Rachamim: The Hebrew Word That Reveals the Deep Compassion of God
On a Sunday evening in May 2011, Grace Aquino was at her Baptist church in Joplin, Missouri, when the sirens went off.
An EF-5 tornado was three minutes away. There was nowhere to go.
Rescuers found her in the rubble, arms still wrapped around her twelve-year-old son. She had taken a concrete post on her own back so he would not have to.
Her obituary says it in one line: “Grace unselfishly covered and protected her twelve-year-old son during the tornado, and as a result, his life was spared.”
That is a picture of the heart of God.
The Hebrew word for it is rachamim.
Rachamim Means “Womb-Love”
Rachamim (רחמים) comes from rechem — the Hebrew word for womb.
When Old Testament writers wanted to describe the strongest love they knew, they pointed to a mother carrying her child.
That is how God loves you.
Not policy. Not procedure. Womb-deep. The kind of love that climbs into the burning building.
God’s Compassion Goes Where Ours Cannot
In Isaiah 49, God asks: “Can a woman forget her sucking child?”
We expect the answer to be no.
But God says, “Yea, they may forget.”
A mother can forget. Sin runs that deep.
Then comes the hinge: “…yet will I not forget thee. Behold, I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands” (Isaiah 49:15–16).
Human sympathy stays behind the rope line. Rachamim crosses it.
Rachamim Meets Justice at the Cross
The world wants God’s compassion without His justice — or His justice without His compassion.
Scripture refuses to split them.
In Exodus 34, God calls Himself “merciful and gracious” — and in the next breath, “will by no means clear the guilty.”
How can both be true?
The cross.
At Calvary, God laid sin upon His own Son. Justice was paid. Womb-love spilled out for you.
When you wonder if God has forgotten you, look at the hands of the risen Christ. The nail prints are the engravings.
You are not forgotten. You are nail-printed into the Son of God.
Like Grace at Harmony Heights, your God has wrapped you in His own body and held you when the walls came down.
You came from Him. He could not leave you.
That, brothers and sisters, is rachamim.
Keep Looking Up!
And that, friend, is how God lifts up your day.
Related Devotionals
- Why Do Bad Things Happen to Good People? — when life feels like the walls came down
- The Prayer That Sparked a Revival: Lessons from the Hebrides, 1949 — God’s compassion poured out on a praying people
- What Does the Bible Really Say About Anxiety? — when you wonder if God has forgotten you
- How Can I Hear God’s Voice? — listening for the One who has not forgotten you
For more daily stories like Grace Aquino’s, listen to Lift Up Your Day — a five-minute devotional with true stories of faith.
Want more from Pastor Rodney?
If today’s devotional spoke to your heart, my books carry these same themes deeper. Stories of God moving in ordinary lives, scripture for tired pastors and weary parents, and steady reminders that heaven is closer than you think.