The Love Of God - Mercy Me [with Lyrics] (2025)

MercyMe’s rendition of the classic hymn stands as a powerful testament to the enduring nature of divine mercy. Originally appearing on their 2002 album Spoken For (and later featured in various live and lyric videos ), the song breathes modern life into a text with ancient, diverse roots. A Legacy Spanning Centuries

: The imagery of an ocean filled with ink and skies made of parchment traces back nearly a thousand years to an Aramaic poem called Akdamut Millin , composed by Rabbi Meir ben Yitzchak in 11th-century Germany.

: The opening lines declare that God’s love "goes beyond the highest star and reaches to the lowest hell," emphasizing that no person is beyond the reach of grace.

: The first verse highlights the "guilty pair" (often interpreted as Adam and Eve or the thieves on the cross) and God’s choice to give His Son to reconcile his "erring child".

While often associated with , who wrote the primary verses in 1917, the most famous lines of the hymn—the third verse—carry a much older story.

MercyMe’s rendition of the classic hymn stands as a powerful testament to the enduring nature of divine mercy. Originally appearing on their 2002 album Spoken For (and later featured in various live and lyric videos ), the song breathes modern life into a text with ancient, diverse roots. A Legacy Spanning Centuries

: The imagery of an ocean filled with ink and skies made of parchment traces back nearly a thousand years to an Aramaic poem called Akdamut Millin , composed by Rabbi Meir ben Yitzchak in 11th-century Germany.

: The opening lines declare that God’s love "goes beyond the highest star and reaches to the lowest hell," emphasizing that no person is beyond the reach of grace.

: The first verse highlights the "guilty pair" (often interpreted as Adam and Eve or the thieves on the cross) and God’s choice to give His Son to reconcile his "erring child".

While often associated with , who wrote the primary verses in 1917, the most famous lines of the hymn—the third verse—carry a much older story.