-Savio Saldanha SJ
DOI- 10.5281/zenodo.18279916
17-01-2026
Mercy from the Womb
I
did not intentionally set out to study the etymology of ‘Mercy’. The
question came to me quietly, during a reading group conversation where we were
speaking about mercy. A Syrian Jesuit, Mike Kassis, mentioned that in Arabic
the word raḥma (رحمة) means
mercy, and that it comes from raḥim (رحم), the womb.
A Croatian Jesuit, Robert Matečić, agreed and added that in Hebrew we observe the
same roots reḥem (רֶחֶם), womb and raḥamîm (רַחֲמִים), meaning
mercy or compassion and also in Aramaic – the spoken language of Jesus –
we notice the same root r-ḥ-m, with similar meanings: womb, tender mercy.
For me this etymology seemed more than a coincidence, mercy and womb coming
from the same word family.
That
short exchange stayed with me, unsettling something within me. I began to sense
that this conversation had opened a new perspective for me, and yet it was also
something that brought me to this crossroads of conscience. One path led to the
way I had often heard mercy explained in Western theology while the other led
back to the languages Jesus himself spoke and prayed and most importantly
thought. This essay traces the path of my reflections.
Mercy in the Semitic languages
As
stated earlier, in Hebrew the word reḥem means womb. From this word
comes raḥamîm, mercy or compassion. Hence, we see that mercy is not just
an idea, it is an actual place. This is a sacred place where life begins, where
the weak are held and where growth happens in darkness and trust. It is a sacred
place because in this place humans become co-creators with God. The Psalmist
says in Ps.139:13-14, “For it was you who formed my inward parts; you knit
me together in my mother's womb. I praise you, for I am fearfully and
wonderfully made”. It will be interesting to note that Aramaic, the daily
language of Jesus, shares the same root and so does Syriac, the language of
early Eastern Christianity. Mercy is again linked to the womb which gives
life before judging it.
The
Arabic language preserves this link with great clarity, Raḥim is womb, Raḥma
is mercy. Even the most common names of God in Islam, al-Raḥmān and al-Raḥīm,
speak of a mercy that shelters and brings forth life. Mercy here is not a
response to failure but the very source of existence! Across these languages
mercy is creative because it generates and sustains. Interestingly, it does not
begin with guilt but with life.
The Latin turn
When
Christianity moved into the Latin world the meaning shifted. Latin did not have
the same root. Mercy became misericordia. The word joins miser,
meaning wretched, and cor, meaning heart. Mercy now means a heart moved
by another’s misery. Simply explained, I see someone in pain, and feel sympathy
or empathy with that person.
The
image is no longer the womb, but the heart. Mercy becomes a reaction. Mercy responds
to misery. It does not give birth. It forgives after the fact. Over time, this shaped
theology. In practice, sin often came first and mercy followed. Law often stood
before life. Suddenly, mercy was no longer ‘life-giving’, but became ‘life-saving’.
In all this change the human conscience learned to ask, “Am I guilty?” more
often than, “Am I alive?”
The early Church
In
biblical theology, mercy (raḥamîm) is not merely pardon but, re-creation,
restoration of life and even covenantal rebirth. Ezekiel 36 (very close to John
3!) speaks of water, new heart and a new spirit. All of this is the language of
‘creative mercy’ and not merely an emotion or reaction.
The
early Church Fathers still stood close to this biblical world. Greek and Syriac
writers spoke of salvation as rebirth. Baptism was new creation, not only
cleansing. God’s mercy was seen as a power that brings forth a new person.
Especially in the Syriac tradition, the Spirit gives life like a mother; hence
the Church is a place of birth. Mercy is not simply a weak kindness but a
strong and patient love that forms Christ in us. Even in the Greek Fathers,
mercy was linked to participation in divine life. God does not only overlook
sin but shares life. As theology developed in the Latin West, moral order and
legal clarity became more central. Much good came from this, but something
quieter was lost. Mercy slowly became thinner, less of creative, and more of law.
St.
Augustine thought in Latin categories, when he wrote that, Grace heals the will, Mercy
forgives guilt and thus, God’s love is paternal, judicial and sovereign. The maternal imagery never fully disappeared, but it
was no longer structural. Thus, in Augustine, we see a careful
articulation of guilt, grace, and healing, framed in a juridical vocabulary. Saint
Augustine’s Latin articulation of grace and guilt remains a profound and
necessary contribution, even if it speaks more readily in juridical and
paternal language than in maternal metaphor. Later Western developments
sometimes leaned heavily on this juridical line and muted the more maternal,
creative metaphors. The juridical tradition that followed served a real
pastoral need in its time, offering moral clarity and protection, even as it
sometimes left less room for the older language of creative and generative
mercy.
What
is striking is how Pope Francis and contemporary theology are retrieving
the Syriac intuition. In Amoris Laetitia, we see multiple times that Pope
Francis states, Mercy as source, not exception. He refers to the Church
as mother, while stressing on discernment rather than legalism and accompaniment
rather than judgment. When he speaks of mercy as: “God’s way of touching the
human heart”, he is, actually moving back toward raḥmē, away from pure misericordia.
This
is where my conscience stands today. Many of us experience conscience as pressure,
as a fear of failure and a list of rules to measure up to. Mercy is then reduced
to an escape clause, something applied when we fall short. The Semitic vision challenges
this, if mercy is womb-like, then conscience is not first a judge, but a place
where life is being formed, slowly, sometimes painfully but always with care. This
does not remove responsibility, but it changes its tone. Growth matters more
than perfection. Direction matters more than control.
I
found that reading the Gospel with this lens changed how I heard Jesus. His Call
was not first about moral sorting, but about new life and being drawn into the
life of God. It becomes about mercy as the ground we stand on, not the
exception we beg for. Mercy, understood in this way, does not cancel truth or
human responsibility; rather, it creates the space in which truth can be faced
and responsibility can be assumed without fear.
Mercy as new creation
To
speak of mercy as a creative force is to return to the heart of Christian
faith. In Christ, God does not only repair what is broken, but creates again. The
womb-like images of mercy found in the biblical and Semitic tradition do not
replace other images of God, but stand alongside them, enriching our faith by
reminding us that God’s justice is always life-giving. This reshapes my
perspective on mercy. I see the Sacraments become places of formation, and not
reward. Moral life becomes response to life received, not a ladder to earn
love. Conscience becomes a listening space, not only an alarm. At the
crossroads where many believers stand, this matters. A conscience shaped only
by law risks forgetting why it exists. St. Paul speaks of this when he says, ‘They
show that what the law requires is written on their hearts, as their own
conscience also bears witness, and their conflicting thoughts will accuse or
perhaps excuse them’. (Rm.2 :15) A single conversation led me here. It
helped me see that words carry worlds and that by listening to the roots of
mercy, I came closer to the Gospel itself.
References
Biblical Texts
- The
Holy Bible.
New Revised Standard Version. Psalm 139:13–14; Ezekiel 36:25–27; Romans
2:15.
Magisterial and Contemporary
Church Teaching
- Francis.
Amoris Laetitia. Apostolic Exhortation on Love in the Family.
Vatican City, 2016.
See especially §§6–9, 56–59, 296–312. - Francis.
Misericordiae Vultus. Bull of Indiction of the Extraordinary
Jubilee of Mercy. Vatican City, 2015.
- Catechism
of the Catholic Church. Vatican City, 1992. §§1996–2005 (grace),
§§1422–1424 (sacraments of healing).
Saint Augustine and the Latin
Tradition
- Augustine
of Hippo. Confessions. Translated by Henry Chadwick. Oxford
University Press, 1991.
- Augustine
of Hippo. On Nature and Grace. In Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers,
First Series, Vol. 5. Edited by Philip Schaff. Hendrickson, 1994.
- Augustine
of Hippo. Enchiridion on Faith, Hope, and Love. Translated by J.F.
Shaw. Regnery, 1955.
Greek and Syriac Fathers
- Ephrem
the Syrian. Hymns on Paradise. Translated by Sebastian Brock. St
Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1990.
- Ephrem
the Syrian. Hymns on the Nativity. Translated by Kathleen McVey.
Paulist Press, 1989.
- Aphrahat.
Demonstrations. Translated by K. Valavanolickal. St Ephrem
Ecumenical Research Institute, 2005.
- Gregory
of Nyssa. On the Making of Man. Translated by H.A. Wilson. Nicene
and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, Vol. 5.
- Basil
of Caesarea. On the Holy Spirit. Translated by Stephen Hildebrand.
St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2011.
Studies on Semitic Mercy and
Syriac Theology
- Brock,
Sebastian P. The Luminous Eye: The Spiritual World Vision of Saint
Ephrem. Cistercian Publications, 1992.
- Schmemann, Alexander. Of Water and the Spirit. St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1974.
- Rahner, Karl. Foundations of Christian Faith. Crossroad, 1978.

It's a super rich and enlightening piece Savio, thank you. Just one point is, though the church becomes more latinized, and that rich Semitic tradition is kept at hold many a times, it's also important to note that this was present (probably as a minor current) in the church tradition too and the theology of St Bernard Clairvaux, Bonaventure (or Francis of Assisi), Ignatian Spirituality (not that all Jesuits were fully immersed in that understanding, but certain aspects of Spiritual Exercises point to that) etc are a few examples. Even Augustine's writings too has this aspect present in certain forms. This is just to bring a little clarification and no way denies the important aspect which you brought to the attention. Mercy as life giving rather than reactionary. That deeper dimension of mercy which we forget in the legalistic or reactionary game. Thank you.
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