Tangible Truth Podcast with Susan & Friends (KLRC)
The Word Speaks - WALK HUMBLY - Susan's Favorites (Season 5 Episode 35)
Susan was once asked, "If you have to choose a scripture that captures your 'worldview,' what would it be?"
After a moment of thinking, she came back with Micah 6:8, a verse that has been on one of her handy scripture notecards for as long as she could remember.
To finish out our "The Word Speaks" series, Susan talks about what it means to follow the steps laid out in Micah 6:8 - with some help from Brook Smith.
For more information on SOZO House, click here: SOZO House - Rest. Heal. Renew.
If you are interested in the hermeneutics (the in-depth interpretation) of Micah 6:8 that Brook read on this episode, we've posted it below for you!
via CHATGpt
Excellent question! Let’s take a close hermeneutical look at Micah 6:8, especially the word translated mercy or kindness.
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The Verse (NIV)
“He has shown you, O mortal, what is good.
And what does the Lord require of you?
To act justly and to love mercy
and to walk humbly with your God.”
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Key Hebrew Word
The word translated “mercy” or “kindness” in this verse is חֶסֶד (ḥesed).
• Root meaning: It doesn’t translate neatly into one English word. It’s a rich Hebrew concept encompassing steadfast love, covenant faithfulness, loyalty, mercy, loving-kindness, goodness.
• Some translations use kindness (ESV, NASB), others mercy (KJV, NIV), and still others steadfast love (ESV footnote, RSV).
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Hermeneutical Layers
1. Lexical Analysis
• ḥesed implies not just a feeling of kindness but a covenant-committed love.
• It is often used to describe God’s faithful love toward Israel (e.g., Exodus 34:6–7, Psalm 136).
2. Contextual Analysis
• Micah contrasts outward ritual sacrifices (vv. 6–7) with the inward life God desires.
• Instead of “buying off” God with burnt offerings, He requires His people to live out justice (mishpat), mercy (ḥesed), and humility (ṣanaʿ).
• Here, ḥesed is about faithful, relational love toward others, reflecting God’s own covenant love.
3. Theological Analysis
• This isn’t just about doing kind deeds; it’s about embodying God’s steadfast mercy in relationships.
• It emphasizes ethical living flowing from covenant identity: God has shown mercy → His people must live mercifully.
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Summary
In Micah 6:8, the word “mercy/kindness” (ḥesed) is best understood as:
“Faithful, covenantal love expressed through compassionate action toward others, reflecting God’s own loyal love.”
So it’s not only “be nice” or “show pity,” but live with steadfast loyalty, mercy, and loving-kindness as a way of life.





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