Grace poetry celebrates elegance in motion and spirit - the undeserved kindness that saves us, the forgiveness we don't earn but receive anyway, the smooth way some people navigate difficulty. These verses explore grace as both theological concept and human quality: the divine mercy that lifts us when we fall, the social grace that makes interactions gentle, the physical grace of a dancer, the emotional grace of forgiving what hurt you.
Whether it's the grace of God, the grace under pressure that reveals character, or the simple grace of treating others with kindness they haven't earned, these poems remind us that grace - in all its forms - is what makes life bearable, beautiful, and sometimes miraculous.
The mysterious gift of being loved despite our flaws.
- Catherine Wells
How some people manage to stay kind when life gets hard.
- James Nakamura
Finding redemption in the spaces between who we were and who we're becoming.
- Ruth Morrison
by John Newton (1772)
Written by a former slave trader turned abolitionist, this hymn has become one of the most recognized expressions of divine grace and redemption.
by George Herbert (1633)
Herbert's dialogue between the soul and divine Love, exploring grace as unearned welcome and acceptance.
- Theological wisdom
- Maya Angelou
- John O'Donohue
- Anne Lamott
The grace of letting go and moving forward.
- Marcus Cole
- Diana Park
The daily practice of treating others with unearned gentleness.
- Sarah Chen