
The verse we reflect on today from the Acts of the Apostles originally comes from the prophet Samuel and has always unsettled the minds and hearts of readers. Why?
How can God speak this way about David, whose life includes grave moral failure: adultery with Bathsheba; orchestrating the death of Bathsheba’s husband Uriah; his violence and ruthlessness in his rise to power; his practice of complicity and deception.
St. Augustine writes that the verse “a man after God’s own heart” does not mean sinlessness, but that the heart of that person is aligned with God’s heart. The “heart” here is the center of love and will. David’s life reveals disordered acts but a fundamentally ordered desire: he ultimately wants God (a story very similar to St. Augustine’s own faith journey of moral failure and desire for God).
There is a famous line that says, “God writes with crooked lines.” The meaning of this is captured by Hans Urs von Balthasar, who emphasized that God does not choose the morally flawless; He chooses, calls, and transforms. David’s life becomes a stage on which grace is shown to be before and greater than human achievement. In this light, “after my own heart” suggests a heart that is responsive—one that can be summoned, corrected, and restored. David resists at times, but he does not ultimately close himself off from God.
Henri Nouwen viewed King David as a profound example of the “wounded healer” and a testament to the idea that having a heart for God does not mean moral perfection, but rather a persistent, honest return to God in the midst of brokenness. Richard Rohr continues this thought by saying that King David is an example of a “mixed” or “imperfect” vessel, showing that having a heart for God does not require moral perfection. Rohr suggests that, like David, our own failures, when met with honest repentance, actually break down our “hardened hearts” and lead us to a necessary reliance on divine mercy rather than our own goodness.
God calls David “a man after my own heart,” not because David lacked frailty, but because his life reveals three decisive qualities:
– a fundamental orientation toward God
– a genuine and repeated repentance
– a lived relationship marked by prayer and trust
In other words, God sees in David not the absence of sin, but the presence of a heart that can be claimed, broken, and remade. That can be unsettling, but also deeply hopeful: it suggests that what most aligns a person with God is not moral flawlessness, but a heart that, despite everything, keeps turning back toward Him – which is the beauty and power of reconciliation that is available to all of us who fall and desire to be renewed.