One Foundation: The Church forgives as God forgives
Matthew 18:21–35 21Then Peter came up and asked Jesus, “Lord, how many times must I forgive my brother when he sins against me? As many as seven times?”
22Jesus said to him, “Not seven
times, but I tell you as many as seventy-seven times. 23For this
reason the kingdom of heaven is like a king who wanted to settle accounts with
his servants. 24When he began to settle them, a man who owed him ten
thousand talents was brought to him. 25Because the man was not able
to pay the debt, his master ordered that he be sold, along with his wife,
children, and all that he owned to repay the debt.
26“Then the servant fell down on his
knees in front of him, saying, ‘Master, be patient with me, and I will pay you
everything!’ 27The master of that servant had pity on him, released
him, and forgave him the debt.
28“But when that servant went out, he
found one of his fellow servants who owed him one hundred denarii. He grabbed
him and began choking him, saying, ‘Pay me what you owe!’
29“So his fellow servant fell down
and begged him, saying, ‘Be patient with me, and I will pay you back!’ 30But
he refused. Instead he went off and threw the man into prison until he could
pay back what he owed.
31“When his fellow servants saw what
had happened, they were very distressed. They went and reported to their master
everything that had taken place.
32“Then his master called him in and
said to him, ‘You wicked servant! I forgave you all that debt when you begged
me to. 33Should you not have had mercy on your fellow servant just
as I had mercy on you?’ 34His master was angry and handed him over
to the jailers until he could pay back everything he owed.
35“This is what my
heavenly Father will also do to you unless each one of you forgives his brother
from his heart.”
“Forgive our sins as we forgive,” You taught us, Lord,
to pray, But you alone can grant us grace To live the words we say. Amen. (CW 493:1)
I was speaking with
my dad earlier this week about his farm. Since I am the executor of my parents’
will, I wanted to see how much they thought their 53 acres, farmhouse, barns,
sheds and farm machinery are worth.
We came up with a total
of 1.25 million dollars.
My dad said he
will never sell the farm. My mom heard 1.25 million dollars and called out, “I’ll
sell!”
My two sisters and
I already own our own homes. We don’t need the farm after my parents are called
home to heaven. My daughter Miriam is interested in buying the property and
running the farm after she graduates with her agricultural engineering degree.
But there’s no way she will be able to afford that price tag. So my dad has
talked about selling it to her for $1.
That’s a pretty
big discount!
But it isn’t as big
of a discount as we find in the story Jesus uses with Peter.
Perhaps Peter was
having trouble with his younger brother. Maybe Andrew was getting on Peter’s
nerves! So Peter asked Jesus, Lord, how many times must I forgive my brother
when he sins against me? As many as seven times?”
Peter is trying to
quantify forgiveness. He wants to keep score. He may think he’s sounding
generous and magnanimous suggesting what seems to him like a lot of times for
the same offense. Seven times!
Jesus replies,
“Not seven times, but I tell you as many as seventy-seven times.” By picking such
a ridiculously high number Jesus is saying, “Don’t keep score at all. Not seven
times or seventy-seven times Don’t keep track of how often you forgive your
brother. Just forgive, whether it’s the first time or the seventy-seventh time.
Forgiveness doesn’t count.”
To drive home the
point, Jesus goes on to tell the story we often refer to as The Parable of the
Unmerciful Servant. Since we heard the parable in our Gospel lesson, I’ll
paraphrase the story.
A servant owes his
king a bazillion dollars. I think that’s the actual ancient term for this
amount of money. A bazillion dollars. This was a big debt. We aren’t told what
the servant did to cause this huge debt. But it was massive. He could never pay
it back in his lifetime. Not even in multiple lifetimes.
Now the king is
going to foreclose on the guy. The servant is hauled before the king and told
to pay up. The guy is shaking in his boots because he knows what the king can
do to him and his family for failure to pay the debt.
What does the king
do? “The master of that servant had pity on him, released him, and forgave him
the debt.” The king did this even though the last words his servant spoke to
him were a blatant lie. “Master, be patient with me, and I will pay you
everything!” The king forgiving the bazillion dollar debt was a pure act of
mercy.
Now the servant is
free. He has learned a powerful lesson about mercy and forgiveness. … Or has
he? Apparently not because the first thing he does with his newfound freedom is
hunt down a fellow servant who owes him a few thousand dollars. An infinitesimally
small debt in comparison.
The unmerciful
servant is unwilling to expend the same pure actions of mercy to his buddy. He
grabs his friend by the neck and begins choking him and yelling in his face, “Pay
me what you owe!”
The servant uses
almost the same words, “Be patient with me and I’ll pay you back.” But they have
no effect. The unmerciful servant has no pity on the man who owes him a few
measly bucks. He throws the guy in prison.
The unmerciful
servant has obviously not learned how forgiveness works in this kingdom. He
shows that he does not really want to operate on the basis of grace. He prefers
the old way of accounting and scorekeeping and payback and revenge. Sadly, he
has rejected the way of his king.
The king finds out
and says to his servant, “You wicked servant! I forgave you that huge debt but
you would not show the same mercy to your friend who owed you a much smaller
debt. Go to jail. Do not pass Go. Do not collect $200.”
Jesus ties all
this together for Peter as he throws in the punchline to the meaning of the
parable: “This is what my heavenly Father will also do to you unless each one
of you forgives his brother from his heart.”
The meaning of the
parable is clear. We often want to hold people in our debt for their offenses
against us.
When a child slams
the door and storms out of the house.
When a parent is
being unreasonable.
When a neighbor is
rude.
When a coworker
drops the ball on an assignment.
When a classmate
gossips about you.
Pick your person.
Pick your offense. I’m sure there are plenty to choose from.
These are legitimate offenses. We have been sinned
against. The hurts are real. The pain is substantial. The wounds are open and
raw.
For all that we demand our 100 denarii!
We all have our ways of collecting on our debts –
usually more subtly than choking. Perhaps it is being passive aggressive while
delivering the bill. Or nobly deferring the payment … until the time we are
sinned against. Then we feel vindicated in exploding, exacting a balloon
payment with interest for the original offense. Or maybe our mercy is “out of
stock” the next time they need it.
These are the payments our world demands. These are
the debts our sinful nature desires to collect.
Jesus is teaching us this is not how it works in God’s
Kingdom. Forgiveness is the capital of God’s Kingdom. If you want to operate
with some other collateral, then you are in a heap of trouble. Because that’s
not how your heavenly Father deals with you.
You have created a debt that far exceeds a bazillion
dollars. You know exactly how you created that debt. With your inborn sinful
nature. Your sins of thoughts, words, actions and inactions. You have created a
debt you cannot pay off in this lifetime. You cannot pay off this debt in an
eternity of lifetimes. You will be thrown into the flaming prion of hell,
created for the devil and his demons.
The King has already come to settle his account with
you. But God settled this account in a way that is totally different than we
would ever imagine. The King came to settle accounts by taking on yourself the
penalty for your offenses and paying your debt off to his heavenly Father. Jesus
is the Suffering Servant who paid your debts, not with gold or silver but with
his holy precious blood and innocent suffering and death. He paid for our
crimes against our heavenly Father, our offenses against those around us, our
lack of mercy to those who have offended us. He suffered the hellish prison
when his heavenly Father forsook him on the cross. His death was payment for
everything humanity owed God. His resurrection was his heavenly Father’s
receipt that accepted his Son’s payment.
Through Jesus all our accounts are settled. Our debts
are paid. Our prison term is commuted. The King has had pity on you, released
you and forgiven the debt you could never begin to pay. You are a free servant
in your Father’s Kingdom.
God, then, is clearly not someone who stops forgiving
you after you have committed the same sin seven or seventy-seven times. Rather
as the prophet Jeremiah says, “By the mercies of the Lord we are not consumed, for his compassions do not fail. They
are new every morning. Great is your faithfulness” (Lamentations
3:22,23). And as St. John teaches, “If
we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to
cleanse us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:9).
Because the King has been merciful to you, you now go
out to be merciful to those around you. The debts others owe you are real. But they
are also really small compared to your debt to God. You forgive as you have
been forgiven. You have been shown mercy to show mercy to others.
You hunt down your friends who have offended you.
Instead of choking payment out of them, you love them, hug them, cry with them,
talk to them, lead them to repentance and then forgive them.
If your sins are not too great to be forgiven by God,
then no one’s sins against you are too great to be forgiven by you.
Jesus paid for your sins against your brother. And
Jesus has paid for your brother’s sins against you.
Forgiveness is not an excuse for your brother to keep sinning
against you. Just as Jesus’ forgiveness is not an excuse for you to keep
sinning against Jesus. Forgiveness does not encourage sinners to continue in
sin. Forgiveness does the opposite. It frees people from sin. It frees people to
live in Christ’s forgiveness. It frees people to live extending Christ’s
forgiveness to others.
I seriously doubt that my parents will sell their farm
to their granddaughter for a dollar. But if they did, it would be a huge debt
removed that she would never forget. She would live on her grandparents’ farm
with gratefulness, telling everyone why fantastic, loving, gracious
grandparents she has. She would tell everyone she meets about the huge,
canceled doubt.
How much more for you? Tell everyone about your
canceled debt. Let everyone know what Jesus has done for you. Proclaim the
fantastic, loving, generous, gracious King you serve. You had a debt you could
never pay. But it was canceled. Forgotten. Forgiven. Now you are loved to love.
Served to serve. Forgiven to forgive. Amen.
Lord, cleanse the depths within our souls And bid
resentment cease; Then, bound to all in bonds of love Our lives will spread
your peace. Amen. (CW 493:4)
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