Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Mercy is for the Merciful

In Matthew 18:23-25 we read of The Parable of the Unmerciful Servant.

It’s not easy to have a clear understanding of many of the words of Jesus without a better understanding of the context, time, and place in which Jesus is teaching.

This story is a reminder that when you’re feeling sorry for yourself and you're thinking that nobody cares about you, try missing a couple of payments.

The Parable of the Unmerciful Servant is a message about divine forgiveness exemplified in human relationships. God does not provide mercy to the unforgiving.

The amount of money that is portrayed by Jesus in this story is so ridiculously large that it had to have been heard as funny. I’m sure his listeners were thinking to themselves, “That is just silly that someone would owe that much money” which is how Jesus got their undivided attention to hear how this would all pan out.

Ten thousand talents was roughly equivalent to the national debt. No average worker could ever even dream of paying back that much money. A talent was equivalent to 6,000 denarii. To help you understand how much that is, Judea, Idumaea, and Samaria together would pay 600 talents per year, while the servant, an average working man, in this story, all by himself owed 10,000 talents. If this working man could work every day of his life, and save every single dollar, meaning he had no bills and didn’t even use money to eat, it would take him over 150 years to pay this back.

The enslavement or imprisonment of a person, and in many situations, the enslavement of family members for paying off debt is a reality for Jesus’ listeners as well. In fact, Jesus refers to this when he says, “Make friends quickly with your accuser, while you are going with him to court, lest your accuser hand you over to the judge, and the judge to the guard, and you be put in prison; truly I say to you, you will never get out till you pay the last penny” (Matt 5:25-26; Luke 12:58). In 2 Kgs 4:1 a widow cries to Elisha, “Your servant may husband is dead; and you know that your servant feared the LORD, but the creditor has come to take my two children to be his slaves.”

The listeners of this story are amazed when Jesus says that the king forgives the debt and lets the man go free.

Then the twist comes when this same man who had an enormous debt forgiven by the king goes to a man who owes him what would be considered three months wages and he does not forgive the debt. The man who was forgiven then faces the judgment of being unmerciful.

I believe that we, as children of God, are to gorge one another with forgiveness; without it, we whither and die.
The ultimate goal of Jesus’ story is to remind his hearers of God’s compassion and willingness to forgive, as well as His unwillingness to ignore justice

Only the merciful are shown mercy.

Forever learning,
Johnny

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