The text of today is the conclusion to Matthew’s “Community
Discourse” (18:1-35). It begins with a question from Peter about the number of
times one is expected to forgive. While Peter proposes seven times, Jesus’
response far exceeds that proposal. The number seventy-seven can be
understood in this way or even as four hundred ninety (seventy times seven).
The point is not so much about numbers but about forgiveness from the heart. If
one has to count the number of times one is forgiving, it means that one is not
really forgiving at all.
The story that follows in 18:23-35 about the king
who forgave his servant a debt of ten thousand talents (a talent was more than
fifteen years wages of a labourer) and that same servant who would not forgive
another servant who owed him a mere hundred denarii (a denarius was the usual
day’s wage for a labourer). The point that the parable makes is that the one who was forgiven has not accepted the forgiveness. If he had, he would have been able to forgive in turn.
We expect to be forgiven by other when we do them harm after we
have said sorry, and sometimes if they do not forgive us, we get upset with
them even more. We need to apply the same yardstick to ourselves when others
ask for forgiveness from us.
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