Good Morning
All!!
Matthew
18:28; “But when that same servant went out, he found one of his fellow
servants who owed him a hundred denarii, and seizing him, he began to choke
him, saying, ‘Pay what you owe.’”
Most
of us have heard the admonition “if it sounds too good to be true; it probably
is.” Most of us, if we know, would not
buy something that was “too cheap.” If
someone offered to sell you a house for half of what the other houses in the
areas sell for, you would ask “what’s wrong with it?” It would be the same with a car, a boat, just
about anything we buy we usually try to follow the maxim “If it is too good to
be true, then it must be.” But what
happens if it really is a good deal? Do
we trust it or do we think that somewhere there is a catch?
I wonder sometimes if this unforgiving servant thought this was too good
to be true. When you look at the amounts
owed, they are absurd. A talent was
equal to what an average worker would earn in twenty years. This man owed 10,000 talents or roughly the
sum of money an average worker would earn in 200,000 years. A denarius was equal to one day’s pay. So the second man owed about 3 months’ worth
of wages. We often make the same
accusation of the unforgiving servant; he should have been so grateful for his
forgiveness that he would readily forgive his neighbor the paltry sum he owed
but he does not. Maybe he thought that
the king would wake up one day and realize how much he forgave and change his
mind. He owes the king and usually the
king can change the rules or the deal whenever he feels like it. So the unforgiving servant simply thought he
had received a deal that was too good to be true so he went out and began to
collect money owed to him. He might have
done this in order to get some money together so he would have a little
something to bargain with the king. He
could pay a little as a show of good faith and buy some time. He might have been a bargaining and a
practical man and he just couldn’t fathom someone forgiving that much debt.
We go through life doing the same thing.
We don’t fully trust God’s great promise. We listen as the devil tells us that when
knowledge of our sins get out and the people know who we are and what we have
done; God will reject us and withdraw his grace. This is why we are slow to forgive; deep down
we do not feel forgiven.
Yet this is one case where it is not too good to be true. God’s love leads him to forgive the sins of
the ones whom he loves. We have complete
forgiveness and we need to completely trust his love and mercy. This is why Jesus willingly came to earth and
to die for us; it is because of his love and because of this love we can
forgive others who harm us. God’s love
moves mountains for us. It empowers us
to forgive and to free us from the devil’s control.
Father,
your love for me is beyond my understanding.
Give me the strength to fully grasp your mercy. Give me the power to live my life as fully
forgiven. Give me the power to fully
forgive. Send your Spirit that I might
be your child and show your love to those around me. In the precious name of Jesus we pray, amen.
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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