The story that Jesus is telling is about a working-class guy who owes his boss 10,000 talents or about 60 million dollars today. Does that sound a little
unreasonable? Yeah, it is. Friends, it's not possible. Jesus is telling a story about a person who owes a completely
unreasonable and unpayable debt.
It's such a ridiculous number that when the master says
it's time to call to account and pay for it, the servant says, I'll do whatever
I can. I'll work for the rest of my life. I'll pay you back. I swear. And the
master's like, I mean, no, you won't. You're never going to make 60 million.
Are you going to play the lottery? Like what's your plan?
In that moment, the master
forgives him. And the point isn't that he forgives a big debt. The point is
that he forgives an unforgivable debt. The point isn't that he forgives
something that the slave would have to spend the rest of his life trying to pay
off. The point is that he's forgiving something the slave will never, ever, in
all of history, possibly pay off.
So this slave is
forgiven, and then he turns around, and he's so excited, and he goes out, and
in the middle of his excitement, he sees his other slave friend, who owes him a hundred denari, about 5k today. It's kind of small compared to 60 million. He's just been forgiven
an unforgivable debt. He has just been forgiven a 60 millions dollar debt. And he
sees someone who owes him 5k. And he goes, put that guy in jail. It's the debtor's prison for him.
This is the story Jesus is telling. Is he telling a story
of how often we should forgive? Of how many times? No. Is he even telling a
story of how big a sin we should forgive? Again, no. Jesus is trying to change
our relationship with forgiveness. How do you and I, how do we relate to
forgiveness? What is our relationship with forgiveness? How do we understand it? He recognizes that most of us
keep score.
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