Homily for August 13th,
2020: Mathew 18:21-19:1
“Lord, when my brother wrongs me,” Peter asks Jesus, “how
often must I forgive him? Seven times?” “No,” Jesus replies, “not seven times;
I say, seventy times seven times.” Jesus was saying that the duty of forgiveness
was unlimited. Then, as so often, Jesus tells a story to illustrate his
teaching.
The
story’s opening is ominous. A king, for Jesus’ hearers, was a man with power of
life and death over his subjects. The people with whom he intends to settle accounts
are officials responsible for collecting the king’s taxes. “One was brought in,
who owed a huge amount.” A lifetime was insufficient to pay it. The king’s
cruel punishment, ordering not only the man himself but his whole family to be
sold into slavery, would have shocked Jesus’ hearers. Then comes a surprise. When
the man pleads for time to pay the debt, the king suddenly shows mercy: “Moved
with pity, the master … wrote off the debt.”
No
sooner delivered from his desperate plight, the official finds a colleague who
owes him “a much smaller amount,” and demands immediate payment in full. The
second official’s reaction to the demand that he pay his debt
mirrors that of the first. “Just give me time and I will pay you back in full.”
The sole difference is that the second official’s debt could easily be
paid, given reasonable time. How shocking for those hearing the story for the
first time to learn of the first official’s harsh response. Seizing his
colleague by the throat and throttling him, he insists that the man be imprisoned
until the debt is paid.
In
the story’s conclusion the colleagues of the two debtors go and report the
injustice to the king. Summoning the first official again, the king reminds him
of the unmerited mercy he has received and, in an act of grim irony, grants the
man what, in his original desperation, he had requested: time. Now, however,
the time will be spent not in repayment but in prison, under torture. This
detail would have deeply shocked Jesus’ hearers. In Jewish law torture was
unknown.
The story’s lesson is
simple: if we are not forgiving toward others, as God is already forgiving toward us, we risk
discovering one day that the forgiveness God has extended to us has been canceled. Jesus is telling us, in short,
that our treatment of others, here and now — and especially of those who have
wronged us — is already determining where, how, and with whom we shall spend
eternity.
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