Trinity Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)

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Sermons

September 2002 (click here to return to "September 2002 Sermons" page)

24th Sunday in Ordinary Time (September 15, 2002)

        “Canceling Out Debts”        Dr. Julie Adkins

                Text: Matthew 18:21-35

 

SERMON

  

Clarence Jordan,

            who was a New Testament scholar

            and author of the “Cotton Patch” version of the gospels …

was asked one time,

            why he thought it was that Jesus said

                        we must forgive our brother or sister seventy-seven times.

“Well,” said Jordan in his southern drawl,

            “I guess he figured that by that time,

                        we’d be pretty good at it.”

  

Who among us is really “good at” forgiving?

Most people I know – myself included –

            find it to be one of

                        the most painfully difficult things

                                    we are ever asked to do.

Now, I’m not talking about small-potatoes kind of stuff like,

            “please forgive me for being late,” or,

                        “oh no, I stepped on your foot, please forgive me.”

Of course we should be able

            to forgive small incidents like these,

                        but they’re relatively easy.

What seems difficult, if not impossible,

            is the big-ticket items.

Woundings at the hand of someone we care about.

Betrayal by someone we deeply trusted.

Someone else’s carelessness, or stupidity,

            that damages our life irrevocably.

I hesitate even to list examples,

            because there are so many,

                        and they have happened to us all.

Probably more often than we like to think about.

We have all been hurt.

And what we heard Jesus say last week was difficult enough:

            if your brother or sister sins against you,

                        you must go and privately tell them their fault.

This week the job gets even harder.

Not only must we be honest,

            we must forgive.

Except, let’s face it,

            there are some things, it seems,

                        that are so awful they can never be forgiven.

Or at least not by us.

Or at least not any time soon.

Or at least not until the one who wronged us

            grovels and begs and repents.

Yet, here is Jesus saying “seventy-seven times.”

Truly, it seems impossible.

  

And, speaking solely in human terms,

            it probably is impossible.

Consider the parable:

If Jesus had only told the second half of the story …

            Servant 1 owes Servant 2 twenty bucks,

                        only he doesn’t have it when he promised.

            So Servant 2 has Servant 1 thrown into debtors’ prison,

                        until he pays back everything he owes.

Now that might seem a little excessive,

            but certainly not out of line with

                        what was appropriate in that culture.

It’s only in the context of the first half of that story,

            where we find out that Servant 2

                        has just been forgiven a debt of

                        something like ten million dollars …

            only in light of that do we understand

                        how shabbily he has treated Servant 1.

He has refused to pass on

            the grace and mercy that he was shown.

And for Jesus,

            that’s kind of the bottom line:

whatever debt we are owed by whomever,

            it pales in comparison to the debt we owed to God,

                        which has, however, been forgiven.

  

Having said that, however,

            let me reiterate that that is the bottom line,

                        and getting there isn’t always easy.

Take, for example, the dozens and maybe even hundreds of people

            who are coming forward to say they were abused as children or teenagers

                        by their priest.

Doesn’t it seem unfair and insensitive to say to them,

            “Nevertheless, you must forgive.”?

How can they?

How could anyone?

Yet somehow, they must be freed from

            the burden of anger, and pain, and shame.

And as satisfying as it may be to see justice done,

            or even vengeance (!),

                        those don’t heal us.

Although it seems strange,

            the only way there is to have any hope

                        of healing from such devastation,

            is to forgive the one who devastated you.

Several years ago, I read an article in the magazine Christianity Today

            which had this to say:

“To forgive is to set a prisoner free

            and to discover that the prisoner was you.”

I needed to hear that

            at that particular moment.

Because as surely as a swift kick in the pants,

            it made me realize that

                        no matter how fierce or pure or even justified

                        my anger was toward a given person at that moment,

                                    it wasn’t hurting him a bit.

My refusal to forgive

            didn’t bind or imprison him,

                        but it was eating me alive.

In fact, listen to what Frederick Buechner has to say

            about that kind of anger:

“Of the Seven Deadly Sins, anger is possibly the most fun.

            To lick your wounds,

            to smack your lips over grievances long past,

            to roll over your tongue the prospect

                        of bitter confrontations yet to come,

            to savor to the last toothsome morsel

                        both the pain you are given and the pain you are giving back –

in many ways it is a feast fit for a king.

The chief drawback is that what you are wolfing down is yourself.

            The skeleton at the feast is you.”                          (Wishful Thinking, p. 2)

 

So, there may be times when

            the beginning or our forgiving

                        may have to be cynical and selfish motives.

When the hurt we need to forgive is truly awful,

            we may have to start somewhere like this:

                        “Okay, I’m going to forgive you,

                          not because you deserve it, you jerk,

              but because you’re not worth

                        my getting an ulcer over.”

Now we can’t leave it there.

As I said, the bottom line is elsewhere.

But sometimes,

            it is okay to start from our own needs.

  

Beyond that, though,

            we forgive because God has forgiven us.

And that’s kind of a two-edged sword.

On the one side,

            it is because we are forgiven by God

                        that we are set free to forgive one another.

Knowing and acknowledging that we are sinners,

            in spite of our best intentions,

                        somehow makes it easier to forgive all those other sinners.

Or to forgive ourselves, for that matter.

On the other hand,

            it is when we forgive one another,

            when we are able to let go

                        at least a little of our price and our need to be right,

Only then are we opened up to

            the possibility of receiving God’s grace and mercy.

You see,

            that was the real problem of Servant #2.

Not just that he refused to show forgiveness,

            but that he didn’t even recognize

                        the forgiveness he had been shown.

I think this is what is meant in the Lord’s Prayer

            when we say “forgive us our debts

                        as we forgive our debtors.”

It’s not that God will refuse to forgive us

            if we do not forgive one another …

Just that, until we show mercy to one another,

            we simply aren’t open to receiving it

                        from anywhere else.

  

Now, forgiveness does not mean

            forgetting or trying to forget what happened.

We can’t learn from it if we forget it.

Nor does it mean a kind of cheap-grace

            passing-it-off by saying it doesn’t matter.

Because if it really doesn’t matter,

            it doesn’t need forgiving.

Listen again to Frederick Buechner:

“To forgive somebody is to say one way or another,

            ‘You have done something unspeakable,

                        and by all rights I should call it quits between us.

              Both my pride and my principles demand no less.

              However, although I make no guarantees

                        that I will be able to forget what you’ve done,

                          and though we may both carry the scars for life,

              I refuse to let it stand between us.

              I still want you for my friend.’”                            (Wishful Thinking, p. 28)

 

 Forgiveness also does not necessarily mean reconciliation.

And this is a distinction I think many people fail to draw,

            including some who write on the topic and ought to know better.

You can forgive someone who is unrepentant.

Indeed, you have to.

You have to get yourself free

            from whatever it was and is that is causing you pain.

Besides which, God forgives us all the time,

            often long before we even realize that we did something

                        we need to repent about.

You can forgive someone who is unrepentant,

            but until they repent, the relationship cannot be restored.

True reconciliation requires both forgiveness and the acceptance of that forgiveness;

            that is, the admission that one has done something out of place

                        and a sense of sorrow about that,

            and a willingness to rebuild a relationship

                        with someone we have caused pain to.

  

Well, most of us don’t even want to think about

            getting hurt seventy-seven times,

                        much less forgiving all those hurts!

Nevertheless, it’s what we are called to do.

Perhaps it will help us if we remember

            that God has forgiven us

                        many more times than that!

In fact, there are probably occasionally days

            on which God has to forgive us seventy-seven times!

However we come to it,

            forgive we must.

Only then can we live in community with each other.

Only then can we free ourselves.

Only then do we open ourselves to receive in full the great love of God.

  

It’s not easy.

But after seventy-seven times,

            well, we will probably start to get pretty good at it.

Let us love one another

            as God has loved us.

Amen.

 

© 2002 Julie Adkins (e-mail: DrJAdkins@trinitypresdallas.org)