The Parable of the Unmerciful Servant
The questions we wrestle with as Christians about who God is, how do we live out our faith, what is the Bible, what is the truth of the Bible, what are we supposed to believe? How are we supposed to live? There are really big deep questions that we ask each other, that we ask God, that we wrestle with ourselves. And that's why the Cultivate podcast exists, to help us go deeper in our understanding of who God is, his word, and the way that he's called us to live. Everyone, welcome to the Cultivate Podcast with The Grove Church.
Charlie Loften:I'm Charlie Lofton, the lead pastor there, and I'm joined by creative director, podcast producer, great friend, cool hat wearer. Aww. Big one. Which one of those was the awe?
Abigail Boone:Great friend.
Charlie Loften:I thought maybe it
Abigail Boone:was A sappy.
Charlie Loften:Cool hat wearer.
Abigail Boone:No. I am quite known for that though. There was one time that was sometimes the women's ministry here has a clothing swap and I showed up and this woman was like, yes. I'm gonna get some hats. And I was like, oh, I'm not getting rid of my hats.
Abigail Boone:No. I just have some old t shirts here that you can have. Know. She was she was disappointed. So I I love that I've become known for it.
Abigail Boone:But shout out to Brenda Boone. She does not like it, I don't think.
Charlie Loften:Shout out to your mom that she doesn't like that you wear hats?
Abigail Boone:No. It bothers her to some extent. Also, since she's moved up here, she's been with me quite a few times when I'm like, oh, like this one, literally, as she was with me, she was like, you're getting that? Of course, I am.
Charlie Loften:Amazing. Moms for the win.
Abigail Boone:Yeah. Did
Charlie Loften:your mom listen to the podcast?
Abigail Boone:Oh, yeah. Big time.
Charlie Loften:So you're be excited about this shout out.
Abigail Boone:Yes. Yes.
Charlie Loften:Alright, we are neck deep in parables. We just finished a supersized episode.
Abigail Boone:Yeah, we did. Apologies for that.
Charlie Loften:One of my favorite parables. And now we're about to come into another one that is one of my favorites.
Abigail Boone:Really?
Charlie Loften:So we're gonna jump right in,
Abigail Boone:trying to
Charlie Loften:make it not as super It's called The Parable of the Unmerciful Servant. And it's a really good, I think, follow-up to the prodigal son, where we spend a lot of time talking about how much the father loves, how much the father forgave the younger son, and this kind of connects with that.
Abigail Boone:Okay.
Charlie Loften:Matthew 18, starting verse 21. Then Peter came to Jesus and asked, Lord, how many times shall I forgive my brother or sisters who sins against me? Up to seven times? Jesus answered, I tell you, not seven times, but 77 times. Therefore, the kingdom of heaven is like a king who wanted to settle accounts with his servant.
Charlie Loften:As he began the settlement, a man who owed him 10,000 bags of gold was brought to him. Since he was not able to pay, the master ordered that he and his wife and his children and all that he had to be sold to repay the debt. At this, the servant fell on his knees before him. Be patient with me, he begged, and I will pay back everything. The servant's master took pity on him, canceled the debt, and let him go.
Charlie Loften:But when that servant went out, he found one of his fellow servants who owed him a 100 silver coins. He grabbed him and began to choke him. Pay back what you owe me, he demanded. His fellow servant fell to his knees and begged him, be patient with me, and I will pay it back. But he refused, instead he went off and had the man thrown into prison until he could pay the debt.
Charlie Loften:When the other servants saw what had happened, they were outraged and went and told their master everything that had happened. Then the master called the servant in, you wicked servant,' he said, 'I canceled all that debt of yours because you begged me to. Shouldn't you have had mercy on your fellow servant just as I had on you?' In anger, his master handed him over to the jailers to be tortured until he should pay back all he owed. This is how my heavenly Father will treat each of you, unless you forgive your brother or sister from your heart.
Abigail Boone:Sheesh. Boop. Teeny boop. Yeah. It's pretty heavy.
Charlie Loften:Right? So again, let's make sure we understand the kind of the the setup here because it's, again, just like with the prodigal son, it's a crazy setup to a story. Mhmm. But first, let's make sure we understand the context. Who is Jesus talking to?
Abigail Boone:One of the disciples?
Charlie Loften:Yeah, so this insider's is parable. Comes from a question from Peter, which kind of implies, probably wasn't probably wasn't a one on one, it was probably they were all hanging out. So this is something that He is communicating to his closest followers. And the question is forgiveness. You know, how many times should I forgive somebody?
Abigail Boone:That's a really funny question.
Charlie Loften:But I think Peter probably thought he was being like super cool. I mean, how many times did say? Like seven?
Abigail Boone:I'm willing to do seven.
Charlie Loften:I'm sure he thought that was like a big deal. Mean, we have because we've got this expression, right? Fool me once. Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me. Like, to me, it's like, well, like, you get one.
Charlie Loften:You get one time, but I will not let you do it to me twice. Peter's like, fool me six times, shame on you, fool me seven times?
Abigail Boone:Shame on me.
Charlie Loften:Jesus Right? Is like, no, it's actually like a whole, not just one seven, it's like a whole bunch of sevens. And then He tells a story. It's like a king whose people owe him some money, he's got to settle up some debts. It says that somebody owes him 10,000 bags of gold.
Charlie Loften:And the word there, really, that we translate bag is the very common word talent, a talent of gold.
Abigail Boone:Oh, a talent is a measurement?
Charlie Loften:A talent is a weight measurement.
Abigail Boone:Okay.
Charlie Loften:So in the parable of the talents, this guy got 10, this guy got five, this guy five, two, one, whatever, right? It is a weighted amount of gold or silver.
Abigail Boone:Okay.
Charlie Loften:So just a few, 10,000, not pounds, but a certain amount of poundage, 10,000 of these measurements of weight, 10,000 kilograms, right? It's a weight measure, but it is a weight measure that is tied to a precious metal that then becomes money. He owes the king 10,000 bags of gold.
Abigail Boone:That's insane.
Charlie Loften:Okay? If you were to do the math on it, and say based on how much inflation and cost of gold, everything, we're talking about billions of dollars.
Abigail Boone:Yeah, that's not a debt you can
Charlie Loften:And so not come out only would it be impossible for a servant to
Abigail Boone:Amass that debt.
Charlie Loften:Amass that much debt, he could not spend that much. There was not a king alive at the time that Jesus told this story
Abigail Boone:Oh, that even had that much.
Charlie Loften:That would have had that much money to lend. You know, probably the wealthiest person in the world might have had half of that. Maybe in the entire Roman Empire, maybe the Roman government, not Caesar himself, but the entire government, they would have had that much, but they certainly would not have lent a third of the entire value of the entire kingdom to one person. I mean, at some point, two bags of gold in. That's a lot.
Charlie Loften:Be like, okay, we're Yeah, Liability. We're done. We're done here. It would have been impossible for him to spend that much, to lose that much, it would have been impossible for him have borrowed that much, because no one had that amount of money to borrow. And wouldn't it be kind of weird for
Abigail Boone:a king to loan money to a servant?
Charlie Loften:Nothing about this story makes sense. Right, you can imagine, like in the normal Parable of the Talents, know, we go, hey, I'm going to give you these bags of gold, and I expect you to do something from it. So it's like, hey, I've got this investment idea, I'm going to borrow this money for you, and I'm going to build this thing and turn it into an investment, and I'll be able to pay you back, And there's some things like that. I mean, I mean, people that are in my closest circle, I would give them some money for them to invest, either on my behalf or their own behalf, or some sort of venture together. It's a possibility.
Charlie Loften:But again, not to these degrees.
Abigail Boone:When
Charlie Loften:I teach this parable, I'll say it this way, and we'll get a laugh line, you know, where it's like, really, for purposes, what Jesus is saying is like, there's like, let's imagine this guy and he owes a king like a bazillion dollars. A kajillion.
Abigail Boone:Yeah.
Charlie Loften:It's a made up number. It's not a real number.
Abigail Boone:Okay.
Charlie Loften:I mean, billions upon billions
Abigail Boone:of But it would have then caught their attention because it's
Charlie Loften:The a hyper GDP of Multiple countries. Multiple nations, right? I mean it's like it's an incomprehensible number. It would not have even registered with them. Abigail, what would you do with a trillion dollars?
Charlie Loften:Like I don't even know how much that, I don't even know how much I that don't even know what I would buy a house? Okay, well now you spent $1,000,000 and now you have 999,000 more millions of dollars to We just can't even comprehend it. And so again, kind of like the story with the setup of the prodigal son, the setup is intentionally extreme. And so Jesus is communicating to Peter, let's just kind of talk about what you're worrying about whether or not, you you're worried about maybe being too gracious with someone.
Abigail Boone:Right, right.
Charlie Loften:So you're like a guy who owes a king an amount of money that the Roman Empire has, but no collection of any thousands of people would have this much money. You owe them an amount of money that you can imagine, like, in your brain, the whole world doesn't have this much money. That's the setup here. That's how much money you owe God. So we're already like, what?
Charlie Loften:Because I think, again, if you go from a kind of an Old Testament kind of mindset of the way the law works, I have a manageable amount of sin. Sure, I'm a sinner, but it is a manageable amount that through good works, a scapegoat or two, bull, a couple of turtledoves, and regular synagogue attendance, and clean living, God and I can be okay. I'm a sinner, sure, but a manageable amount. I understand I need God's forgiveness, but like a normal amount. Hey, no, bro, man.
Charlie Loften:Man, I got you. Yeah. It's like a guy and you went out to eat together and you're supposed to split the check and you forgot your wallet, and so I now owe you $20, I'll get you next time, my man, thanks for being a bro. And he says, Aimee, don't worry about it.
Abigail Boone:Oh,
Charlie Loften:sweet. That's where they're coming from. And he's like, imagine all the money in the world, and that's how much you owe God. And so we're already off to a weird start here as far as they're concerned. And then he forgives, which is wild, which, you just that you could even get that much debt, much less be forgiven, it's wild.
Charlie Loften:And then that same person, having been forgiven a debt of all the gold in the world, somebody comes up to him, and he owes him a 100 denarii, which is, I think of a denarius as one day's worth of wages. A minimum wage worker. Let's just say for our purposes,
Abigail Boone:Significantly different than
Charlie Loften:He works an eight hour shift, and he gets $10 an hour, $80 a day, one hundred days.
Abigail Boone:No, don't do that to me.
Charlie Loften:Or just think about like a of the annual salary of a regular person. So 10 to $20,000 a year, right? 10 to $20,000 is what we're talking about. Which, if there was somebody in your life that owed you $15,000 that's not a small amount of money.
Abigail Boone:More than I have.
Charlie Loften:It's not a small amount of money, right? But imagine you owe the government, or car loans, mortgages, everything, you owe a million dollars. And suddenly, somebody just pays off all of that debt. Now, I don't owe a million dollars anymore. Your payment on a million dollar loan was more than this $15,000 that this person owes
Abigail Boone:you. Even Yeah, with interest.
Charlie Loften:Yeah, and so now you were having to pay this debt that was tens of thousands of dollars a month, and this has been wiped clean. And so you have now saved countless amounts of money. Literally Now I come to you and say, hey, I know I still owe you $10,000 And you'd be like, oh, that's one that's like Drop of the bucket. That's like one mortgage payment, bro. Like, I'm good.
Charlie Loften:Good. I'm good. I'm great. I'm great. The best day of your life.
Charlie Loften:You know, if you win the lottery and you win $500,000,000 suddenly the fact that one of your siblings owes you $500 would be like Nothing. I just had the best day of my life. Your $500 doesn't even move the needle anymore. That's the idea here. It's not that it's an insignificant amount of money.
Abigail Boone:In comparison.
Charlie Loften:But relatively speaking, and so it really is an interesting thing that Jesus does here. He doesn't say, guy came up to him and he owed him two acorns. Right? I mean, it's a significant amount of money, but not in comparison. Billions of dollars compared to $15,000.
Charlie Loften:But I've just been forgiven billions, dollars 15,000 doesn't move the needle anymore. But it did move this guy's needle. And he was like,
Abigail Boone:I'm hold you over the fire.
Charlie Loften:Yeah, I'm gonna throw you in debtors prison. Which But is again
Abigail Boone:all of the stuff like that was very harsh. Like, I'm gonna torture him until he pay, or I guess that's at the end.
Charlie Loften:Yeah. Again, just think of like a debtors' prison, where it's like, this is where you go, and then they work in this prison, and they earn, you know, a denarius a month, but then they owe it to you. And so this guy can work this off in a hundred months, and in a hundred months his debt will be forgiven. Yeah. And so that was what should have happened to the first guy.
Charlie Loften:And again, another crazy thing about this story, he comes to the guy who owns 10,000 towns, billions of dollars, and said, don't worry, I'll pay you back. Like, how, bro?
Abigail Boone:Right. You're not any more capable than the other guy was able to pay it back.
Charlie Loften:I mean, you're an idiot. You've somehow managed to lose 10,000 talents. You're not going to be able to find 10,000 more.
Abigail Boone:Right.
Charlie Loften:And so the comparison is really stark, where it's like, okay, you owe a lot, this guy owes you something. It would have been significant, except that you have just been forgiven this amount. And so then the people find out about it. It's like, how did the king just got billions in that? What?
Charlie Loften:And they tell the king, he's like, I ain't trying to be a snitch, but that guy that you just forgave the billions, threw another dude in prison for 15,000. And the king is rightly outraged. I mean, come on, we've to have a little bit of pay it forward in you, don't you? I I could have done this to you on a magnitude of scale that you can't even comprehend, and you can't reserve any of that in light of how much I have forgiven you? And so Jesus' point here, if you have a real, full understanding of how much God has forgiven you, then even the biggest debts that normal people run up with against each other will seem insignificant by comparison.
Charlie Loften:And it will be a sign, it will be a sign as to whether or not you fully
Abigail Boone:understand How much you have.
Charlie Loften:How much you've been forgiven.
Abigail Boone:Yeah. But not just financially.
Charlie Loften:Well, yeah, it's a metaphor. Yeah. So the metaphor is all financial, but from God's, it's about sin from God's perspective, where it's like, yeah, mean, this is all the sin that you have committed, and God has forgiven you, and somebody else called you a name in middle school, and you're like, oh man, it's fine. Again, he's talking about more serious things where people can have really hurt you and you won't forgive them. And it is interesting here because I think about this a lot, because there's some, you know, I have some relationships that are not good.
Charlie Loften:But in this context, everybody is at least trying to repent. Know, this person's like, hey, please forgive me. Please forgive me this debt. And then he refuses. And so we have some, you know, people that really don't have the opportunity to forgive because they're not sorry.
Abigail Boone:But
Charlie Loften:you know, people who are legitimately sorry, you should always forgive them, not one time, not seven times, and certainly, whatever you take away from this, don't think that you're supposed to keep up with some tally sheet on Excel whether or not you've ever hit four ninety. Because the reality of it is, if you're in a close, intimate relationship with a family member, you're gonna hit four ninety. Have several people in my life, I'm sure, that are
Abigail Boone:Way beyond that.
Charlie Loften:Well over four ninety.
Abigail Boone:Yeah. So would you say the main point is how much Jesus forgives, or God forgives, or how much we should be forgiving?
Charlie Loften:Think the point is, is the answer to the question is how forgiving should I be? And the answer is, in light of how much you have been forgiven
Abigail Boone:You should be very forgiving.
Charlie Loften:You should always forgive. It would be literally impossible for everybody in the world to collect a debt against you larger than what you have been forgiven. Which is why that number is so large.
Abigail Boone:And you think their mind was like, you mean we've been that bad?
Charlie Loften:Yeah, I think, again, I don't think that people, I think it would have been shocking to hear Jesus describe the debt, the sin debt that people have against God to be said in such large terms, like the sin of the prodigal son in that story, or to think of it in terms of 10,000. Just get it. Abigail, how big a sinner are you? Oh, I'm pretty bad. I'm not the entire GDP of America sinner.
Charlie Loften:Yeah, I'm not this guy, I'm not this guy, I mean, it's not billions. It's not billions. But I got good theology, man. It's 100,000,
Abigail Boone:right? Yeah.
Charlie Loften:And yeah, so I think we think of it in terms of I've been forgiven a lot, but a manageable, comprehendible amount. And Jesus is like, no, you have been forgiven so much that it would be impossible for everyone else together to, this guy owes him $15,000, a 100 people could owe him $15,000 now we're at 1,500,000, and we're still not anywhere close to the billions of dollars of the debt that you have racked up. It's impossible for you to be so forgiving that God looks at it and is like, dang, bro, I don't know people could be that forgiving. You have experienced that much. And it wasn't because of anything that you did, or anything that you've particularly earned, it was free, and you didn't deserve it, and now go replicate that.
Charlie Loften:But I am sure that that servant walks out of there, having been forgiven billions of dollars, yeah, that's right, that's how important I am. I am so important that the king is willing to forgive me this insurmountable debt, and because I'm that important, I'm gonna choke you out until you give me the $15,000 that you owe me. And again, I think there is a certain amount of privileged thinking that we start to get into where it's like, yeah, I remember back when, when I was forgiven, but now I'm a Christian walking with God, and actually, because of that, that actually kind of makes me kind of great, makes me better than you, makes me important, and you doing something to me is actually kind of a big deal because I'm actually kind of a big deal.
Abigail Boone:Well, it's also, and I could be understanding this wrong, but it seems like he forgave him in a bankruptcy type way, not a I'll pay for you. Because that was so much money.
Charlie Loften:Well, is So
Abigail Boone:it's like he didn't even have really any pride to walk away with.
Charlie Loften:Well, yeah. Yeah. But again, you can convince yourself after the fact. You know, I lost all of this money that the king gave me, but he was willing to forgive me. Why?
Charlie Loften:Why would he forgive me? He needs me. I'm sorry, he needs you? What, to lose another And billion again, his story seems so ridiculous because of how quick the turnaround is, but it's real for us. Where it's like, oh, it may not be as immediate as this, but Christians walk around all the time acting like that their position with Jesus now entitles them to some sort of favored status out in the world.
Charlie Loften:Everything that you have is based on a generous, forgiving God, not based on anything that you did. In fact, everything that you did that led up to that was insanely stupid. Your claim to fame is that somehow you ran up an $8,000,000,000 debt. That's your claim to fame. And you don't get to say, well, you know what?
Charlie Loften:I'm the worst money manager in the world, and God forgave me, therefore treat me with some respect, please.
Abigail Boone:Actually was thinking that if that happened modern days, it would be, like, probably an article written about it.
Charlie Loften:Yeah.
Abigail Boone:Like, this is insane.
Charlie Loften:Dave Ramsey.
Abigail Boone:Yeah. But it is interesting to think of, like Jesus is telling this to Peter, not just like the what he's teaching his disciples how he wants them to live. And if that is like really applied, how different would a lot of our relationships be. Right. That we do.
Abigail Boone:It is true what you're saying of like we do find ourselves like this prideful. I'm owed something or can't do that too many times to me, but like how different would it be if we were generous with forgiveness?
Charlie Loften:Yeah, especially, again, when you think that your status as a Christian is what makes you better than someone else. Your status as a Christian is that you have some measured awareness of what a sinner you actually are. And so if you really are trading on that status, I'm a Christian. What Jesus is saying is, okay, well then you understand forgiveness in a way that other people don't. And so therefore you should be more forgiving, not you have some privileged spot with God because you are favored from Him in some way, which again, would've been a very Old Testament Jewish mindset.
Abigail Boone:So do you think the disciples had some Pharisee tendencies?
Charlie Loften:Well, that's who was teaching the law everybody.
Abigail Boone:And
Charlie Loften:so every, I mean, the Pharisees were the biggest example of kind of a works based theology, but they would've caught some of it. They were certainly catching strays from that, and would've believed that their position with respect to God gave them a privileged status more than a humble status of like, actually, because I am favored with God, it is really based on the fact that I am more keenly aware of how desperate I am for God's grace, and therefore then more willing to pass it on. And so he's turning that on its head. You think this status that you have of connection with God gives you great privilege out there, but it should really make you the most humble, forgiving people out there.
Abigail Boone:It's really walking away with humility.
Charlie Loften:And you should not think of Tally card. Yeah. That somebody, well, that a sin against me is that big of a deal. Yeah. And again, and Jesus does a really artful job with this, it's a significant amount of money.
Abigail Boone:Right, with the second surgery, Yeah,
Charlie Loften:it's significant. Not nothing. And by itself, imagine if someone came up to you and they owed you $15,000, like, okay, you should You're forgive like, Should
Abigail Boone:I though?
Charlie Loften:Should I? Mean, that's a lot of money. Yeah. But it is not a lot of money in comparison to the thing that you should already know. So Peter, you're saying, should I forgive somebody $15,000 How many times should I forgive somebody $15,000 Seven times?
Charlie Loften:He's like, well, once it hits 8,000,000,000, now we can start having a conversation. But it's not ever gonna hit that, so you should just And keep always again, I wanna be careful with this because people have crazy wild stories out there of people who are doing them real harm and real damage and things like that. I mean, this is all in the context of someone who is repentant.
Abigail Boone:Right.
Charlie Loften:And forgiving somebody doesn't mean you bring them back into your home. I mean, always feel like I need to give just a small number of disclaimers when we start talking about what feels like forgiveness, absolute forgiveness, under any circumstances, doesn't mean the person is asking for forgiveness, and also, yeah, I do need to protect myself and my children, so we're gonna still keep you outside that, I forgive you.
Abigail Boone:But you're doing like the heart The
Charlie Loften:heart forgiveness.
Abigail Boone:It's almost like people equating other things that really God's asking you to have a posture of, a heart posture towards these people of
Charlie Loften:not I just feel like I always need to put asterisk, ask me about toxic, harmful relationships, and what forgiveness looks like in that context. But again, we're just talking about every day normal, I've hurt you, should you forgive me, yes. Should I forgive you, yes, but in light of what Jesus has already done.
Abigail Boone:So,
Charlie Loften:all right. You know what's next? Good Samaritan.
Abigail Boone:Oh, that one, I don't really know much about that one.
Charlie Loften:All right. It's easily top two of kind of like most well known.
Abigail Boone:Which is fine. Know more about it for sure.
Charlie Loften:Well, I mean, you up in a context spiritually where you're probably more familiar with things like Parable of the Talents, the ones where the point is like, you need to work harder. Yes.
Abigail Boone:I know on that one very well. I've shared it many a time.
Charlie Loften:Few of these have been about you need to work harder. Maybe we need to go ahead and skip the Parable of
Abigail Boone:the Talents. Oh, I'm interested. All right.
Charlie Loften:Thank you guys for joining us. As always, you, Bagel, for joining us. I encourage you to go to our website, thegrovechurch.org/connect, find out everything you need to know about our church, our services on Sunday, better ways to connect, send us questions, all that sort of stuff. And join us next time as we continue our series of parables, look at the Good Samaritan, and see you then. Thank you for listening to the Cultivate Podcast.
Charlie Loften:Our hope is that you are taking steps to go deeper in your faith, that you are asking big questions, and you're looking for answers. We hope that we can be a resource for you through our podcast and any other way that we can help you. You can find all our episodes anywhere that you can find podcasts, including YouTube. And, again, thank you so much for joining us.
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