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Pastor Chris White says to all of you: HELLO MY FRIENDS. May the Lord bless you today.
HOLA MIS AMIGOS. Que el Señor los bendiga.
Jesus said we are to forgive others “seventy times seven” in
response to Peter’s question, “Lord, how many times shall I forgive my brother
when he sins against me? Up to seven times?” (Matthew 18:21-22). To fully understand what
Jesus was saying, we must look at the context of the whole chapter, for Jesus
was speaking not only about forgiving one another but about Christian
character, both in and out of the church. The admonition to forgive our brother
seventy times seven follows Jesus’ discourse on discipline in the church (Matthew 18:15-20), in which He lays down the
rules for restoring a sinning brother.
Peter, wishing to appear especially forgiving and benevolent, asked Jesus if
forgiveness was to be offered seven times. The Jewish rabbis at the time taught
that forgiving someone more than three times was unnecessary, citing Amos 1:3-13 where God forgave Israel’s enemies
three times, then punished them. By offering forgiveness more than double that
of the Old Testament example, Peter perhaps expected extra commendation from
the Lord. When Jesus responded that forgiveness should be offered four hundred
and ninety times, far beyond that which Peter was proposing, it must have
stunned the disciples who were listening. Although they had been with Jesus for
some time, they were still thinking in the limited terms of the law, rather
than in the unlimited terms of grace.
By saying we are to forgive those who sin against us seventy times seven, Jesus
was not limiting forgiveness to 490 times, a number that is, for all practical
purposes, beyond counting. Christians with forgiving hearts not only do not
limit the number of times they forgive; they continue to forgive with as much
grace the thousandth time as they do the first time. Christians are only
capable of this type of forgiving spirit because the Spirit of God lives within
us, and it is He who provides the ability to offer forgiveness over and over,
just as God forgives us over and over.
Jesus’ parable of the unforgiving servant follows
directly after His “seventy times seven” speech, driving home the point that if
we are forgiven the enormous debt of sin against a holy God, how much more
should we be eager to forgive those who sin against us, who are just as sinful
as they? Paul parallels this example in Ephesians 4:32 where he admonishes us to
forgive one another “even as God for Christ’s sake has forgiven you.” Clearly,
forgiveness is not to be meted out in a limited fashion but is to be abundant,
overflowing, and available to all, just as the measureless grace of God is
poured out upon us.
Thank you to Got Questions. Copyright 2002-2019
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