
I can relate to the Parable of the Unmerciful Servant. Like that servant, I’ve acknowledged my poverty to a holy King and willingly accepted His pardon, but too often my attitude says, Because God made me and loves me so much, He’d do anything to have me back. Redemption is a right I claim. (Sometimes it’s like I’ve done Him a favor and allowed Him to save me.)
I have not grasped what mankind initially owed nor how much was the ransom paid nor what it cost the King. I have so little concept of the debt He cancelled. So is it any wonder if I struggle to forgive my brother or sister?
How much did we owe, anyway? What kind of debt was cancelled?
• The earth – that place of beauty of which the Creator said “It is good” - was trashed. Sin entered. Decay spread. Death reigned.
• Man and Woman – who alone were made in God’s image – were disfigured and shamed and polluted, stripped of their original dignity and glory, and doomed to eternal separation from God.
• The heart of God was so anguished He was sorry He had ever made us.
• The Son of God, the Glorious One of heaven, stepped into the tragedy, disguised in human flesh, and endured our disbelief and abuse and rejection.
• He died under the immeasurable weight of every sin ever committed, as God laid His hand upon the Scapegoat of the human race, and sent Him into the wilderness of death alone, bearing our sin.
Bearing my sin. My debt – mine alone. For such a tremendous price would have been exacted even if I been the only one needing rescued. It would still have meant an earthly life and an ugly death and agonizing separation from the Father. So there’s no sense shifting any of it onto any other sinner in the world. I was enough to cause it all.
So can I forgive the one who has wronged me terribly and repeatedly? In the words of missionary Amy Carmichael, “Count the cost. But when you do, take your figures to the foot of the cross and tally them there.” I must go and sit at the foot of the cross as I ponder the question. I must let the blood of Christ trickle down over my calculations. Let just a tiny fraction of the weight of sin He bore press on my heart. Let the jeers sound faintly in my ear. If I dare, for a nanosecond, I can even try to imagine what it felt like to be utterly rejected by the Father. Then I can compare the cost of forgiving my brother…
To be honest, the foot of the cross gives the matter a whole new perspective. From that vantage point, I feel like looking around my world for somebody, anybody, to forgive, and forgive again and again and again in response to God’s payment of my debt. It would still require His supernatural grace, but He promises to give it.
What better way to show my grasp of His grace and my gratitude for His mercy than to assure my fellow man, “Your debt to me? Paid in full.”