As We Forgive:
Year A, Proper 19
Exodus 14:19-31; Exodus 15:1b-11,
20-21; Genesis 50:15-21; Psalm 114; Psalm 103; Romans 14:1-12; Matthew
18:21-35
A conventional pass through the readings for this Sunday leads us to a
vision of retributive judgment against the enemies of God: As Moses and
the multitude of Israelites cross the Red Sea, God protects those who
have signed on to the Covenant. The Elves tell us the
alternative Old Testament reading (Genesis 50:15-21) is closely related
to the Gospel reading. Joseph forgives his dastardly brothers,
who sold him into slavery in Egypt. Sure enough in Matthew
18:21-22, Peter’s question about how much forgiveness is enough is
paired with the parable of the unforgiving slave, instead of with last week’s admonitions about
how to deal with recalcitrant members of the community. Matthew’s
Jesus threatens divine punishment of those followers who fail to
forgive their friends and neighbors who might owe them a debt of money,
gratitude, respect, or other payment for wrongdoing. Paul seems
to agree, as he cautions the faithful not to judge one another, but to
leave judgment to God. “We do not live to ourselves,” Paul
pontificates. “[W]hether we live or whether we die, we are the
Lord’s.”
The Jesus Seminar commentators
in The Five Gospels
(p. 218), make a distinction between a parable, which has a single
point, and an allegory, which “is coded theology.” By putting the
story of the unforgiving slave in the context of how much forgiveness
is required for salvation, Matthew turns the authentic Jesus’s parable
into allegory. In other words, instead of a parable with a
confounding ending that causes the hearers to wonder what the trick is,
Matthew’s Jesus hits us over the head with piety: “That’s what my
heavenly Father will do to you, unless you find it in your heart to
forgive each one of your brothers and sisters.” Taking that point
to its logical conclusion, given the juxtaposition of this reading with
Genesis, even Joseph, who suffered the ultimate betrayal and was sold
into slavery, was able to forgive all his brothers. Surely
Christians – who have overthrown all that Old Testament tribalism – can
do as well, if not better than that.
Matthew’s interpretation of Jesus’s parable paints God as requiring
retributive judgment. But Paul writes 50 years after the death of
Jesus, “Why do you pass judgment on your brother or sister? . . . each
of us will be accountable to God.” Being accountable to one’s
“lord” is not the same as being judged less than moral by one’s
neighbors. Paul suggests that people may have been inviting
others to join the Christian community in Rome as a set-up, or as Paul
puts it, “for the purpose of quarreling over opinions.” Dietary
customs (“The weak eat only vegetables”) are not usually fighting
offenses in the post-modern world. Instead, the clash of opinions
about gun ownership, reproductive choice, homosexuality, and theories
about social and economic conditions has prompted deadly attacks on
churches and communities from both the left and the right. In
such a polarized environment, judgment wins the day, as complex thought
is reduced to bumper sticker code that appeals to fear.
Accountability is left for dead.
Paul’s point is that judging others is a waste of time and energy
because each of us is ultimately accountable to God. But to whom
or what are we accountable in a post-Christian, non-theistic
world? When the parable of the unforgiving slave is reduced to
the bare bones of the story itself, when Matthew’s opinion about God’s
avenging judgment is removed, we find that the slave for whom a vast
debt was forgiven is held accountable not to his master, but to his own
integrity.
Because Matthew is the only one who tells this particular parable, it
is perhaps unfair to have it stand alone without Matthew’s
commentary. But the Jesus Seminar scholars thought that the story
alone was the kind of story that Jesus liked to tell. So here we
are, around the camp fire. We come in a bit late, so don’t hear
what prompted Jesus to start the story the way he did. . . .
“Now I’ll tell you why God’s realm is like a land owner who decided to
settle accounts with his slaves,” Jesus says. He finishes off his
last bite of fish, and licks his fingers. Mary Magdalene tucks a
loaf of bread into the coals to warm, uncorks the wineskin, and starts
it on its rounds. Andrew throws another log on the fire.
Somebody hushes a child and points at Jesus.
“So the first account he looks at, the slave owes him $10 million.”
“10 million!” “No way!” “No wonder the guy needed to close
his accounts.” “This crook ripped off his entire estate!”
Jesus goes on: “Obviously, he couldn’t pay it back, so the land owner
ordered him to be sold, along with his wife and children and everything
he had.” Jesus looks around at the company. “Sort of like
you and Zach, Hannah.” Hannah hugs the child, and Zach shivers
and wraps his arms around his knees.
“Anyway, the slave begs forgiveness, reminds the land owner what an
excellent steward he has been in other ways, and promises he will pay
it all back.” Jesus pauses for a moment. We are all
expecting the worst for the slave for his impertinence: jail,
torture, exile – but then Jesus says, “This land owner was
compassionate. This master let that slave go and canceled the
debt.”
It’s a joke. Several people start laughing. But Jesus isn’t
finished with the story.
“Wait,” he says, “There’s more. As soon as the slave got out of
there, he jumped one of his fellow slaves who owed him $100 and
demanded payment immediately. Well of course the guy begged for
mercy, but the slave wasn’t interested. Instead, he threw the guy
in prison until he paid the debt. When the rest of the slaves
realized what had happened, they complained to the land owner.”
“Why? The slave was within his rights,” says Judas.
“The land owner called the slave back and rescinded the agreement, and
threw the slave into jail to be tortured until he could repay it all.”
Silence. A twig snaps in the fire. Jesus pulls the warm
loaf of bread out of the coals. He breaks the bread into two
pieces, and lifts it up in his hands. Then he closes his eyes and
says, “Abba, may your name be
praised. You provide us with the bread we need for
the day.” Jesus passes the bread to the people on either side of
him. “Forgive us our debts to the extent that we have forgiven
those in debt to us.”
In the stripped down parable, the subject matter is clearly economic
debt – a life or death fact in the 1st Century. The followers of
Jesus presumably were the debtors, not the ones to whom debt was owed,
hence the conundrum and the open meaning. What debt do we
forgive, if no debt is owed to us? Debt is concerned with either
the past or the future, never the present moment, which is all that
matters in God’s realm. In God’s realm of distributive
justice-compassion, where bread for the day is provided, where rain
falls on the just and the unjust, debt has no power.
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