In Matthew 6:14-15 Jesus teaches that if we do not forgive men their sins against us God will not forgive our sins against Him.
At first I had a difficult time reconciling this truth (I say “truth” because it stands independent of whether or not I understand or reconcile it because it is the word of God). But upon reflection and study I have come to, I think, a better understanding.
In Matthew 18 Jesus teaches using a parable. A king wanted to settle his accounts. A servant begged for forgiveness and the master forgave the servant’s debt. But upon returning home the servant demanded a lesser debt owed to him be settled in full, refusing to forgive the man. When the king heard of this he confronted the servant, calling him wicked. In his anger the master handed this wicked servant over to be tortured until the servant should pay back all that he had owed.
The king gave forgiveness, but in the end forgiveness was withheld because the servant refused to forgive others. In other words, the debt was forgiven but this forgiveness was dependent on the character (or perhaps change in character) of the man. He proved to be wicked and unaffected by the grace the king extended to him. And he was, ultimately, without forgiveness and condemned.
Our debts are settled “on that day” or at Judgment, I think. Our salvation now looks to our salvation “on that day”. Perhaps there are people who have had an experience they equate to salvation but “on that day” may not actually be saved from Judgment. Maybe these are those who, I believe, Jesus spoke of in Matthew 7.
How do you reconcile the truth that those who do not forgive other people will not be forgiven by God?
At first I had a difficult time reconciling this truth (I say “truth” because it stands independent of whether or not I understand or reconcile it because it is the word of God). But upon reflection and study I have come to, I think, a better understanding.
In Matthew 18 Jesus teaches using a parable. A king wanted to settle his accounts. A servant begged for forgiveness and the master forgave the servant’s debt. But upon returning home the servant demanded a lesser debt owed to him be settled in full, refusing to forgive the man. When the king heard of this he confronted the servant, calling him wicked. In his anger the master handed this wicked servant over to be tortured until the servant should pay back all that he had owed.
The king gave forgiveness, but in the end forgiveness was withheld because the servant refused to forgive others. In other words, the debt was forgiven but this forgiveness was dependent on the character (or perhaps change in character) of the man. He proved to be wicked and unaffected by the grace the king extended to him. And he was, ultimately, without forgiveness and condemned.
Our debts are settled “on that day” or at Judgment, I think. Our salvation now looks to our salvation “on that day”. Perhaps there are people who have had an experience they equate to salvation but “on that day” may not actually be saved from Judgment. Maybe these are those who, I believe, Jesus spoke of in Matthew 7.
How do you reconcile the truth that those who do not forgive other people will not be forgiven by God?