Unforgiving Servant
Matthew 18:23–35
Opening: A
Mountain Forgiven, A Pebble Owed
Peter asked, “How often shall my brother sin against me, and I
forgive him?” Jesus answered with a number that refuses to keep
count and then told a kingdom story. A king settled accounts. One
servant owed a sum beyond a lifetime’s power to repay—ten thousand
talents. The king listened to a plea for patience and released the
debt. That same servant then found a fellow servant who owed about a
hundred denarii and throttled him for payment. News reached the
king; justice fell. Jesus closed with a sentence that lands on the
conscience: “So My heavenly Father also will do to you if each of
you, from his heart, does not forgive his brother his trespasses.”
The king’s mercy sets the pattern. The forgiven become forgivers.
The Numbers
Preach
Jesus chose figures that teach without footnotes. Ten thousand
talents tower like a mountain; a hundred denarii sit in the hand.
The gap is the point. No neighbor will ever owe me more than I owed
in the court of heaven. My ledger toward God carried a debt I could
never settle. The king in the parable wiped it clean. When I seize a
peer over a small account, I deny the record that was erased for me.
The King’s
Face in the Story
The king pictures Jesus, the One with authority to settle all
accounts. He receives pleas for mercy and cancels what cannot be
repaid. Scripture speaks this way: “Forgive us our debts” (Matthew
6:12). The gospel announces remission of sins by the blood of the
covenant (Matthew 26:28). God “forgave you all trespasses, having
wiped out the handwriting of requirements that was against us” and
“taken it out of the way” at the cross (Colossians 2:13–14). The
parable places that truth before our eyes. A servant stands before a
king; the king removes an impossible weight. Every refusal to
forgive a brother disregards that scene.
Obedience
According to the Lord’s Pattern
Jesus ties entrance into the kingdom to submission: “He who does the
will of My Father” (Matthew 7:21). Hebrews says He is “the author of
eternal salvation to all who obey Him” (Hebrews 5:9). Forgiving a
brother is not optional counsel; it is the will of the King. He
requires forgiveness “from the heart” (Matthew 18:35). Words without
release do not meet that standard. The Lord looks for a will that
lets go of personal vengeance and seeks a brother’s good.
Context:
Family Life in the Kingdom
Matthew 18 describes life together among disciples. Jesus warns
against despising “little ones,” pictures the shepherd who pursues a
stray, and lays out the steps for addressing sin between
brethren—private conversation, witnesses if needed, and
congregational involvement when a heart refuses correction (Matthew
18:1–20). The parable does not erase accountability; it governs the
spirit of it. We correct with a forgiving disposition. We pursue
restoration while we refuse the chokehold of personal revenge.
The
Servant’s Failure—And What It Reveals
The first servant begged; the king released. The same servant
grabbed; the fellow servant begged; the plea was rejected. The king
called that choice wicked because it ignored mercy received. The
gospel exposes the same drift in us. When injury comes, memory
shortens. We recount what others owe and forget what was erased for
us. Jesus’ story restores perspective: no one’s debt to me surpasses
my debt to Him.
Practicing
Forgiveness in Real Time
Forgiveness releases a personal claim to collect. It refuses to
rehearse the wrong to injure. It prays for the offender and seeks
reconciliation by the Lord’s pattern (Matthew 18:15–17). It keeps
the circle small and the goal clear—win your brother. It acts
promptly; delay hardens the will. When trust has been damaged,
forgiveness opens the door and then walks through it with wise steps
and time. Throughout, the servant’s logic guides the heart: the
mountain was removed; this pebble will not be kept.
Warnings We
Must Hear
Jesus describes the end of the unforgiving servant with severe
language: delivered to the jailers “until he should pay all that was
due” (Matthew 18:34). That day never comes. The picture communicates
misery that follows a hard heart. The Lord’s warning—“so will My
heavenly Father do to you”—removes every excuse. He has already
spoken elsewhere with equal clarity: “If you do not forgive men
their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses”
(Matthew 6:15). The King’s mercy remains our hope; the King’s
command remains our duty.
Conclusion:
Remember Your Ledger and Settle Accounts Today
The king in Jesus’ story settled accounts. He still does. Some of us
need to plead for mercy. Some need to release a brother or sister
from a personal debt. Some need to take the first step toward
reconciliation. The mountain has been removed. Do not keep the
pebble.
Exhaustive
Sermon Outline
-
Opening: A Mountain Forgiven, A Pebble Owed
-
Peter’s
question and Jesus’ answer (Matthew 18:21–22)
-
Kingdom
story summarized (Matthew 18:23–35)
-
Thesis:
The forgiven become forgivers
-
The
Numbers Preach
-
The
King’s Face in the Story
-
The king
as a picture of Jesus’ authority to cancel debts
-
Debt
language in Scripture: Matthew 6:12; Matthew 26:28;
Colossians 2:13–14
-
Refusing
forgiveness disregards the cancelation we received
-
Obedience According to the Lord’s Pattern
-
Matthew
7:21—doing the Father’s will
-
Hebrews
5:9—eternal salvation and obedience
-
“From
the heart” as the required depth of forgiveness (Matthew
18:35)
-
Context: Family Life in the Kingdom (Matthew 18:1–20)
-
Value of
the “little ones”
-
Pursuit
of the stray
-
Brother-to-brother process (vv. 15–17)
-
Forgiving disposition within faithful correction
-
The
Servant’s Failure
-
Mercy
received, mercy refused
-
The
king’s verdict: “Wicked servant” (Matthew 18:32)
-
The
moral: never forget what was erased for you
-
Practicing Forgiveness in Real Time
-
Release
personal claims; stop rehearsing the injury (Romans 12:19;
Proverbs 10:12)
-
Pray for
the offender; pursue reconciliation (Matthew 5:44; 18:15–17)
-
Keep the
circle small; act promptly (Mark 11:25; Hebrews 3:13)
-
Rebuild
trust with wise steps and time (Philemon 17–21)
-
Warnings We Must Hear
-
Conclusion: Remember Your Ledger
Call to
Action
Write two names. First, the person you need to forgive; second, the
person you need to ask for forgiveness. Pray honestly about each.
Release the personal debt you hold. Go to your brother or sister
this week, following Matthew 18:15. Speak plainly and kindly. Let
the mountain that was removed for you decide what you do with the
pebble.
Scripture
Reference List
-
Matthew
18:21–35 — Full parable, “from the heart,” king’s verdict
-
Matthew
18:1–20 — Value of brethren, pursuit, restoration pattern
-
Matthew 7:21
— Doing the Father’s will and entrance into the kingdom
-
Hebrews 5:9
— Eternal salvation and obedience
-
Matthew
6:12, 14–15 — Forgive our debts; the link between forgiving and
being forgiven
-
Matthew
26:28 — Blood of the covenant for remission of sins
-
Colossians
2:13–14 — Record of debt removed at the cross
-
Romans 12:19
— Leave room for the wrath of God; refuse personal vengeance
-
Proverbs
10:12 — Love covers offenses
-
Matthew 5:44
— Pray for those who wrong you
-
Matthew
18:15–17 — Steps toward reconciliation
-
Mark 11:25 —
Forgive when you pray
-
Hebrews 3:13
— Exhort one another; beware hardening
-
Philemon
17–21 — Receive a brother; rebuild fellowship
Prepared by David Hersey of the church of Christ at
Granby, MO |