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Favell Lee Mortimer

Matthew 18:21 to End. the Parable of the Unforgiving Servant.

The sermon emphasizes the importance of forgiveness, highlighting the immense disparity between our debt to God and man's to us, and encouraging listeners to pray for a sense of God's forgiving love.
Favell Lee Mortimer emphasizes the importance of forgiveness by comparing the ungrateful servant in the parable to the unforgiving sinner, highlighting the immense debt we owe to God compared to any debt others may owe us. The sermon underscores the need to reflect on the frequency and magnitude of our offenses against God, who continues to offer reconciliation despite our continuous sins. It challenges listeners to consider their own faults in conflicts and to seek the assurance of God's forgiving love, enabling them to forgive others as Christ forgave them.

Text

How odious that servant appears, who after having received such exceeding benefits from his Lord, went out, and acted with such rigor towards his fellow-servant! Yet that unfeeling servant affords but a faint picture of the unforgiving sinner. For what was the obligation that he had received, compared to that under which we lie to God! His Lord had forgiven him a debt of ten thousand talents; but we are not informed, that in order to do this, his Lord had made any painful sacrifice. But before our Lord could forgive us, He was constrained by his own holiness to find an atonement for our sins, and that atonement was the blood of his Son. Now if after having received this gift, we should go forth, and willingly retain any unkind feeling against those who have done us wrong, how great would be our guilt!

We should also remember how infinitely greater the debt is that we owe to God, than any debt our fellow-creatures can owe to us. In the parable the disproportion is immense; two millions of pounds in the one case, and three pounds in the other; (according to the calculations of some;) but there is a still greater disparity between our debt to God, and man's to us.

Consider these two circumstances, which most aggravate offences. The repeating of them often, and after having received great benefits. Have not our offences against God these two aggravations in an eminent degree? Who can have provoked us so OFTEN as we have provoked God? from our birth until this moment, we have not ceased to sin against him in thought, word, and deed; and yet he is still willing to be reconciled to us. Who can have received such benefits from us, as we have received from God--not only temporal blessings, but the offer of everlasting life, and the gift of his Son!

If we had a more just idea of the nature and extent of our transgressions against him, we should be ashamed of thinking of the sins of men against us. Indeed, perhaps, in our quarrels, we may be most in fault, and may really owe more than is owed to us; or though we may have been ungratefully treated by one, we ourselves may have ungratefully treated some other person, so that on the whole nothing may be owing to us. How it would quiet the tumult of our passions, if, when disposed to think of the injuries we have received from our fellows, we were to turn our attention to the insults we have offered to God!

But perhaps we do not feel that God has forgiven these insults. Perhaps we are still troubled by the dread of his anger for our past transgressions. Nothing would soften our hearts so much, as a sense of his forgiving love. Let us pray for this blessed assurance. Then we shall feel the force of the apostle's command, "Forbearing one another and forgiving one another, if any man have a quarrel against any--even as Christ forgave you, so also do you."

Sermon Outline

  1. I. The Unforgiving Servant
  2. A. The servant's debt of 10,000 talents
  3. B. The servant's refusal to forgive his fellow-servant
  4. II. Our Debt to God
  5. A. The immense disparity between our debt to God and man's to us
  6. B. The aggravating factors of repeated offences and receiving great benefits
  7. III. Our Sins Against God
  8. A. The frequency and severity of our transgressions
  9. B. The benefits we have received from God
  10. IV. The Importance of Forgiveness
  11. A. The apostle's command to forgive one another
  12. B. The need for a sense of God's forgiving love

Key Quotes

“How odious that servant appears, who after having received such exceeding benefits from his Lord, went out, and acted with such rigor towards his fellow-servant!” — Favell Lee Mortimer
“If we had a more just idea of the nature and extent of our transgressions against him, we should be ashamed of thinking of the sins of men against us.” — Favell Lee Mortimer
“Nothing would soften our hearts so much, as a sense of his forgiving love.” — Favell Lee Mortimer

Application Points

  • We should be more concerned with our sins against God than with the sins of men against us.
  • Praying for a sense of God's forgiving love can help us quiet the tumult of our passions and feel the force of the apostle's command to forgive.
  • Remembering the benefits we have received from God should motivate us to forgive others in the same way.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main point of the parable of the unforgiving servant?
The parable highlights the importance of forgiveness and the immense disparity between our debt to God and man's to us.
Why should we be more concerned with our sins against God than with the sins of men against us?
Because our sins against God are more frequent and severe, and we have received greater benefits from Him.
How can we quiet the tumult of our passions and feel the force of the apostle's command to forgive?
By praying for a sense of God's forgiving love and remembering the benefits we have received from Him.
What is the relationship between our debt to God and our ability to forgive others?
Our debt to God is a reminder of the immense forgiveness we have received from Him, which should motivate us to forgive others in the same way.

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