Matthew 18:21-35
Absurd Love – Absurd Community
James Sledge September
17, 2017
The
problem of needing to know more about a scripture passage’s context in order to
understand it has showed up so frequently of late that I wonder if we don’t
need a Bible version of that real estate adage, “What are the three most
important things in real estate? Location, location, location.” Except our
answer would be “Context, context, context.”
Take
today’s reading. It’s not a stand-alone parable. Our verses are the final
lesson in a larger set of teachings, the last big teaching moment Jesus has
with his disciples prior to Jerusalem and the cross. That says something about
their importance. And because Matthew uses private moments with the disciples for
Jesus to speak directly to the Church, that says something about how important
these words are for us.
There
is an interesting ebb and flow in these teachings. They start with Jesus saying
that we must become like children to be part of God’s kingdom, that those who
are humble like a child are called greatest in the kingdom. Jesus then shifts
from actual children to “little ones,” a phrase that speaks of those new to
faith. Here the emphasis is about how terrible it is to cause a little one to
stumble, and about the great lengths we must be willing to go to avoid
stumbling ourselves. Jesus goes on to say how important these “little ones” are
to God, telling the parable of a shepherd who leaves the ninety-nine sheep to
find the single lost one.
Jesus
then shifts gears, insisting that this community also be a place that holds its
members accountable. He lays out a method for confronting those who sin. Meet
privately first. If that doesn’t work, a few members should speak to the
person. If that fails the entire congregation gets involved, and finally, the
offender is to be cast out.
It
is in this context of holding community members accountable that Peter speaks
in our reading this morning. Quite likely Peter is thinking of the elaborate
process Jesus has described of confronting offenders alone, then with a few
members, then before the congregation. Perhaps Peter has in mind some difficult
folks he worries will abuse this process. They’ll cause trouble and resist
correction until they’re on the verge of being thrown out. But later they’ll go
back to their old ways, and the process would start over again. Surely there
have to be some limits to this. “Is seven times enough, Jesus?”