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Matthew 18:15-20                                    

 

thumbnail -These are not rules for personal relationships-marriage, family, etc.-but rules that ensure stability and health in congregational life. Verses 6-14 seem to address the concern for “seekers” or marginal adherents-those in danger of falling off and away from the Christian flock. Verses 15-20 now move in much more dangerous territory -those who are guilty of serious sin and yet resist repentance. [1]

NIB-

Matthew’s community orientation and our individualistic one come into sharp conflict. Matthew offers a solution to something we hardly perceive as a problem, since we are inclined to see our sin as a matter between ourselves and God, or, at most, between ourselves and the person who has wronged us. That it is a matter of the Christian congregation to which we belong, and may damage its life, comes as a surprise to both us and them, if they are as individualistic as we are. Whatever we think of the solution Matthew offers, we might first ponder the nature of the Christian life it presupposes. A doctrine of the church as the people of God is here presupposed. To be Christian is to be bound together in community; to pray is to say “our Father,” even in the privacy of our own room (Matt. 6:6, 9). [2]

 

What things did you and your siblings argue about? [3]

  • What does this passage say about the importance of counsel through others? Of accountability to a trusted few?
  • How does this teaching compare with what Jesus said about offenses in the Sermon on the mount-about not judging others (Matthew 7:3-5)?

 

A homily on this passage is posted on DPS for this Sunday: “What Jesus Taught About Forgiveness, Part I.

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[1] New Interpreter’s Bible VIII (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1995), page 378. 
[2] New Interpreter’s Bible VIII (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1995), page 380. 
[3] Adapted from Serendipity Bible (Zondervan, rpt. 1998), page 1354.