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5. The
Limit of Forgiveness.
“Then came Peter and said unto Him, Lord, how
often shall my brother sin against me and I forgive
him?”6071 The
conception that these things were said in a simple sense by Peter, as
if he were inquiring whether he was to forgive his brother when he
sinned against him seven times, but no longer if he sinned an eighth
time, and by the Saviour, as if He thought that one should sit still
and reckon up the sins of his neighbours against him in order that he
might forgive seventy times and seven, but that from the seventy-eighth
he should not forgive the man who wronged him, seems to me altogether
silly and unworthy alike of the progress which Peter had made in the
company of Jesus and of the divine magnanimity of Jesus. Perhaps,
then, these things also border on an obscurity akin to the words,
“Hear My voice, ye wives of
Lamech,”6072 etc. If any
one has already become a friend of Jesus so as to be taught by His
spirit which illumines the reason of him who has advanced so far
according to his desert, he might know the true meaning, therefore, in
regard to these things, and such as Jesus Himself would have clearly
expounded it; but we who fall short of the greatness of the friendship
of Jesus must be content if we can babble a little about the
passage. The number six, then, appears to be working and
toilsome, but the number seven to contain the idea of repose. And
consider if you can say that he, who loves the world and works the
things of the world, and does those things which are material, sins six
times, and that the number seven is the end of sin in his case, so that
Peter with some such thought in his mind wished to pardon seven sins of
those which his brother had committed against him. But since as
units the tens and the hundreds have a certain common measure of
proportion to the number which is in units, and Jesus knew that the
number might be exceeded, on this account, I think, that He added to
the number seven also the seventy,6073 and said that
there ought to be forgiveness to brethren here, and to them who have
sinned in respect to things here. But if any one going beyond the
things about the world and this age were to commit sin, even if it were
trifling, he could not longer reasonably have forgiveness of sins; for
forgiveness extends to the things here, and in relation to the sins
committed here, whether the forgiveness comes late or soon; but there
is no forgiveness, not even to a brother, who has sinned beyond the
seven and seventy times. But you might say that he who has sinned
in such wise, whether as against Peter his brother, or as against
Peter, against whom the gates of Hades do not prevail, is by sins of
this kind in the smaller number of the sin, but according to sins still
worse is in the number which has no forgiveness of sins.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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