The Bible Recap - Day 295 (Matthew 18) - Year 7
Episode Date: October 22, 2025FROM TODAY’S RECAP: - D-Group - Online Note: We provide links to specific resources; this is not an endorsement of the entire website, author, organization, etc. Their views may not represent our ...own. SHOW NOTES: - Follow The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | TikTok | YouTube - Follow Tara-Leigh Cobble: Instagram - Read/listen on the Bible App or Dwell App - Learn more at our Start Page - Become a RECAPtain - Shop the TBR Store - Credits PARTNER MINISTRIES: D-Group International Israelux The God Shot TLC Writing & Speaking DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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                                        Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible Recap.
                                         
                                        Today we open with the disciples bringing a debate to Jesus about which one of them is the most awesome.
                                         
                                        I think there's a chance that the special attention Jesus has been showing to Peter, as well as James and John, the three guys in his tightest inner circle, may have caused the others to start comparing themselves to them.
                                         
                                        It's a natural human response, but as usual, Jesus points out that the natural human response
                                         
                                        is often the opposite of the upside-down kingdom response.
                                         
                                        He says humility is connected to greatness, and if they aren't humble, they won't be in the kingdom
                                         
                                        at all, much less be the greatest there.
                                         
                                        God values humility, which is a stark contrast to the ancient view, where humility equals weakness.
                                         
    
                                        In this chapter, Jesus often uses children in his illustrations.
                                         
                                        At this time, children are viewed more like property, so by using them at a
                                         
                                        as an illustration, he's showing the value of children as humans and image bearers. He shows how
                                         
                                        they should be treated with care. Then he seems to draw a correlation between children and his
                                         
                                        disciples, referring to them as little ones. Some commentators think the phrase used here is referring
                                         
                                        to all believers, and others think it's referring to new believers. And for whoever that phrase is
                                         
                                        referring to, Jesus indicates that there are angels who watch over them while also being in the
                                         
                                        presence of God. By the way, the word angel means messenger. They're sent to speak and do
                                         
    
                                        the will of God. When it comes to things that tempt us to sin, Jesus says we should take notice
                                         
                                        of what those things are and avoid them at all costs. He uses some pretty intense hyperbole
                                         
                                        for these illustrations, cutting off your hand, plucking out your eye, because sin is a big deal,
                                         
                                        and those who love God should take their own sin seriously. He also hints at the fact that we can
                                         
                                        cause others to sin in verse 6 when he says, whoever causes one of these little ones who believe
                                         
                                        in me to sin, so someone can cause someone else to sin. Bear with me.
                                         
                                        me here. Yes, scripture teaches that each person is responsible for their own actions. But God also
                                         
                                        points out that we don't live in a vacuum. Our sins and actions impact others. Western society is a very
                                         
    
                                        independent culture as a whole, but the culture of the ancient Near East had a much wider grasp
                                         
                                        on human responsibility. To be clear, that perspective doesn't remove the burden of responsibility
                                         
                                        from the person committing the sin and put it on the instigator. Instead, it becomes more of a shared
                                         
                                        responsibility. But let me be clear on one other thing. This doesn't mean that if someone
                                         
                                        sins against you, that you're responsible for it. This isn't victim blaming. That's a different
                                         
                                        scenario entirely, and in that instance, the blame is only on the sinner's shoulders. Not every
                                         
                                        scenario has two guilty parties. Sometimes people just sin against other people without an inciting
                                         
                                        incident, which is why it's a good thing that Jesus spends some time today telling us how to
                                         
    
                                        respond to people when we've been sent against. Versus 15 to 20 mark out a process for us.
                                         
                                        Here's what it looks like.
                                         
                                        Step one, go talk to the person just between the two of you and see if you can resolve it.
                                         
                                        By the way, there is no step zero.
                                         
                                        There's no space allotted for us to talk to others about that person and how they've sent against us.
                                         
                                        Step one is to go to the person.
                                         
                                        If step one doesn't resolve things, then we move to step two.
                                         
                                        And that's our first opportunity to involve other people.
                                         
    
                                        That's when Jesus says we should take one or two others with us to have a conversation with that person.
                                         
                                        This isn't an ambush.
                                         
                                        They should know this is coming based on the conversation you have.
                                         
                                        with them in step one. If step two doesn't resolve things, then take it to the church for resolution.
                                         
                                        And again, we shouldn't blindside the person with this. That's not loving them well. If step three
                                         
                                        doesn't resolve things, then the church has to exercise discretion that's above my pay grade.
                                         
                                        I'm glad I don't have to make these kinds of decisions because they sound terribly difficult.
                                         
                                        Fortunately, Jesus promises to be with them in their effort to reach unity, and he says that two or
                                         
    
                                        three should be able to agree on how to handle the situation. He promises to give them guidance toward that
                                         
                                        end. By the way, you may have noticed this is a verse that has been wildly taken out of context.
                                         
                                        But even in the hardest outcome here, Jesus says things should still be done in love.
                                         
                                        Think about it for a second. Jesus is telling them to treat the person like a Gentile or a tax
                                         
                                        collector. We've seen him ministering to both kinds of people, associating with them,
                                         
                                        eating with them, seeking them out. Even Matthew, the man who's writing this, was a tax collector
                                         
                                        when Jesus sought him out. So while this does seem like a call to remove them from the church,
                                         
                                        church, it doesn't seem like a call to wholesale excommunicate them and tarnish their name and
                                         
    
                                        reputation. This is a call to love them well and share the gospel with them, but to prevent them
                                         
                                        from being divisive in the church until they repent or the problem is resolved. It doesn't seem like
                                         
                                        a coincidence that he goes straight from this message about how to deal with someone who sins against
                                         
                                        you into a message about forgiveness. Peter brings it up, actually. He wants to know how many times
                                         
                                        he has to forgive someone who keeps committing the same sin against him. Jesus tells a parable about a man
                                         
                                        who has great debt. He's repentant and wants to make things right with his master. His master forgives
                                         
                                        him a huge debt. It amounts to about $4 to $6 billion in today's money, roughly 150,000 years
                                         
                                        worth of wages. The guy gets his huge debt forgiven, then turns the corner and runs into a guy
                                         
    
                                        who owes him about $1,000. This man is also repentant and also wants to make things right. He
                                         
                                        isn't flippant or rebellious or in denial, but the man who had the huge debt forgiven won't forgive
                                         
                                        this small debt. In this parable, we're the one who owes six billion dollars. Our sin debt is so
                                         
                                        massive we could never pay it, not even in 150,000 years, because in that time we'd just keep
                                         
                                        sending more. And God is the generous master who forgave us. So when Peter's friend sends against
                                         
                                        him seven times, Jesus is like, you seriously have no idea how much you sinned against me, do you?
                                         
                                        Let me tell you a story. Jesus could have disconnected the two halves of the parable and made them
                                         
                                        two entirely different sets of people. But the fact that it revolves around this one man in the
                                         
    
                                        middle seems to point to something interesting. It seems to show that forgiveness is our response to
                                         
                                        God, not the person who sinned against us. We respond to our forgiveness by forgiving those who are
                                         
                                        repentant. We extend what's been given to us. If we don't do that, then we probably don't really
                                         
                                        understand what we received or how much we were in debt. Jesus adds a little weight to this at the
                                         
                                        end of the parable by saying that forgiveness has to be from the heart. In scripture, the heart
                                         
                                        is the seat of the thoughts, emotions, and will. It's like a combination of your mind and your heart.
                                         
                                        So this could be referring to feeling forgiveness, but more likely, it's referring to making a
                                         
                                        decisive effort to continually choose forgiveness even when you don't feel it. My counselor once told
                                         
    
                                        me that forgiveness is not a destination. It's a decision to embark on a journey over and over
                                         
                                        to keep putting one foot of forgiveness in front of the other every time the wound rears its ugly head.
                                         
                                        What was your God shot today? Mine was just this one line in the parable of the lost sheep.
                                         
                                        Verse 12 says, if a man has a hundred sheep and one of them has gone astray,
                                         
                                        does he not leave the 99 on the mountains and go in search of the one that went astray?
                                         
                                        God pays individual attention to his kids. He notices what's happening and he acts.
                                         
                                        He moves toward us when we run away. He comes to carry us back.
                                         
                                        And the next verse says he rejoices over us.
                                         
    
                                        He's not far off.
                                         
                                        He's not inattentive.
                                         
                                        He's actively working on our behalf, even when we're running away from him.
                                         
                                        I'm so glad he finds us and brings us back because he's where the joy is.
                                         
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