C, Midweek Lent 5 - The Lord's Prayer #6 - Matthew 6:10b,12 "Forgiving them on Earth"
Your will be done on earth – as we forgive those who sin
against us.
Part two of God’s
will is for his will to be done on earth.
This is his horizontal will. We
covered his vertical will, in part one last week.
God’s vertical
will, is done in heaven when he forgives us our sin. Put another way, God the Father makes himself
responsible to humanity, by finding a way that all might be restored to a right
relationship with him. This is God and
humanity, coexisting in peace with each other, in a community of tranquillity
and peace, as there was before the fall in the Garden of Eden.
For God’s will to
be fulfilled in heaven he sent Jesus Christ to live the perfect life as a human
being. Despite bearing the nature of God
the Son, he put his rights aside as the Son of God, and faithfully lived under
the responsibility of God the Father as a created Son of Man. He was faithful to the Father, even unto
death. Never losing faith, never losing
hope in God who would redeem him.
God raised Jesus
to his right hand in victory over sin and death. In his faithful death, he bore our guilt and sin, in his innocent
loss of all human rights, when he was nailed to the cross.
It was Jesus’
right to suffer for our sin! It was his
right to be lifted up in love for you.
In doing so he not only gave us the right to become children of God,
through the forgiveness of sin, but he died sharing the responsibility of the
Father.
God the Father at
the fall made himself responsible for the salvation of humankind. He promised to send a Saviour, who would
crush the head of the snake under his heel.
Saint Paul speaks of this verse in Genesis three when he says to the Romans, “The God of peace will soon crush Satan under your feet. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with
you.” (Romans 16:20 ESV)
We are children of
God because of Jesus’ joy in putting aside his human rights, for yours and my
eternal rights as holy adopted Sons of God.
Jesus made himself responsible to you in this life, by also sending the
Holy Spirit to walk with you. He does
this to uphold your rights as children, so you and I don’t slip back into
demanding the rights of self-righteousness.
But rather as God’s children we carry our crosses, bearing the rights of
others, as it was Jesus’ right to die for us.
What are these
rights? These are the rights to forgive others, as
we have been forgiven.
Jesus takes our
rights seriously, and we know this because he has given us the Holy Spirit, to
be our helper.
This right to
forgive each other, is the will of God on earth. Our right to forgive, is the responsibility
lived and written in the Word of the Gospel, the good news of God’s
responsibility, and our rights!
Our right to
forgive has got nothing to do with a higher power born of our own doing! Rather, it is solely based on forgiveness
given to us as pure gift. Likewise, our
right to forgive others, has nothing to do with them showing some sort of
better inclination towards us, to receive our forgiveness. Our forgiving others is our right, born in
the responsibility, good pleasure, and love of God, flowing through us by the
power of the Holy Spirit.
God knows how to
forgive sin! It’s his will on earth for
us to know how and why we forgive sin too!
Jesus joins the vertical with the horizontal, being the Son of God and
the Son of Man. He serves God as his
faithful Son, by living as a faithful servant of humanity.
We too, being
adopted as Sons of God, now function as types of Jesus Christ. But you and I do so in a way that is greater
than Jesus Christ. We not only can
forgive as he forgives, but we must continue to be forgiven, unless God ceases
to function as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Recorded in Saint
John’s Gospel, Jesus himself says, “Truly,
truly, I say to you, whoever believes in me will also do the works that I do;
and greater works than these will he do, because I am going to the Father.” (John 14:12 ESV)
Here we have the
two sides of the coin of being a Christian,
“Confession of Sin, and forgiveness of sin!” Jesus gives you the right to confess your sin
and the right to forgive others their sins!
Or put another way, the Holy Spirit bears the responsibility of working
confession within you, and your forgiveness of others.
But, if you are
like most other Christians, you struggle with confessing your sin and forgiving
others. For the most, we don’t even see
a fraction of what we do as being sinful, let alone confess it. But when we come to seeing the sin of others,
we easily see sin, but find it very difficult to forgive it.
But our right to
forgive, in the horizontal sense, is bound to the vertical direction of God’s
love and forgiveness. God the Father
comes down in his providence of humanity, God the Son comes down in his
redemption of humanity, and God the Holy Spirit comes down in his help of
humanity.
God comes down and
finds us helpless! But he comes down
because he knows we are helpless!
Therefore, he comes down to take you by the hand and help you.
Returning to John
14 again, Jesus tells us how we are able to do greater things once he goes to
the Father, saying, “Truly, truly, I say
to you, whoever believes in me will also do the works that I do; and greater
works than these will he do, because I am going to the Father. Whatever you ask in my name, this I will do,
that the Father may be glorified in the Son.
If you ask me anything in my name, I will do it. If you love me, you will keep my
commandments. And I will ask the Father,
and he will give you another Helper, to be with you forever, even the Spirit of truth, whom the world
cannot receive, because it neither sees him nor knows him. You know him, for he dwells with you and will
be in you. I will not leave you as
orphans; I will come to you. Yet a
little while and the world will see me no more, but you will see me. Because I live, you also will live.” (John 14:12–19 ESV)
As children of
God, we live as Jesus lives, because he lives.
As Jesus forgives, we forgive! We
also confess because Jesus now lives to forgive!
When Jesus
finishes teaching the Lord’s Prayer in his Sermon on the Mount, he goes onto
give a footnote regarding forgiveness saying, “if you forgive others their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also
forgive you, but if you do not forgive
others their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses.”
(Matthew 6:14–15 ESV)
Jesus hits home
with the full force of the Law here, and it sounds frightening. What is Jesus saying to us?
Jesus’ Sermon on
the Mount was preached and recorded for the Jews. Matthew’s Gospel is a catechism for Jewish
believers, teaching them that through the Law no one can achieve
righteousness. If one thought they
could, here Jesus extends the Law, making it obvious that no one will ever
achieve righteousness under the Law.
That is, except him!
Jesus alone
fulfilled all righteousness required from the Law, having every right to accuse
us, but instead he champions the right to forgive, so we can live. He neither accuses us or excuses our sin, he
binds the sin and sets the sinner free.
You now have that
freedom, and with it comes your right to forgive others. We like Jesus, neither excuse the sin, nor
accuse the sinner. We pray to God the
Father, for the Holy Spirit to give us the will on earth, to forgive as we have
been forgiven.
After the cross,
we, together with believing Jews, look at the Sermon on the Mount and cry out
to God, naming his responsibility to help us forgive as we have been forgiven.
Therefore, we pray
and demand, with the very demand he has given us to pray, “forgive us our sins
as we forgive those who sin against us.” “You have forgiven us Heavenly Father,
now give us the will to forgive others!”
God will give you
the will to do so! Why? Because he sent Jesus to die for your sin,
and the Holy Spirit to make you holy in his forgiveness! And because he would fail to be God, if he
did not fulfil his promises made through sending Jesus and the Holy Spirit!
Let us live in
peace, knowing you neither have to accuse others, nor excuse their sin. It’s God’s good pleasure, that we pray
individually, and, as the body of Christ, his church on earth, to bind each
other’s sin to the cross and loose the sinner.
It is God’s
responsibility to bind our sin and loose us!
And it is our right to loose other sinners and bind their sin, as Jesus
has bound our sin and set us free. Pray
to your Father in heaven to give you and me the will to joyfully do this. Amen.
On Maundy Thursday we conclude the series on the Lord’s Prayer with the centre kernel of the prayer. We learn what the Holy Spirit does in us when we pray, “Give us this day our daily bread."