Christian Superiority Complexes and the Parable of the Unforgiving Servant

Christian Superiority Complexes and the Parable of the Unforgiving Servant 2017-09-18T06:08:23-06:00

Mercy and Law are like two parallel planets. They operate according to their own rules, each as real as the law of gravity on earth. You can either live in the realm of Mercy or the realm of Law. But what you don’t get to do is choose to live in Planet Mercy for yourself, while insisting everyone else live in Planet Law.

David Lose builds on that, writing,

What if we imagine that rather than inflicting some new (or old) punishment on the unforgiving servant, the king is actually only describing the condition his servant already lives in. That is, he is already a slave to the world of counting and calculating and reckoning everything according to the law and will therefore remain a slave to that way of being until the end of time … or when he can forgive others, whichever comes first.

Without Christ, all is figuring and reckoning and tally sheets. All is Planet Law. With Christ, all is grace and Planet Mercy. There is no tabulating the amount of mercy we’ve been given, and there’s to be no tabulating of the amount of mercy we extend to others.

How do Christians relate, then, to the world around us? Instead of saying, “God, I thank you that I am not like other people–robbers, evildoers, adulterers–or even like this tax collector [insert favorite group to hate here]” (Luke 18:11), we pray, “God, have mercy on me, a sinner” (Luke 18:13). We need mercy; we extend mercy. We learn to posture ourselves as ones who have something we need from God and from others. In this there is freedom from the exhausting work of tabulations and balance sheets and self-promotion. In this there is Christ’s presence. In this there is the gift of the neighbor.

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P.S. Please also note that I am not a scientist, but a person with expertise in theology and the arts. While I am very interested in the relationship between science and faith, I do not believe I personally will be able to adequately address the many questions that inevitably come up related to science and religion. I encourage you to seek out the writings of theistic or Christian scientists to help with those discussions

photo credit: ToGa Wanderings The Sun Sets on Santee Lakes via photopin (license)


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