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Matthew 18-19

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The Parable of the Unmerciful Servant Matthew 18:21-35 The debt of 10,000 talents was equated with each man s sins. It was an insurmountable debt! – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Matthew 18-19


1
Matthew 18-19
2
Matthew 181-5(Humility)
  • Both the Apostles and the Church grew in
    importance.
  • The Savior discussed several issues relative to
    the church and its leaders.
  • The first was His concerned with humility.
  • Doctrine and Covenants 11210, was one of
    President Hinckleys favorite scriptures).

3
Matthew 183-4
  • Humility is important for both a leader and a
    member of the church.
  • The attribute of absolute dependence upon a
    higher power. This is especially true regarding
    the Atonement.
  • An infant who dies is utterly dependent upon the
    Atonement of Jesus Christ for salvation (Mosiah
    316,19).
  • In other words, the Atonement is in effect in
    their lives.

4
  • Matthew 186-14
  • Causing little ones to stumble.
  • Little Ones Converts to the new kingdom
  • Matthew 186
  • Millstones were large round stones about three
    feet in diameter.
  • It required the power of a donkey to turn the
    mill. It would drown someone easily if they were
    cast into the sea (they were sometimes called
    Donkey Millstones).

5
  • Matt. 186
  • What is meant by the statement Whoso Shall
    offend one of these little ones?
  • Little ones are children and those who have
    become as little children by conforming to the
    principles of the gospel. To offend one of
    these little ones, to cause to stumble or falter
    because of false example of doctrine, is a
    grievous sin indeed. The Savior taught that in
    some cases it would have been better for a person
    never to have been born than for him to have
    blocked the eternal progress of another
    (McConkie, DNTC, 1420).

6
Matthew 188-9
  • There are two ways to look at this second
    reminder
  • Members of the Church should avoid sin of every
    kind.
  • Those members who commit extreme sin and cause
    others to do so should be removed from the body
    of the church.

7
  • Matthew 1810
  • Despise not one of these.
  • Greek To look down on, treat with contempt,
    condemn, despise, disdain, think little or
    nothing of these little ones. In other words, all
    members are equal.
  • Matthew 1815-20
  • Dealing with the sinner! Leaders are told to
    confront those who have sinned in an effort to
    reclaim them (DC 102).

8
  • The Parable of the Unmerciful Servant
  • Matthew 1821-35
  • The debt of 10,000 talents was equated with each
    mans sins. It was an insurmountable debt! In
    other words, the debt could never be paid back.
  • 1 talent 75.6 pounds
  • The 100 pence debt (a reasonable debt) was
    equated with the most another can do to you. It
    would be equal to 100 days of work.
  • This was 1,250 times less debt owed!

9
Matthew 181-192(The 4th Discourse)
  • There are two things we should be really good at
    in this life
  • 1. Forgiving others
  • 2. Repenting
  • We should be doing plenty of both!

10
  • Application
  • Since God had forgiven the disciples of their
    sins (something they could not do for themselves)
    they should therefore from their hearts forgive
    every one his brother their trespasses (DC
    649-11).

11
Matthew 19(The 5th Narrative)
  • Divergent Views concerning Divorce
  • In relation to the different opinions upon this
    subject among the Jewish authorities in the time
    of Christ, Geikie says
  • Among the questions of the day fiercely debated
    between the great rival schools of Hillel and
    Shammai, no one was more so than that of divorce.

12
  • The school of Hillel contended that a man had a
    right to divorce his wife of any cause he might
    assign.
  • If it were no more than his having ceased to
    love her, or his having seen one he liked better,
    or her having cooked dinner badly.
  • The school of Shammai, on the contrary, held
    that divorce could be issued only for the crime
    of adultery, and offences against chastity. If it
    were possible to get Jesus to pronounce in favor
    of either school, the hospitality of the other
    would be roused, and, hence, it seemed a
    favorable chance for compromising Him.

13
  • Rabbi Akiba (Hillelite) said, If a man sees a
    woman handsomer than his own wife he may put her
    (his wife) away, because it is said, if she find
    not favor in his eyes. The school of Hillel
    said, If the wife cook her husbands food ill,
    by over-salting or over-roasting it, she is to be
    put away. On the other had Rabbi Jochanan (a
    Shammaite) said, The putting away of a wife is
    odious. Both schools agreed that a divorced wife
    could not be taken back Rabbi Chananiah said God
    has not subscribed His name to divorces, except
    among Israelites, as if he had said I have
    conceded to the Israelites, the right to
    dismissing their wives but to the Gentiles I
    have not conceded it. Jesus retorts that it is
    not the privilege but the infamy and reproach of
    Israel, that Moses found it necessary to tolerate
    divorce (Dummelows Commentary, 347-348).

14
Marriage and Divorce
  • It focused on the hard heartedness of the
    Pharisees.
  • Marriage is a very important aspect of Jewish
    society.
  • Matthew 193
  • In other words, is it alright to get a divorce
    for any reason?
  • The Savior responded by declaring the higher
    law! (Matthew 194-6, DC 131-132, Moses 318-25).

15
  • Matthew 197
  • The Pharisees rebutted by saying that Moses
    allowed it!
  • Matthew 198
  • The Lord tried to impress this upon his
    disciples that it was only because of the
    hardness of the hearts of the people, because
    they failed to keep the commandments that the
    Lord had given them that Moses granted the
    putting away of the wife.
  • Today the laws are different, and sometimes
    wives put away their husbands, but a marriage in
    the Temple of the Lord should be one that should
    be considered sacred and holy, never to be
    violated in any way whatsoever because it means
    that those who enter such a covenant shall
    continue after death and have eternal increase
    and build a kingdom.

16
  • Now, if there is ever a divorce between a man
    and a woman married in the temple for time and
    all eternity, it is because they, one or the
    other or both, have violated the covenants that
    they made at the altar of the Lord otherwise they
    could not separate, and the Lord never intended
    that a man and a woman be separated in death, but
    that this marriage was one for eternity. There
    was no separation in death, and one of the
    greatest sins that can be committed is for a man
    and a woman to separate after they have been
    sealed in the house of the Lord to become sons
    and daughters of God and members of his
    household, and to have children come to them,
    sent by divine approval to be in that household
    not only for time but for all eternity (Joseph
    Fielding Smith, C.R. April 1961, 49).

17
Matthew 199
  • The Savior stated that the only good reason for
    divorce was when the trust of the marriage was
    shattered by adultery.
  • Otherwise, if he divorced to marry another, it
    was the same as committing adultery.

18
Elder Bruce R. McConkie said
  • Even in the Church today the saints do not abide
    by the full and perfect law. It is somewhat as it
    was in the days of Moses divorce is permitted
    because of the hardness of the hearts of the
    people, and the Lord permits his agents to
    exercise the power to loose as well as the power
    to bind. Under our circumstances divorced persons
    who remarry are not always guilty of the crimes
    they would be if the highest gospel standard were
    in force (Mormon Doctrine, 203).

19
Eunuchs Matthew 1912
  • (Bible Dictionary page 667)
  • Born from their mothers womb impotent
  • Made of men celibacy
  • Made themselves castrated
  • These men were trusted over harems for obvious
    reasons.

20
  • Matthew 1916-22 The Rich Young Man
  • The cost of discipleship. The question seemed to
    imply that salvation could be earned by doing one
    good thing.
  • Matthew 1918 Which?
  • A good question. Living at a time when Judaism
    was extremely fractured with various religious
    parties.
  • There were 613 laws in the oral law.
  • The man was perplexed as to which commandments
    he should keep.
  • The Savior told the man to keep the written law
    of Moses.

21
  • Matthew 1921 Be perfect!
  • He was living the commandments of the law of
    Moses, but the law of Moses will not save a man
    in the Celestial Kingdom.
  • If one would be perfect, one must shed the
    material things of this world and follow the
    Savior.
  • He was content with doing just one thing to
    inherit eternal life.
  • He was not willing to live the Law of
    Consecration.

22
  • Matthew 1923-24
  • There have been those who claimed that the
    needle referred to here was a small gate not
    meant for large animals to pass through.
  • There is no evidence for such a gate.
  • The statement was meant to be an exaggeration.
  • In Jewish literature, Rabbi Raba said
  • This is proved by the fact that a man is never
    shown in a dream a date palm of gold, or an
    elephant going through the eye of a needle
    (Talmud Berakoth 55b).
  • Jesus saw wealth as a hindrance to spiritual
    progress!

23
  • Elder Talmage taught in Jesus the Christ that
    some interpreters insist that a rope not a
    camel, was mentioned by Jesus.
  • Elder Talmage mentioned that it had been
    asserted that the term needles eye was applied
    to a small door or wicket set in or alongside the
    great gates in the walls of cities and the
    assumption had been raised that Jesus had such a
    wicket in mind when He spoke of the seeming
    impossibility of a camel passing through a
    needles eye.

24
  • It would be possible though very difficult for a
    camel to squeeze its way through the little gate,
    and it could in no wise do so except when
    relieved of its load and stripped of all its
    harness.
  • If this conception be correct, we may find
    additional similitude between the fact that the
    camel must first be unloaded and stripped,
    however costly its burden or rich its
    accoutrement, and the necessity of the rich young
    ruler, and so of any man, divesting himself of
    the burden and trappings of wealth, if he would
    enter by the narrow way that lead into the
    kingdom.
  • The Lords exposition of His saying was
    all-sufficient for the purposes of the lesson
    With men this is impossible, but with God all
    things are possible (Matthew 1926).

25
  • Matthew 1927
  • Peter said Behold, we have forsaken all, and
    followed thee what shall we have therefore?
  • The Savior gives a gentle but firm rebuke.
  • The responsibility was that they would judge the
    12 tribes of Israel. Their reward was eternal
    life!
  • Matthew 1930
  • The Savior hinted that some outside the
    apostolic circle would prove in the end more
    worthy than some of the apostles.
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