THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO LUKE - Chapter 7 - Verse 42
Verse 42. Frankly forgave. Freely forgave, or forgave entirely
without any compensation. This is not designed to express anything
about the way in which God forgives sinners. He forgives— forgives
freely, but it is in connection with the atonement made by the Lord
Jesus. If it was a mere debt which we owed to God, he might forgive,
as this creditor did, without any equivalent. But it is crime which he
forgives. He pardons as a moral governor. A parent might forgive a
debt without any equivalent; but he cannot pardon an offending
child without regarding his own character as a parent, the truth
of his threatenings, the good order of his house, and the maintenance of
his authority. So our sins against God, though they are called debts,
are called so figuratively. It is not an affair of money,
and God cannot forgive us without maintaining his word, the honour of his
government, and law—in other words, without an atonement. It is
clear that by the creditor here our Saviour meant to designate GOD,
and by the debtors, sinners and the woman present. Simon, whose life
had been comparatively upright, was denoted by the one that owed
fifty pence; the woman, who had been an open and shameless sinner,
was represented by the one that owed five hundred. Yet neither
could pay. Both must be forgiven or perish. So, however much difference
there is among men, all need the pardoning mercy of God, and all, without
that, must perish.