Expositor's Bible Commentary Commentary


Expositor's Bible Commentary Commentary
"But that servant went out, and found one of his fellow-servants, who owed him a hundred shillings: and he laid hold on him, and took [him] by the throat, saying, Pay what thou owest." — Matthew 18:28 (ASV)
The servant’s attitude is appalling. The amount owed him is not insignificant: though worth but a few dollars in terms of metal currency, it represented a hundred days’ wages for a foot soldier or common laborer. Yet the amount is utterly trivial compared with what has already been forgiven him. The similarity of his fellow servant’s plea (v.29) to his own (v.26) does not move this unforgiving man, and he has him thrown into a debtor’s prison (v.30). Even an inexpensive slave sold for five hundred denarii, and it was illegal to sell a man for a sum greater than his debt. But the other servants (v.31), deeply distressed by the inequity, tell the master everything.
These are the two sides of a Roman denarius coin, many of which have been found in Palestine.