As forgivers our responsibility does not begin and end with our forgiving our debtors, the parable shows there is more to it, we need to make sure the person being forgiven understands forgiveness and accepts the forgiveness as pure undeserved charity, so they can Love all the more.
No.
First, we realize we have no "debtors" when we realize that all we have actually belongs to the Lord. In Jesus' parable, whatever the lesser servant owed the unforgiving steward actually belonged to the master all along.
All of them were slaves indebted to the master. The steward was merely the top link of the debt chain.
This means that by cancelling the debt of the steward (one of the master's slaves), the master also cancelled the debts of all of his slaves who owned the steward. By extracting payment from those slaves, the steward was actually stealing from the master...again.
Second, we have no way--and no responsibility--to "make sure the person being forgiven understands forgiveness and accepts the forgiveness as pure undeserved charity" any more than God has.
Not even God makes sure the person being forgiven understands forgiveness and accepts forgiveness as pure undeserved charity. The parable of the unforgiving steward shows that does not always happen. The most important point that Jesus atypically makes clear is that such people are condemned by their unforgiveness. I say "atypically" because Jesus typically did not explain His parables to His general audience, but in this case, He made a specific point to immediately explain the parable because it is so absolutely and utterly critical: Unforgiveness is a direct ticket to Hell.
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