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Woah. You're right. I still think, though, that this is referring to a sort of accountability thing, where we can lay our sins out in the open for other people, and they can give encouragement, and bring them before God in prayer. In that way, yes, humans can help in the bringing of sins before God.
And I would agree with that. My point is that, by speaking the words of forgiveness, we can actually help to bring about that reconciliation.
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I just want to add something here. As long as the human agent is not saying something like "I have forgiven your sins, they have been washed away" or something like that, it's alright.
I would say, instead, that as long as the person identifies that they do it only as an agent of God, then it is okay to say, "I forgive you." For example, on Sunday morning, during the Confession part of our service, I say, "As a called servant of God's Word, I forgive you all your sins in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit." I am in fact forgiving them, but I also identify that I do so as God's agent, not under my own right or power. Nevertheless, I do believe that real forgiveness takes place in the event.
Now if someon is still harboring unbelief or hidden sin, then they are continuing in their sin and are defiling themselves with it, in which case no amount of my absolving them will remove the sin. I will concede that. The forgiveness offered as well as the forgiveness received is not arbitrary.
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But the human agent should encourage the sinner to take it up with God as well, as this is what needs to be done to be truly and completely forgiven.
That's where the "Where two or three are gathered in my name" comes to bear. If a person comes to me, whether individually or in the context of public worship, then they are indeed bringing it to God, because God himself is present in the event. It would be the same if a Christian friend came to you and confessed sins to you. Hopefully you can recognize that, as you are coming together for the sake of his spiritual welfare, that God is in fact there with you. I don't think a Christian friend would be coming to you confessing sins unless God was already at work in him, anyway.
I know that passage is most often associated with prayer, but I am not convinced that it's application is limited to vocalized prayer as most people understand it. And considering that the overall discourse of Matthew 18:10-35 is that of sin and forgiveness, I would contend that it's primary meaning should be understood in relation to forgiveness.
I know this might be hard for some people to understand. But I've actually seen God at work in this process before. I have actually been in a group of fellow Christians and confessed some deep, painful, and shameful sins in my life, and have known the joy of receiving forgiveness of them, not only from God himself, but from those people in that room. It is indeed a very powerful thing when a brother or sister in Christ says to you, "No matter how bad it is what you have done, I forgive you in Christ."
And to me, this isn't a mere matter of intellectual debate: it strikes the very heart of who I am as a Christian, as a minister, and as a pastoral caregiver. It strikes at the very core of who we are as God's Church and as fellow Christians. It's all a part of how we are to care for one another within the Body of Christ. And for that reason, I don't want to see us miss out on it.