“So take the talent from him, and give it to him who has ten
talents. For to everyone who has, more will be given, and he will have
abundance; but from him who does not have, even what he has will be taken
away.” (Matthew 25:28-29)
This Parable
deals with one of the most insistent problems of life the use and faithfulness
of our abilities; with plain everyday fidelity to duty. It portrays the
splendor and high reward of service. It pictures also the tragedy of laziness.
In the Parable
of the Ten Virgins (vv. 1-13) the warning sounded is against negligence. Here
it is against idleness and laziness. They are both dangers to our spiritual
life and the work of God. In the Parable of the Ten Virgins we are shown the
danger of presumption, in the parable of the talents we are taught the danger
of the lack of confidence and paralyzing fear. The virgins thought it was an
easy thing to serve God. The man with one talent thought it was too hard.
In the strongest
possible way Jesus in this parable commends and applauds the service that we do
for Him. Many of Jesus’ parables were meant to inspire us to action. He admires
action and decision, and gives it a high place in His evaluation of Christian
qualities.
How, does God
see us? In God’s sight a man’s character and his real achievement in life
are determined by the fidelity and energy with which he has used the abilities
and talents with which He has endowed. The servant who gained ten pounds
did not receive more honor or reward than the one who had gained five. Each
received the same eager and hearty “well done, good and faithful
servant!” All service ranks the same with God. There is no first or
last. He judges by our unseen loyalties and fidelities.
The main point
of the parable has to do with the man who hid his talent and brought no gain to
his Lord. More than either of the other two servants, his situation corresponds
to that of the great majority of us, with our small amounts of ability and
wealth. It was no accident that the man who buried his talent was the one who
had only one and not the one who had five or ten. The temptation to bury our
abilities and fail to use them comes with peculiar force to those who have only
an ordinary amount.
The warning of
this parable is to the one who hides his talents from use. You will notice that
it is not the man who wastes his substance in riotous living who is under
condemnation. He simply failed to use his talent for his master’s benefit. But
that failure was enough to cast him into outer darkness. This warning is to
those who, being equipped for active service, yet they hid from it. Those who
always answer: “I can’t,” “I’m too busy,” “I don’t have the time.” How
much of the work of God is held back because of this? Are such people any
different from the man who dug a hole and buried his talent?
“I was afraid”. In these words of excuse the man gives voice to the main reason for
the waste of ability and uselessness of multitudes of lives. How many make the
excuse that they can do nothing, when what they truly mean is that they don’t
want to do nothing! God is looking for people that well say “I
cannot do everything, but I can do something. I will not let what I cannot do
interfere with what I can do.” Some are afraid of making mistakes. The
man who never made any mistakes never did anything else. Pele, the famous
Brazilian soccer player once said: “You’ll always miss 100% of the
shots you don’t take.”To reap the rewards, you have to take the risk.
The commonest
form of burying our talent is by thinking and talking about what we would do if
we were in other conditions or had larger opportunities, doing nothing
meanwhile with the conditions and opportunities we have now. All such
imaginings are a delusion and a drug to the conscience. They overlook two important
truths: A man’s real achievement is measured by the use made of what he has, be
it large or small and the only sure indication of what one would do with larger
means or talents is by what he actually does with the smaller ones which are
his now.
When the parable
represents the talent as taken away, it shows us a law which holds true in the
physical, economic and intellectual world as well as in the spiritual. The arm
which is never exercised loses its strength by degrees as muscles shrink. So
the abilities and talents which God has given us fail if we do not exercise
them. The capacity for enthusiasm, the appetite for spiritual things, the
ability to see visions, the energy to work, the unselfish spirit of sacrifice,
all these wither and droop when they are not put to use.
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