Five Lessons From The Parable of Talents
How should Christians think about work, success and wealth?
The Parable of the Talents in MATTHEW 25:14:30 provides a helpful framework for this question.
1. First, this parable teaches us that success is a product
of our work.
In the book of Genesis we see that God placed Adam in
the garden to work it and take care of it. We were made to work. As
Christians we have a mission that our Lord expects us to accomplish in the here
and now.
Far too many evangelical Christians today see their
salvation as simply a “bus ticket to heaven.” They believe it doesn’t matter
what they do while they “wait for the bus.” The Parable of the Talents teaches
us what we are supposed to do while we await the return of our King.
We are to work, using our talents to glorify God, serve the
common good, and further God’s kingdom. Biblical success is working diligently
in the here and now using all the talents God has given us to produce the
return expected by the Master.
2. The Parable of the Talents teaches that God always gives
us everything we need to do what he has called us to do.
Have you ever wondered what a talent is worth in today’s
dollars? It is hard to know for sure, yet whatever its exact value, in the New
Testament a talent indicates a large sum of money, maybe even as much
as a million dollars in today’s currency.
We are tempted to feel sorry for the servant who received
only one talent, but in reality he received as much as a million dollars from
the master and buried it in his back yard. He was given more than enough to
meet the master’s expectations.
Just as the master expected his servants to do more than
passively preserve what has been entrusted to them, so God expects us to
generate a return by using our talents towards productive ends. The servants
were given enough to produce more – it is the same with the gifts God has given
us. The Apostle Paul writes in Ephesians 2:10: For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do
good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.
We seldom associate this verse with our work, but we should.
3. The Parable of the Talents teaches that we are not all
created equal.
The most overlooked part of this parable is the second half
of verse fifteen: the master gives to each servant talents, “…each according to
his ability.” The master understood that the one-talent servant was not capable
of producing as much as the five-talent servant.
We want to protest this as unfair. Yet we know this is true
from our own experience. Diversity is woven into the fabric of creation.
But even though we’re not created equal in regard to the
talents we’re given, there is equality found in the Parable of the
Talents. It comes from the fact that it takes just as much work for the
five-talent servant to produce five more talents as it does the two-talent
servant to produce two more talents.
This is why the reward given by the master is the same. The
master measures success by degrees of effort, as should we.
4. The Parable of the Talents teaches that we work for the
Master, not our own selfish purposes.
The money that is given to the servants is not their own.
The money they earn with the capital is not theirs to keep. The servants are
only stewards of the master’s investment, and it is the quality of their
stewardship that the master seeks to measure.
We should maximize the use of our talents not for our own
selfish purposes, but to honor God. We know that we work in a fallen world.
Because of the curse of sin, our work will be difficult. But we should feel
satisfaction and joy from doing our best with what God has given us in the
place where his providence puts us, seeking to succeed in order to honor him.
5. The Parable of the Talents shows that we will be held
accountable.
The Parable of the Talents is not about salvation or works
righteousness, but about how we use our work to fulfill our earthly callings.
It is about whole-life stewardship, or “Stewardship with a capital ‘S‘.”
The unfaithful steward in this parable didn’t so much waste
the master’s money – he wasted an opportunity. As a result, he was judged
wicked and lazy. We are responsible for what we do for God with what we have
been given, and one day we will be held responsible.
What we hear from the Master on that day is up to us.
This post was adapted from its original version appearing in
the latest edition of byFaith magazine.
>>Thank you Andrea for Forwarding>>
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