If you wish to read the texts click here: 1 Corinthians 1:26-31; Mt 25:14-30
A talent is a large sum of
money, equal to the wages of a day labourer for fifteen years. (In Luke 19
12-28, the figures are much smaller. There are ten servants and each receives a
“mina” which was only one sixtieth of a talent, and worth 100 denarii and
translated “pound”) In Matthew, however, there are three servants and they
receive different amounts. The first receives five, the second two, and the
third, one. The first and the second use the money to earn similar amounts in
return. The third, buries it in the ground. The point that the parable seems to
make here is that we are called not merely to “passive waiting” or strict
obedience to clear instructions, but active responsibility that take initiative
and risk. Each must decide how to use what he/she has been given.
Often times, our understanding
of Christianity has been one in which we are content if we have not done “any
wrong”, but rarely ask whether we have done “any right”. We are content
like the third servant to give only grudgingly, and not with the freedom that
we are meant to have.
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