To read the texts click on the texts: Prv 31:10-13, 19-20, 30-31; I Thes 5:1-6; Mt 25:14-30
A story is told of an old man
who, because he thought he had dedicated his whole life to God, wanted God to
help him in his old age. He read the passage in Matthew and Luke where Jesus
says that we must ask to receive and began to pray to God that he win the
lottery. When the results were declared he found that had not won and was upset
with God. “God”, he said, “I have dedicated my whole life to you and I asked
you for a simple favour which, for you, would be so easy to do and yet you have
refused me. Why dear Lord, why?” “My son”, God replied, “If you want to win the
lottery, at least buy a ticket”. The point is that if one wants to win, then
one has to play.
The connection between the
second reading and Gospel is clearer today than it usually is and the first
reading seems only distantly connected with the Gospel.
The word “talent”, though often
understood to mean the gifts and abilities that a person possesses, is here
clearly a large sum of money. According to some calculation one talent was
equal to 15 years’ wages for a day labourer. The master gives no instructions
to the servants about what they are to do with the money. Each servant is left
to decide what he must do with what is given to him. All three think that the
money belongs to the master and is given to them only in trust. The first two
take active responsibility to trade with what is given to them and earn more
than they had before. Both are rewarded appropriately and it is in the giving
of the reward that we realize that the money given to them initially was
actually given to them as their own.
Although the parable alludes to
a delay in the master’s return, the attention of the reader is directed not to
the surprise of his sudden return but more directly the servants’ conduct
during the time he has been away. The parable sets the responsibility of the
servants in terms of money but the symbolism points to something obviously more
comprehensive.
At first glance it might seem
that the guilty servant has acted carefully. He has not lost or squandered the
money given to him. He seems to have even acted responsibly by burying the
money in the ground so that he could return it safely to his master. So the
reaction of the master is surprising. Not only is the money taken back from
him, but also he is thrown into the outer darkness. However, the reaction of
the master will not be so surprising when we realize first that what was given
was not given merely in trust but as the personal property of the concerned
servant and second, that to be “good and faithful” is not passive waiting, or
even merely obeying rules and regulations or even being obedient to the letter
of the law but active responsibility that takes initiative and risk. He didn’t
gain but just preserved what was given. Fear had motivated this servant, the
fear of failure and losing the talent he had been given. He continued to regard
the money as his master’s and not his own, whereas the first and second
servants responded actively to the grace given to them freely by the master.
They were active, alive and awake.
Paul invites the Thessalonians
to a similar attitude, in view of the immanent parousia or coming of the Lord. Since this day will come at any
time, the best response is to be ready at all times and all the time. This
readiness has to be shown in the actual life that one leads – in one’s actions.
Since Jesus has made them children of the light, they must act as such and not
as children of darkness who never knew the light.
The worthy wife extolled in the
first reading is an example of such living. The qualities mentioned are such as
must be assimilated by everyone who hopes to be a child of light or to be
regarded as a good and faithful servant. The worthy wife does not sit idle all
day, but is active doing what she has to do to ensure that the household runs
smoothly. Her concern extends not merely to her household but also to the poor
and the needy to whom she reaches out.
If the modern use of talents
has any relation to the text, it is at the level of allowing God to work in us
and with us and putting our talents, qualities and natural abilities at God’s
disposal. God has given each one of us gifts and talents. Some have talents of
one kind, others of another kind. Some are blessed with more than one, others
have just one. However, the fact is that everyone has at least one.
This means that we have to
respond to this gift of God, which is latent in us. We will only be brought to
fulfilment, when we utilize it and especially for the good of others. We will
not be able to do this if, for any reason, we compare who we are or what we
have with who others are and what they have. Each of us is unique and special.
We are thus responsible and accountable for the way we use what God has given
us. We will be affirmed if it is used well and especially for the good of
others, and we will condemn ourselves if we bury it in the ground.
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