Matthew 25:14-30 (Romans 5:1-5)
Risking-Taking Mission and Service: Use Your Talents
Foolishly
James Sledge May 26, 2013 – Trinity Sunday
There’s
a TV commercial for a bank where someone with a brief case full of money goes
up to strangers and asks them to hold it for a while. The commercial shows a
man sitting next to the brief case, nervously touching it and looking around. Imagine
someone asked you to take care of his brief case full of money. What would you
do? How about if he asked you to watch it for six months, or a year, or five
years?
If
we eliminate “I’d just keep it for myself”–let’s say the person who gave it to
you is a mobster – what are your options? You could take it to the bank and put
the cash there, or perhaps put it in a money market account where it would earn
a little interest. But I doubt many of you would do any speculative investing
with a mobster’s money. No way I would risk losing a big chunk of that money
and having to tell him, “I tried to make you some big money, but it didn’t work
out, and most of it’s gone.”
If
you’re like me and not inclined to speculate with a mobster’s money, then you
should have no trouble relating to the third slave in Jesus’ parable. He did
just what we would do. In Jesus’ day there were no banks as we know them, no
investments that were really safe, and if you wanted to be certain you wouldn’t
risk losing it, you hid money, which is exactly what the third slave did.
The
first two slaves, on the other hand, managed to double their master’s money.
Even today, with regulators and laws to protect investors, you don’t double
your money without taking some significant risks. In Jesus’ day, the risks
would have been phenomenal.
In
popular thought, and often in sermons, today’s parable gets treated as a fable
with a moral that says, “Use your talents wisely.” Trouble is, the third slave
does what most folks considered wise and prudent, while the first two slaves do
what is risky and foolish.