Readings:
Proverbs
31: 10-13, 19-20, 30-31;
1
Thessalonians 5: 1-6;
Matthew
25: 14-30
Once upon a time a TV
commentator delivered a very pessimistic editorial on a Friday evening
broadcast (taped earlier in the day).
- The world was in grim
shape, he told the camera.
- Global warming was
worse than anyone had thought it was.
- The population of
the world would double again in the next twenty year.
- It was likely that
an asteroid would hit earth before the end of the next century.
- Rage was increasing
the third world countries against our wealth.
- The races were
polarizing in America.
- The crime had turned
up again.
- Our schools were
total failures and would not, could not get any better.
- There was a drug and
alcohol epidemic in white suburban high schools.
- Divorce rates were
increasing.
- Abortions were at an
all time high.
A wave of bad news was sweeping
the earth and there was nothing anyone could do about it.
When the taping was over, he
got into his Mercedes and drove rapidly into the country to escape the Friday
night traffic rush. At his house on the shore of the lake, he relaxed in the
sauna, sipping from a large glass of Barolo wine, swam in the pool, wrapped
himself in a silk robe, and sat on the deck as the sun set. He poured himself a
second glass of wine and, as the sky turned red and then purple he thought that
life was very good indeed.
Let us
look at the parable we are presented with today.
- First, a talent was
not a coin, it was a weight in gold or silver of about 40 Kilos, so it was a
very considerable treasure that this man was trusting to his servants. One
talent was probably equivalent to a whole lifetime’s wages for such a
servant—he had entrusted them with something precious beyond their wildest
dreams.
- The second point is
that the Master took a very long time to come back. This is a tiny but
important detail in today’s Gospel. It shows the Master’s love for his servants
that he gave them more than ample time for the treasure of the talents to yield
bounteous fruit.
What is the precious thing that
God has entrusted to us? Is it not our own gifts or talents, as we try to
understand it sometimes? Is it not our live which is a wonderful gift of God?
It is, of course, but also it is the Good News of Salvation.
The great treasure that we have
been given is the gift of the Gospel—the realization that Jesus is our Savior
and that through our faith in him we will find salvation. It is what we do with
these gifts: our life our talents and the gift of the Good News, that makes all
the difference.
We are surely all at quite
different stages in relation to this gift of faith. What am I doing in my life
with this gift? Do I develop it, do I increase my faith, do I take care of it
or I simply bury it in the soil, or maybe I neglected it and forgot?
Like the man in the Gospel
“'Master, I knew you were a demanding person,
harvesting where you did not plant and gathering where you did not scatter; so
out of fear I went off and buried your talent in the ground. Here it is back.'”
The man with one talent did not
lose it. But, he did not do anything at all with it. If he had tried and
failed, he would have met compassion and forgiveness. But he simply denied his
responsibility, or he has chosen the easiest way … I will loose nothing because
here I have my secured ticket to the Kingdom. I will bury it and at the proper
time I will unearth it … Clever. Isn’t it?
- Some of us may not
even be sure whether they have it or not. This might be a particular problem
for some of our young people, but not only them. There are many long-standing
members of the congregation who suffer doubts and experience long periods of
darkness and disbelief.
But if I do nothing to develop,
to improve, to increase my faith why am I astonished that my faith is dying,
failing and vanishing? God gave me all what I need; it’s now up to me to do
something with it.
- Others of us might
find it a bit of a burden—knowing and believing in Jesus and his message but
feeling quite inadequate to the task of transforming the Gospel into daily life.
God gave me the gift; He gave
me the necessary skills and means. It’s now up to me to do something with this.
It is astonishing; how clever and intelligent, bright we are when dealing with
the multiplication of our earthly assets and how lazy, clumsy and naïve whence
going about our eternal life?
- Then some of us
might feel full of faith and have put a lot of effort into carrying the
precepts of the Gospel over many years and who yet feel that for one reason or
another God has let them down badly. They certainly haven’t lost their faith
but feel a bit depressed about it and don’t know where Christ is leading them.
This is the situation when I
declare: “I believe in God” but I don’t believe HIM, I don’t trust Him. Or
rather I don’t trust Him thoroughly. Should I not search how to strengthen my
faith, should I not “invest more” in the religious growth and development?
- Still others might
be experiencing a new joy as they experience some wonderful grace or blessing
from God. This is the situation when I cooperate, co work with God’s grace,
with God’s gift. Somebody asked me not so long time ago: Father, do you have
never doubts or suspicions that, what are you believing and doing as a pastor
is wrong? Don’t you have any doubts that God is deceiving you? Don’t you doubt
God’s existence and Mercy? My answer was direct: To doubt God’s existence means
for me to deny my own reason and this is the end of myself, but I know also
that, this is the great gift of God, with which I try to cooperate through my
whole life ….
The parable tells us that faith
is a real and wonderful gift from God. It is entirely unbidden—as in the
parable the servants are given no clue in advance what the master is about to
do.
Faith is also given to us according
to our ability to deal with it—each in proportion to his ability, as it says in
the parable.
But the most important aspect
of the Parable is that the Master will eventually return. The parable is about
Christ’s Second Coming and the judgment we will all face at the end of time. We
know that we will be called to account for how we have handled this gift of
faith that we have been so generously given.
- This first thing to realize
is that it is not a burden; it is a gift.
o
For how many
Catholics the faith is a burden?
- The second thing to realize
is that the man who is punished is condemned because he has buried his talent.
He has refused to deal with it. He has simply ignored the gift and literally
buried it.
o
How many of us did
the same with the talent of our faith, how many of us simply buried it?
So the message of hope is that
whatever stage of life you are at, whether you are doubting, whether you are
struggling to make sense of the Gospel message, whether you are teaching the
love of Christ to your children, whether you are rejoicing in some new grace or
blessing, whether you are going through the dark night of the soul, whether you
are groping in darkness and searching for some chink of light—whatever might be
happening with your faith at least something is happening!
Yes we will face judgment and
we will have to give an account of ourselves. But it will be a long and
convoluted story and we will have a wonderfully sympathetic listener (who knows
the story all along because he was an essential part of it) and whose judgment
will be merciful and who wants above all other things our happiness.
His whole aim is to give us
joy—not a superficial joy, but a deep and lasting and fulfilling joy based on a
life of engagement with him.
The most dangerous situation,
the situation of disaster is when you bury your faith, and do nothing!!! So DO SOMETHING WITH YOUR FAITH!!! Don’t
sleep!!!
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