Summary: Life is about choices. Parable of the Talents is explored considering such issues as the fairness of each receiving a different amount, the importance of freewill, and personal accountability.

What’s Life All About?

Matthew 25:14-30[1]

3-1-09

Jesus had an awesome ability to speak volumes in a simple story. He revealed the heart of God by telling the story of the Prodigal Son. He showed us how to treat each other with the story of the Good Samaritan. And in our story today He tells us what life is all about. What will you do with your life? How will you invest your time? How will you manage your money? What career choices will you make? Every decision we make should be made in the light of what Jesus teaches us in the Parable of the Talents. This is life’s meaning in a nutshell! This is what life is all about.

The story is about a man who goes on a long journey. Before he leaves he entrusts his property to his servants. Two of those servants are faithful to the master’s desires. One is not. When the master returns he requires each servant to give account of what he has done with the property entrusted to him. The two faithful servants are rewarded. The unfaithful servant is cast out.

Let’s consider three fundamental facts of life that we can draw from this story.

1st. Our Master has entrusted to each one of us certain resources and opportunities.

When we hear the word talent we do not think of the same thing as the disciples did when Jesus was telling this story. For us a talent has come to mean ability or natural gifting. But in this story a talent is about 100 pounds of metal, probably gold or silver. The current gold price is $ 940/ounce. So, 1600 ounces is about $ 1½ million. One commentator valued it as 20 years of wages. It was a lot of money.

The point is: each of these servants was entrusted with something very valuable. Even the one talent man was given a lot of money to handle.

What do the talents represent in your life? They represent everything God has given you—everything you are and everything you have. What do you have that you didn’t receive from God? Nothing, even your next breath is a gift from God. Paul asked the Christians in Corinth this question. (1 Cor. 4:7) “For who makes you differ from another? And what do you have that you did not receive? Now if you did indeed receive it, why do you boast as if you had not received it?”

Here is something we must remember as we journey through life. Every ability I have, every dollar I have, every opportunity that comes my way, my next heart beat come to me from God. I am not my own. I am bought with a price, the precious blood of Jesus. Everything really belongs to God. He has simply entrusted me with it during this brief event we call life.

The moment I think that the money I have belongs to me (to do with as I please) is the moment I am thinking wrong about life. The moment I think I have success because of my hard work or smarts is the moment I am already thinking wrong. Do you have good health? Do you have a good job? Do you have money? It is all on lend to you for a brief season. Deut 8:18 "And you shall remember the LORD your God, for it is He who gives you power to get wealth....”

Why are we not more thankful? Because we forget where it all came from. A subtle misunderstanding comes in and it gets us off track. If we’re not careful we can start thinking that God is lucky we give Him ten percent. There are serious dangers in that kind of thinking. We will not just give account for the ten percent. You and I will give account for every penny of it. It’s not mine to use as I please. It’s to be used, as God wants it used.

In 1 Cor. 12 Paul talks about the diversity of spiritual gifts in the people of God. Some are granted more prophetic insight than others. Some are given faith. Some are given words of wisdom. God grants to some people more leadership abilities than others. Paul talks about that; but then he reminds them of a very important principle. Did God give one person more ability than others just so that person could use it to his own selfish ends? No! 1 Cor 12:7 “Now to each one the manifestation of the Spirit is given for the common good.”

What I have and what you have is not ours to just use as we please. We are to use it, as God wants it used.

Has it ever bothered you that the master in this parable did not give his servants the same amount? It doesn’t seem fair. God gives one person a photo static memory and another has to work very hard to just learn basic grammar. One person struggles with relational skills. For another it just seems to come naturally. One person is born into a home with godly parents who nurture and train the child. Another is born into an abusive situation.

Is it fair? Not by our human standards. Is it right? It is right for God to give what He chooses to give. Remember what the landowner said to the workers who complained about him giving a day’s wages to the eleventh hour workers? Matt 20:15 “Don’t I have the right to do what I want with my own money?” God has the right to give it out however He wants to. It’s all His in the first place.

God’s perspective on justice is eternal not temporal. You and I really don’t have enough information to judge whether God is doing justly or not. We don’t know all the facts of the past and we certainly cannot see into the future. What we do know from scripture is that God is just and the judge of all the earth will do right.

Notice each servant is only accountable for what his master has given him. The two-talent servant does not have to give account for the five talents entrusted to the other servant. Each man will give an account of himself unto God. Instead of comparing ourselves one with another, which is not wise (2 Cor.10:12), we are better off making sure we give a good account of what we have. This we do know. “To whom much is given, much is required.”

Think about what God has put into your hand. Some of us here have precious little children who can be taught and encouraged to serve God. Some of us have influence with grandchildren. We all have a certain amount of time to invest in the kingdom of God. We all have money to invest in God’s kingdom. We all have skills. What are we doing with all that is the question?

Everything we have, every gift, every ability, our health, our days, our resources, our opportunities make up a big package represented by the talents in this parable. You have something to work with. You have been entrusted with something very valuable.

2nd. Our Master allows us to decide what we will do with those talents.

Free will is an awesome thing. No theologian, no philosopher can fully explain God’s decision to give man free will. The explanation that helps me understand it some is the fact that real love cannot be coerced. The moment it is forced it is no longer love. God wants a love relationship with you and me and that demands free will. “We love Him because He first loved us.” Do you know what God is doing in your life right now? He is

loving you and seeking to win your love. He is longing for a like-kind response.

In this parable the master left for a long time. There is the test. Enough freedom, enough time for the servant to fully decide what he would do—what he would do when the master was not standing there looking over his shoulder.

Life is about a choice. That choice is made up of a lot of decisions. But in the end it all boils down to one choice. I will either respond to the goodness of my master and pursue His will or I will choose my own course and find an excuse for that choice.

Consider the money you have. If you use it for yourself nobody can stop you. You can choose to spend every bit of it on yourself and invest nothing into the kingdom of God. There is no Gestapo of holy angels coming down to take you by the neck and make you be generous. It has been entrusted to you by the Master for this time so you can decide what you choose to do with it.

Your time can be used for comfort and leisure or for the advancement of God’s kingdom. But for now that is entirely your choice. Each person decides how he will use his 24 hours each day. The person who lives selfishly may seem to do fine for now. Now is not the day of reckoning. Now is the day of choice and decision.

What will I do with my life? It is a choice I can make. We live in a society that offers us a lot of choices—as far as I can tell more than any other generation. There are an awful lot of ways you can spend your life. We have to decide what will be our priorities and then live with our decisions. Regardless of what you may have been told, you cannot have it all. You and I are finite beings with a limited amount of time and energy, a limited amount of resources, an utter inability to go east and west at the same time. When I say yes to one thing, I am automatically saying no to other things. That’s why it is very important to choose wisely. This life is not a rehearsal. You do it once and that’s it. Your choices have eternal implications.

In this clip from the movie, Radio, the coach has spent last season stressed out and neglecting his wife and daughter. He has to turn loose of one thing in order to lay hold of another. As you watch ask yourself if any similar choices have to be made in your life.

Video clip from Radio (Chapter 25: 1:37:00 to Chapter 26: 1:42:00).

Life is about a lot of choices between competing demands upon our lives. Bottom line is always one thing: God, what do you want me to do? If we do that, everything will work out just fine.

3rd. Our Master will one day hold each of us accountable for the choices we made.

That is the major point of this parable. In Matthew 24:3 Jesus disciples came to him on the Mount of Olives and asked him to tell them “...what will be the sign of your coming and of the end of the age.” Jesus gives a very long answer to that question. In the first part of Matthew 25 he is still answering it when he shares the parable of the Ten Virgins.

That parable emphasizes the importance of staying ready for Christ’s return. Right after our text Jesus is still answering the question when he talks about the end time separation of the sheep and goats. In between those two passages is this Parable of the Talents. The point of the Parable of the Talents is the accountability for faithful service to our Master.

1 John 2:28 “And now, dear children, continue in him, so that when he appears we may be confident and unashamed before him at his coming.”

If you knew that the IRS was going to audit your return for 2008 you would be very careful to prepare for that day. You would make sure you filled out every form correctly. You would be extremely conscientious about including all your income and have receipts for all your expenses. The anticipation of that audit would influence the way you filled out your return.

There is coming an audit of your life one day. It is infinitely more important than any audit the IRS could ever conduct. You have been entrusted with time, money, ability and opportunity by your Master. He has allowed you to choose how you would invest those things. But at His coming we must all stand before the Judgment Seat of Christ and give and account of the deeds done in this body.

For some that will be a glorious day. The two faithful servants were glad to see their Master come. They had invested well and were looking forward to presenting to their lord the increase. Their faithfulness was rewarded in three ways:

1. The joy of having pleased the One we love. “Well done, good and faithful servant.” Do you live to hear Him say those words to you? Imagine the joy that will fill your heart that day. 2 Cor 5:9-10 “So we make it our goal to please him, whether we are at home in the body or away from it. For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, that each one may receive what is due him for the things done while in the body, whether good or bad.”

That was a powerful motivation in Paul’s life. It is a motivation we must nurture in our own lives. (Not only the awesome fact of accountability but the wonderful opportunity

of pleasing our Lord) We make it our goal to please him!

2. The opportunity to rule with Christ forever. “You have been faithful with a few things; I will put you in charge of many things.” When we as God’s people stand before the Lord at the Judgment Seat of Christ we will be rewarded according to our faithfulness to Him in this life. We are not saved by works. But as saved people our works will be reviewed and our assignment for all eternity will be given in the light of that review.

1 Cor 3:12-15 “If any man builds on this foundation using gold, silver, costly stones, wood, hay or straw, 13his work will be shown for what it is, because the Day will bring it to light. It will be revealed with fire, and the fire will test the quality of each man’s work. 14If what he has built survives, he will receive his reward. 15If it is burned up, he will suffer loss; he himself will be saved, but only as one escaping through the flames.”

The picture in verse 15 is of a man whose house is rapidly burning up. He does not have time to carry anything out. He is lucky to get out alive. But he loses everything. Every day you are building something for eternity. Every day you are investing your life in something. If that investment is motivated by a desire to advance the cause of the Lord and please Him, it will bring eternal reward. If we simply live for our own desire and temporal comfort, those days will be as wood, hay, and stubble—lost forever. Paul is using two kinds of material to describe a man’s works. Materials like gold, silver, and costly stones can survive a fire and retain their value. But you put wood, hay, and straw into the fire and all you have left is worthless ashes. A life of obedience is a life of gold, silver, and precious stones before the Lord. A life of selfishness is just wood, hay, and stubble.

Notice the reward is a place of authority. “I will put you in charge of many things.” Not every Christian in heaven will have the same level of authority. There are many angels but some are archangels. Archangels occupy a place of greater power and glory than others. The glory of one star differs from the glory of another. The glory of one resurrected saint will differ from the glory of another. The decisions you make today will determine the glory you will manifest forever and ever and ever.

Rev 22:12 "Behold, I am coming soon! My reward is with me, and I will give to everyone according to what he has done.” NIV

3. The other reward mentioned in our text is an invitation to celebrate with the Lord.

The NIV puts it this way, “Come and share in your master’s happiness.” The New Living Bible says, “Let’s celebrate together.” Wouldn’t you like to hear the Lord say that to you? Our Lord will return. He will return in glory and power. He will return for His bride. And what a day that will be.

Do you live for that day? The Bible tells us to encourage one another to do that. Heb 10:24-25, “And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds. 25Let us not give up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but let us encourage one another-and all the more as you see the Day approaching.”

This morning I want to spur you on toward love and good deeds. I want to encourage you to look beyond the immediate things going on in your life and see that Day approaching.

As George Bernard Shaw was coming to the end of his life a reporter asked him, “Mr. Shaw, if you could live your life over and be anybody you’ve known, or any person from history, who would you, be?” That is an interesting question, isn’t it? Shaw replied, “I would want to be the man George Bernard Shaw could have been, but never was.” God has put in each person here amazing potential. Will you be—will you become what God has designed you to be? That choice is being made by the many decisions we make every day of our lives. You will be something for all eternity.

This life is a preparation for much greater things to come. The coming of the Lord is a major theme in the Bible. We are to live with that day in mind. May each and every one of us be faithful to invest our lives in what matters for all eternity.

www.GatewayNixa.org

Richard Tow

Gateway Foursquare Church

Nixa, Missouri