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Do Business Till My Return
by Josprel
Luke 19:19-27
According to at least one of the parables of the Lord Jesus Christ, God,
the Father apparently functions as a stern master who expects a generous
return on His investments. In the Gospel recorded by the physician,
Luke, traveling companion to the Apostle Paul, chapter nineteen records
a parable known to theologians by various titles: "The Parable of the
Talents," "The Unwise Servant," "The Unprofitable Servant," "The Hidden
Talent," among others. Verse thirteen ends with a direct command issued
by a nobleman to his servants.
Soon departing on a long journey during which he was to receive a
kingdom, he entrusted to the discretion of his servants the investment
of various amounts of his wealth. When we understand that the Lord Jesus
was portraying himself by the departing nobleman and depicting his
followers as the servants, the parable requires only minimal commentary.
Entrusting each of his servants with one "mina" (a gold coin worth
approximately twenty dollars in our time, but in biblical times an
amount somewhat equal to the wages for one hundred days of labor) the
nobleman charged them, "Do business till my return” (literal
translation). True to their commissions, nine servants invested the
money wisely, gaining a good return. The tenth, though he understood his
master's command; chose to hide the amount entrusted to him.
Upon his return, the nobleman discovered that this servant not only
neglected to invest the mina for fear of loosing it, he failed to place
it at interest in even the safest, most conservative type of
institution; he made not the slightest endeavor to fulfill his
commission. He did absolutely nothing, and then refused to take
responsibility for his neglect. When called to account by the nobleman,
who now was a king, the servant actually implied that the fault lay with
his master.
"Master, here is your mina, which I have kept, put away in a
handkerchief," he whimpered, "for I feared you, because you are an
austere man. You collect where you did not deposit, and reap where you
did not sow."
His outraged master replied, "I will judge you and condemn you out of
your own mouth you wicked servant! You knew that I was a stern man,
picking up what I did not put down, and gathering where I did not plant!
Then why did you not put my money in a bank, so that on my return I
might have collected it with interest?" (Verses 20-24: literal
translation). The master then charged those who stood by to take he mina
from the neglectful servant and give it to the one who had ten minas.
The essential truth in this parable is that no-gain, maintenance only
spirituality ultimately will encounter the Lord's disapproval. It is a
spirituality that attempts to satisfy Him with less than even the
minimum of effort. If the unproductive servant really believed what he
claimed to believe regarding his master, he would have endeavored all
the more to please him.
What he actually did was rationalize his own laziness, lack of
initiative and diligence. While his fellow servants were keeping faith
with their master, this servant used the master's absence as an
opportunity for slothfulness; he was lazy. Though he did not confide it
to them, the king actually had placed his servants in a test situation.
While still a nobleman, it appears he understood his kingdom would
require faithful administrators; therefore, during his absence, he
tested their various capabilities, dispositions and trustworthiness.
After receiving his kingdom, he appointed those who were faithful during
his absence to high-ranking administrative responsibilities, as he had
intended to do all along. The king tested them in lesser
responsibilities, before promoting them to greater ones.
The unprofitable servant received nothing, but his master’s judgment.
The Lord in His infinite wisdom promotes only the obedient and the
faithful for His work. We must listen patiently for Him and give heed to
the Spirit’s prompting for His coming will not be secret. The Second
Coming of Christ shall catch up the Church so unexpectedly, that there
will be no time for those who are unprepared to ready themselves for it.
“As the lightening flashes across the sky and lights it up from one side
to the other, so will the son of man be in that day . . . On that day
the man who is on the roof of his house must not go down into the house
to get his belongings; in the same way, the man who is out in the field
must not go back to the house . . .” (Luke 17:31; Today’s English
Version).
The houses in Christ’s day had flat roofs that were used much as we use
a veranda or a porch. So instantaneous will Christ’s Second Coming be
that there will be no time to go from the rooftop to the inside of the
house. It would be similar to our saying; the Second Coming is so
instantaneous that there will be no time to run the short distance from
upstairs to downstairs.
The whole intent of these examples is to show that – at the Second
Coming of Christ – if someone is not prepared, there will be no time
left to prepare. The time for preparation (that which we call the "Age
of Grace") will have ended.
Unbelievers shall not expect the Coming of Christ and His kingdom;
however the world shall know that He came. “The Kingdom of God does not
come with [outward show - literal translation]. There will be those who
will say to you, ‘Look, over there!’ But don’t go out looking for it. As
lightening flashes across the sky and lights it from one side to the
other, so will the Son of Man be in his day” (Luke 17:20-24; Today’s
English Version).
As lightning is openly visible for all to see, so shall Christ’s Second
Coming be. The world will know that He came (Luke 17:24). “For the day
of the Son of Man will be as lightning, which flashes and lights up the
sky from one end to the other” (Luke 17:28-31; Today’s English Version).
The Day of the Son of Man shall be at a time when people are enjoying
their social events as usual. “As it was in the days of Noah. So shall
it be in the days of the Son of man. Everybody was eating and drinking,
and men and women married, up to the very day Noah went into the boat
and the flood came . . .” (Luke 17:26-27; Today’s English Version).
The Day of the Son of Man shall be at a time when humanity is conducting
“business as usual.” It shall be the same as “ . . . it was in the time
of Lot. Everybody kept on eating and drinking, buying and selling,
planting and building. But the day Lot left Sodom, fire and sulfur
rained down from heaven and destroyed them all. It will be just like
this on the day the Son of Man is revealed” (Luke 17:28; Today’s English
Version).
So be productive and prepared!
© Josprel (Joseph Perrello)
josprel@verizon.net
About the Author:
Josprel is an ordained minister, who resides with
his wife, Maria, in Western New. Though brought up by devout parents, he
abandoned both the Church and religion at an early age, not returning to
them until several years later. He served three years in the Far East
with the U.S. Air Force. He then was separated from active duty and
placed on a ten-year reserve status. He studied for the ministry under
the G.I Bill of Rights, and holds a Master of Theology degree. He
currently is authoring two novels, "Beloved Apostate" and "Kanfal."
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