What is a talent?
At the time
Jesus told his parable,
A talent was a
unit of weight—about 75 pounds.
And the term
had also come to mean a unit of value.
A value equal
to a talent of gold—75 pounds of gold.
It was also
described as 15-years wages.
That’s quite a
bit of value.
About $1
Million per talent.
In fact, back
then, the term talent was used the
same way
We today use
the phrase, a million dollars.
Not meaning
precisely $1 Million, but meaning, a lot
of money.
But Jesus was telling
a story, a parable, an allegory.
The story made
sense with the idea of a talent as a large lump of gold.
But the
listeners recognized that it also carried a deeper meaning.
Talent
was a metaphor, standing for something else
of enormous value.
Not a material substance, but a human or spiritual
quality.
Our passage from Proverbs also compares
Human qualities to materialistic value.
Human qualities to materialistic value.
Not a talent of gold, but
a set of pearls.
It says a worthy wife’s
value is far beyond that of pearls.
She brings good, and love,
and support.
She reaches out, and helps
the poor and the needy.
Maybe Jesus’
listeners were already familiar with his usage of the term.
But his use of
talent as a metaphor was so striking,
so strong,
That it came to
be the primary meaning of the word.
When someone
says talent today,
Our minds
don’t flash an image of that heavy bar of gold.
Or of $1
Million.
We immediately
think of the human, spiritual quality.
We might think
of America’s Got Talent.
If we’ve been
around long enough we might remember
Arthur Godfrey’s Talent Scouts.
We might think
of extraordinary talent in arts or sports.
But those are
actually narrow images of talent.
Narrower than
the way Jesus was using the term.
Every one of
us has many talents.
More than the one
or two, or even the five, that were given in the parable.
These talents
are our natural abilities.
Our special
aptitudes.
The abilities
that we were born with.
We may need to
work with these abilities to more fully develop
them.
But we didn’t
have to do anything to obtain them.
We might refer to someone
who is talented as being gifted.
A gifted musician, a
gifted writer, a gifted student.
That’s a very appropriate
description, because talents are
gifts.
Unearned gifts, given to
us by God.
In the broader sense,
talents include
All the qualities and
abilities we’ve been given:
Intelligence, physical
strength, endurance, emotional strength.
Even virtues, which we may
have worked to develop,
But for which the initial
seeds were freely gifted to us:
Nurturing ability, empathy,
wisdom, perseverance—even faith.
Jesus’ parable
makes another crucial point regarding these talents.
They are gifts to us individually,
In that each
of us benefits from our own talents.
But they’re
not given to us solely for our own
benefit.
They’re entrusted to us, to use for the Master’s benefit.
We’re expected
to recognize that our talents are gifts.
Therefore,
there’s no need to deny or hide them in mistaken humility.
We can put
them to their fullest use.
To earn
dividends for the Master.
So, what then is a talent?
It’s a human
or spiritual quality.
An unearned gift,
entrusted to us by God.
To be used for
the benefit of ourselves, our neighbors and our Master.
Each of us should
be aware of our many talents.
List them; humbly
marvel at their number.
Hone them;
fully employ them.
So that we can
enjoy helping to make this world a better place.
And
so that, when the time comes for our accounting,
We’ll hear
that glorious invitation—
Come, share your Master’s joy.
Come, share your Master’s joy.
33rd Sunday of Ordinary Time
Mt 25:14-30 Read this Scripture @usccb.org
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