“Portion Or Proportion II”
Rev. Dr. Earl B. Mason, Sr., Senior Pastor
“Watching, Witnessing, And Working”

Profitable and
unprofitable servants (Mt.
24:14–30).
This parable must not be confused with the Parable of
the Pounds (Luke
19:11–27) though the two parables do have
similarities. Please note that each servant in this
parable was given money (a talent was worth about twenty
years’ wages) according to his ability. The man with
much ability was given five talents; the man with
average ability received two talents; the man with
minimal ability received one talent.
The talents represent
opportunities to use our abilities. If five talents were
given to a person with minimal ability, he would be
destroyed by the heavy responsibility. But if only one
talent were given to a man of great ability, he would be
disgraced and degraded. God assigns work and opportunity
according to ability. We are living in the period of
time between
Matthew 25:18
and 19. We have been assigned our ministries
according to the abilities and gifts God has given us.
It is our privilege to serve the Lord and multiply His
goods.
The three servants fell
into two categories: faithful and unfaithful. The
faithful servants took their talents and put them to
work for their Lord. The unfaithful servant hid his
talent in the earth. Instead of using his opportunities,
he buried them! He did not purposely do evil. But by
doing nothing, he was committing sin and robbing his
Lord of service and increase.
The two men who put their
money to work each received the same commendation (Matt.
25:21, 23). It was not the portion but the
proportion that made the difference. They
started as servants, but their Lord promoted them to
rulers. They were faithful with a few things, so the
Lord trusted them with many things. They had worked and
toiled, and now they entered into joy. Their
faithfulness gave each of them a capacity for greater
service and responsibility.
The third servant was
unfaithful and therefore was unrewarded. Because this
man was afraid he might fail, he never tried to succeed.
He feared life and his responsibilities. This paralyzed
him with anxiety, so he buried the talent to protect it.
The least he could have done was put the money in a bank
and collect some interest. There was no real risk in
that.
What we do not use for the
Lord, we are in danger of losing.
The master
reprimanded the unfaithful, unprofitable servant, and
then took his talent from him. The man with the
most talents received the extra talent. Note: He did not
take his singing voice nor the like!
Some feel that this
unprofitable servant was not a true believer. But it
seems that he was a true servant, even though he
proved to be unprofitable. The “outer darkness” of
Matthew 25:30 need not refer to
hell, even though that is often the case in the Gospels
(Matt.
8:12; 22:13). It is dangerous to build theology on
parables, for parables illustrate truth in vivid ways.
The man was dealt with by the Lord, he lost his
opportunity for service, and he gained no praise or
reward. To me, that is outer darkness.
It is possible that the
one-talent man thought that his one talent was not
really very important. He did not have five talents, or
even two. Why worry about one? Because he was
appointed as a steward by the Lord. Were it not for
the one-talent people in our world, very little would
get accomplished. His one talent could have increased to
two and brought glory to his master.
These three parables
encourage us to love His appearing, look for His
appearing, and labor faithfully until He comes. We
should be watching, witnessing, and working. We may not
be successful in the eyes of men, or even popular with
others. But if we are faithful and profitable, we shall
receive our reward.
The power of the Spirit is
given to us “according to the riches of His glory” (Eph.
3:16). Christ returned to glory and sent the Spirit
from heaven to indwell and empower His people. It is not
necessary for us to “work something up.” The power has
to be sent down. How marvelous that God does not give
the Spirit’s power to us “out of His riches” but
“according to”—which is a far greater thing. If I am a
billionaire and I give you ten dollars, I have given you
out of my riches; but if I give you a million
dollars, I have given to you according to my
riches. The first
is a portion; the second is a
proportion.
+ holiness and happiness
are directly proportional.
