This truth of our faith is highlighted in that gospel
parable about a nobleman who went off to a distant country to obtain
the kingship, leaving his ten servants with ten gold coins with the
instruction to engage in trade until he returns. (cfr. Lk 19,11-28)
He was happy with those who carried out the instruction and
gave them charge of big cities. “Well done, good servant! You have
been faithful in this very small matter; take charge of ten cities,”
he said. He punished the servant who did nothing with the gold coin.
Later on, he told the servants that the gold coin of the
servant who did nothing with it be given to the one who gained ten
more with his trading. When the other servants commented that this
productive servant already had ten gold coins, the nobleman who
personifies God said: “To everyone who has, more will be given, but
from the one who has not, even what he has will be taken away.”
All this only show that we are meant to be fruitful and
productive with what God has given us and that we would be receiving
more graces and blessings the more fruitful and productive we are with
all the gifts God has given us.
Everyday, we should be keenly aware that we need to be
fruitful and productive. That’s simply because even from the beginning
of our creation in Adam and Eve, this has always been God’s will for
us.
“Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and
subdue it,” (Gen 1,28) God told our first parents, clearly outlining
his mandate to them. It’s a mandate that continues to be repeated up
to now.
That should be fair enough. If one is given a lot of gifts,
blessings, privileges, opportunities, etc, then a lot should also be
expected of him. Christ himself said so. “Much will be required of the
persons entrusted with much, and still more will be demanded of the
person entrusted with more.” (Lk 12,48)
He reiterates the same idea a number of times in the parable
of the talents, the parable of the seed, the tenants in the vineyard,
and the different images he taught about the Kingdom of God. Even on
the basis of common sense alone, that idea should be a given.
We have always been taught to trade with our talents, to
make the most of what is given and entrusted to us, to be generous in
the way we spend our life. Our life here on earth, after all, is a
test of love, the real love, which is love for God and others, and
never just self-love.
We have been repeatedly assured that if we are generous with
God and with others, we will also be the object of a greater
generosity from God and from others as well.
Christ said so. “Everyone who has left houses or brothers or
sisters or father or mother or children or property, for my sake, will
receive a hundred times as much in return and will inherit eternal
life.” (Mt 19,29) Yes, God cannot be outdone in generosity.
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