Matthew
25:14-30; Luke 19:11-27
Thank
you for continuing this journey of The Gospel Project® for Kids. Matthew and Luke both record parables from
Jesus. In Matthew 25, Matthew writes about the parable of the talents. Luke 19
accounts for the parable of the minas. Though these parables are similar, they
are not identical. Both parables are about a master who gives money to his
servants and then goes on a trip. When the master returns, he judges the
servants for their faithfulness—their stewardship over what they possessed.
This
week, we will focus on the parable of the talents. Jesus was teaching His
disciples at the Mount of Olives, east of Jerusalem. The disciples asked Jesus
to tell them about the end of time. (See Matthew 24:3.) He told them parables
to help them understand what it will be like when the kingdom of heaven comes.
Jesus
said that the kingdom of heaven will be like a man going on a journey. In this
parable, the man is Jesus. Jesus was going to leave earth and return to His
Father in heaven. Before the man left, he entrusted certain amounts of money to
his servants. The relationship between a master and his servants would have
meant that the master still owned the money they were given, and the master
would own any interest they made on the money. The first two servants were
faithful with the gifts, investing the talents and gaining more, not for their
own profit, but for the profit of their master.
The third
servant, however, knew that if he lost any of the money, the master would
punish him. And if he gained any money, he wouldn’t get to keep it anyway. So
he took no risk and buried the money in the ground. When the master returned,
he was pleased with the actions of the first two servants, but he punished the
servant who did nothing.
“Well
done, good and faithful servant!” Every believer, as a servant of Christ, has
the task of serving God with his or her life. We do not sit idly by, afraid of
failure, but we serve joyfully for Jesus’ sake. We eagerly wait for the day we
can share in the joy of our Master. Heaven is the joy of knowing, worshiping,
and enjoying Jesus forever.
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