NOVEMBER 15, 2020 "Lost Treasures" Rev. Dal McCrindle
The parable of the Talents is preached almost every Fall during the stewardship campaign when local churches go to the membership for a commitment for the following year: give your money: give your time: give your talents. If this were some other denomination, our givings would be compared with our tax return and 10% of our time, our treasure and our talents would be expected.
In the United Church, we tend to let people make those decisions based on their understanding of their commitment and gratitude to God. This is conventional wisdom. It is the wisdom that has stood the test of time. It may we tried and trite but it is also true. We hope and expect that members and adherents of congregations will turn over a portion of their assets to the church’s care. And in response, many are generous of the support of the church and its mission, its programs and outreach. But there is much more to this Parable than a commercial for Stewardship week. This is a story about a master who turns over enough wealth to his slaves to scare the confident Howe Street money manager half to death.
I’ve got a cartoon on my desk at home that shows Herman standing at a bank teller’s wicket with a bag-piper. The caption reads: “Hand over the cash or he starts playing!”
One of the challenges of my retirement was learning how to play bagpipes. I had tried several times before but never had time to practice. Now, I know there are other musical instruments that are much more difficult to master but you need to know that the Highland Bagpipe is the only instrument that has had the distinction of having been declared a weapon of war and banned by English King George II in 1746. After that, the punishment for playing the bagpipes was punishable by death. Obviously, the he must have heard a beginning piper trying to coordinate the blowing with the squeezing and fingering. The sound produced by such students has been described as a cross between a dying cat and a trumpeting elephant with a cold. Nevertheless, the successful player has the distinction of knowing that very few people remain ambivalent to the sounds which emanate from this ancient weapon … err instrument.
Unlike the ability of riding a bicycle which seemingly once learned is not forgotten, playing the bagpipes, like playing other musical instruments requires practice and good practice at that. Certain skills and abilities are learned and honed and if left alone are soon forgotten and lost. Then biggest challenge for many including myself in playing the bagpipes had nothing to do with the fingering although classical pipers have refined that skill beyond imagining; nor had it much to do with the strength of one’s lungs since I once blew up resusci Anne in a CPR Course. No, the crucial aspect for pipers is to strengthen their lip muscles. Without a tight grasp on the blow pipe, skilled fingering on the chanter or lungs the size of an ox means very little. Without regular practice, it doesn’t take very long for those lip muscles to atrophy. A skill, talent or gift not used, hidden away, soon fades and then is lost.
Matthew’s story takes us farther in understanding God’s gift-giving and our practice and willingness to risk. In the parable, Jesus speaks of a man who before going away on a journey entrusted his servants, actually slaves with his property. To one, he gave five talents, to another two and to another one “according to their ability.” The one with five, doubles the gift to ten; the one with two, doubles thee gift to four; but the one with only one gifted-talent hides it away – the safe thing to do; preserving it, in secret.
Critics have often said that the distribution of gifts was not fair, those who more talents had a better chance of increasing their value. At least the one, who hid his talent, demonstrated some responsibility by not losing the one gifted-talent, by preserving it. But let us not forget, this is, a parable with great intent and strategically placed here in Matthew’s gospel as an introduction to the description of the last judgment where God will separate the nations like a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats. This is not a simple tale about bag-pipe playing nor about investments in the stock market. This is a biting story that addresses our use or misuse of the gifted-talents with which God has blessed us.
While we cannot be certain of the value of a Biblical talent, it was a unit of measure, worth an extreme amount of money, whether it be of gold or silver. Some have speculated that based on BC’s minimum wage it would be equivalent to $250,000. Not a minor gift. The first two received an incredibly large amount, but so did the third. The gift was incredibly valuable. While the first two double their trust, the third ends up with nothing: it is lost treasure.
“Double or nothing.” Sounds more like gambling talk at one of Lower Mainland’s Casinos than it does about good advice from Jesus or the United Church of Canada! And yet, by alluding to gambling, risk taking and investment, the point is clear. The giver of good things, God expects us; no demands that talents be used. Not to use a talent is a misuse of a trust and the gift is subsequently loss.
A friend of mine hired by the Vancouver School of Theology as a financial Consultant when speaking to their Development Committee before they commenced their massive housing and building renovation compared the corporate life of business and the church. “With all the differences in ideology, theology and purpose,” he said, “the one significant difference between church organizations and businesses is that church people refuse to take risks. They want to keep things as they’ve always been; sanitized and carefully wrapped up in white linen and hidden away, buried in fields.” Now that’s quite amazing for a community that believes that it has been empowered and gifted by God with immeasurable treasure; to turn the world upside down!
The third servant did not understand that his master simply wanted him to use his gift. Whether it increased or decreased in size seemingly was not the issue. It’s too bad there hadn’t been a fourth servant who had used his talent and lost it all, and returned to the Master and said “well, it’s like this. It was a sure thing. Everyone down at the investment company said it was a sure bet. I was careful but things didn’t work out, all I have is a sincere apology.” What would Jesus have had the Master say? “Good try?” The financial equivalent to “it’s better to have loved and lost than never loved at all!”
Servants are to experience the joy of using their gift, seeing it on view, using it, not losing it. God does not reward those who play safe. We are called to be risk takers, resulting in the ongoing gifting by God to face whatever is around the corner. This apparently is what faith is about. This is trust; to leap out into the darkness across a chasm even when the other side is not yet visible – gamble the whole gift; risking it all! Have we in the church taken our stand against gambling to such an extreme that we apply the moral teaching to all of life’s affaires; even those of faith? The gifts of God are good, they are treasures, chosen according to each ability to handle; none are insignificant, some are similar, most are different. God’s treasured gifts are the talents that we and the world need as we journey throughout life.
“Oh I don’t have a talent. I can’t paint, write, sing or talk. You are so much more gifted than I. My little skills isn’t worth a penny. I’ll just wrap it up and hide it away. And then that talent us a lost treasure.
Or, as we look around at other’s gifts, their talents, their abilities their creativity, we may get the impression, that beautiful paintings simply sprang, full grown from the creator’s head and all that was required was a few hours of time to whisk pain onto the canvas. When we see the creations of others, believing their talents and gifts are so much better than our own we fall into a hole believing that we could never do what they have done - we feel inferior, wanting to take our little talent and bury it away until judgment day, having lost the experience of using it.
By playing safe or in response to the criticism, innuendo and subtle psychological attack of peers, parents and others, we forfeit many of the gifts that were originally given. According to a study by the American Association of Psychologists, at the age of 5, 90% of children were measured as having high creativity, by the age of 7, only 10% showed high creativity and by adulthood the percentile of highly creative people had decreased to just 2%.
We may not feel particularly creative nor gifted, but God has given talents to everyone and even if that creativity has waned, it has not YET been lost, it is only latent, repressed and crippled; always present in the unconscious, ready and waiting to emerge as we permit God’s Spirit to shine within us. And while the light from candles and stars can never be compared, they both defeat the darkness, somewhat. Like the master’s gifts, God’s gifts are distributed on the ability of servants to go out into the world and use them – use them - risk them – play with them, create with them – even the most simple gifts are acceptable. God given and extremely valuable. Remember the Shaker Song?
‘tis the gift to be simple, ‘tis the gift to be free
‘tis the gift to come down where we ought to be
And when we find ourselves in a place just right
‘twill be in the valley of love and delight.”
Even freedom is a gift and like any other it must be used, invested and risked or it too is a lost treasure. The greatest gift of all is that as servants we are each free to fail, to seemingly lose. In the world’s eyes, we may not have gained much but lost it all or having lost gained everything. “For what does it profit to gain the whole world and lose one’s soul?” As a prophet, Jesus may well have been judged a failure ending his life on the cross, executed as a common criminal. And yet by enduring the cross he has gifted the way for all, for life.
So what have we done and what will we do with what we have been given? I know a woman back at what used to be called St Giles whom God has give n the talent of being the best oat cake baker in the world. She’s legendary for her baking. She bakes for every occasion, bringing small packages to church for anyone who needs a lift. Maybe for someone who’s been shut in or not feeling 100percent; along come Effie’s oatcakes.
Being able to bake good oatcakes is not a huge talent. But when it’s used in service to others, it can be a marvelous gift. It can be a sign of the in-breaking of the kingdom of God. It can be an ordinary glimpse of the extraordinary graciousness of God in Jesus Christ. Think now of your gift and their use, whether they are tangible, financial , expressive or creative.
And as we take up our gifts and use them, we known that whether we fail or succeed it is their use that God intends and should we fail, God is still there to pick up the pieces.
At least that’s the way I see it!