I was shown that the parable of the talents
has not been fully understood. This important lesson was given
to the disciples for the benefit of Christians living in the
last days. And these talents do not represent merely the ability
to preach and instruct from the word of God. The parable applies
to the temporal means which God has entrusted to His people.
Those to whom the five and the two talents were given, traded
and doubled that which was committed to their trust. God requires
those who have possessions here, to put their money out to usury
for Him--to put it into the cause to spread the truth. And if
the truth lives in the heart of the receiver, he also will aid
with his substance in sending it
to others; and through his efforts, his influence, and his means,
other souls will embrace the truth, and begin also to work for
God. I saw that some of God's professed people are like the man
who hid his talent in the earth. They keep their possessions
from doing good in the cause of God. They claim that these are
their own, and that they have a right to do what they please
with their own; and souls are not saved by judicious efforts
made by them with their Lord's money. Angels keep a faithful
record of every man's work, and as judgment passes upon the house
of God, the sentence of each is recorded by his name, and the
angel is commissioned to spare not the unfaithful servants, but
to cut them down at the time of slaughter. And that which was
committed to their trust is taken from them. Their earthly treasure
is then swept away, and they have lost all. And the crowns they
might have worn, had they been faithful, are put upon the heads
of those saved by the faithful servants whose means was constantly
in use for God. And everyone they have been the means of saving,
adds stars to their crown in glory, and increases their eternal
reward.
I was also shown that the parable of the
unjust steward was to teach us a lesson. "Make to yourselves
friends of the mammon of unrighteousness; that, when ye fail,
they may receive you into everlasting habitations." If we
use our means to God's glory here, we lay up a treasure in heaven;
and when earthly possessions are all gone, the faithful steward
has Jesus and angels for his friends, to receive him home to
everlasting habitations.
"He that is faithful in that which
is least is faithful also in much." He that is faithful
in his earthly possessions, which are least, making a judicious
use of what God has lent him here, will be true to his profession.
"He that is unjust in the least is unjust also in much."
He that will withhold from God that which He has lent him, will
be unfaithful in the things of God in every respect. "If
therefore ye have not been faithful
in the unrighteous mammon, who will commit to your trust the
true riches?" If we prove unfaithful in the management of
what God lends us here, He will never give us the immortal inheritance.
"And if ye have not been faithful in that which is another
man's, who shall give you that which is your own?" Jesus
has purchased redemption for us. It is ours; but we are placed
here on probation to see if we will prove worthy of eternal life.
God proves us by trusting us with earthly possessions. If we
are faithful to impart freely of what He has lent us, to advance
His cause, God can entrust to us the immortal inheritance. "Ye
cannot serve God and mammon." "If any man love the
world, the love of the Father is not in him."
God is displeased with the slack, loose
manner in which many of His professed people conduct their worldly
business. They seem to have lost all sense of the fact that the
property they are using belongs to God, and that they must render
to Him an account of their stewardship. Some leave their worldly
business in perfect confusion. Satan has his eye on it all, and
he strikes at a favorable opportunity, and by his management
takes much means out of the ranks of Sabbathkeepers. And this
means goes into his ranks. Some who are aged are unwilling to
make any settlement of their worldly business, and in an unexpected
moment they sicken and die. Their children who have no interest
in the truth, take the property. Satan has managed it as suited
him. "If therefore ye have not been faithful in the unrighteous
mammon, who will commit to your trust the true riches? And if
ye have not been faithful in that which is another man's, who
shall give you that which is your own?"
I was shown the awful fact that Satan and
his angels have had more to do with the management of the property
of God's professed people than the Lord has. Stewards of the
last days are unwise. They suffer Satan to control their business
matters, and get into his ranks what belongs to, and
should be in, the cause of God. God takes
notice of you, unfaithful stewards; He will call you to account.
I saw that the stewards of God can by faithful, judicious management
keep their business in this world square, exact, and straight.
And it is especially the privilege and duty of the aged, the
feeble, and those who have no children, to place their means
where it can be used in the cause of God if they should be suddenly
taken away. But I saw that Satan and his angels exult over their
success in this matter. And those who should be wise heirs of
salvation almost willingly let their Lord's money slip out of
their hands into the enemy's ranks. In this way they strengthen
Satan's kingdom, and seem to feel very easy about it!