I think of myself as a responsible person. I take pride in doing what I say I will do, when I say I will do it. It is important to me to be a positive contributor in all the roles I inhabit.
I hate the feeling of letting people down and so I work hard to avoid it. But what about the impact I could be having that I’m not?
I know I have the potential to have a greater impact. If I took more risks and made more of a commitment to grow, there would be more value I could create.
I don’t neglect the responsibilities I have in my life, but I find myself sometimes neglecting to take on more when I know I can.
And if I choose to not grow into the best version of myself, am I not neglecting all of the people I could have created value for?
I was thinking about this as I woke up today and something from the bible came to my mind. In Matthew 25:14, Jesus shares a parable, called The Parable of the Talents. FYI, A talent is a measure of gold or silver:
Jesus: 14 This is how it will be. It will be like a landowner who is going on a trip. He instructed his slaves about caring for his property. 15 He gave five talents to one slave, two to the next, and then one talent to the last slave—each according to his ability. Then the man left.
16 Promptly the man who had been given five talents went out and bartered and sold and turned his five talents into ten. 17 And the one who had received two talents went to the market and turned his two into four. 18 And the slave who had received just one talent? He dug a hole in the ground and buried his master’s money there.
19 Eventually the master came back from his travels, found his slaves, and settled up with them. 20 The slave who had been given five talents came forward and told his master how he’d turned five into ten; then he handed the whole lot over to his master.
Master: 21 Excellent. You’ve proved yourself not only clever but loyal. You’ve executed a rather small task masterfully, so now I am going to put you in charge of something larger. But before you go back to work, come join my great feast and celebration.
22 Then the slave who had been given two talents came forward and told his master how he’d turned two into four, and he handed all four talents to his master.
Master: 23 Excellent. You’ve proved yourself not only clever but loyal. You’ve executed a rather small task masterfully, so now I am going to put you in charge of something larger. But before you go back to work, come join my great feast and celebration.
24 Finally the man who had been given one talent came forward.
Servant: Master, I know you are a hard man, difficult in every way. You can make a healthy sum when others would fail. You profit when other people are doing the work. You grow rich on the backs of others. 25 So I was afraid, dug a hole, and hid the talent in the ground. Here it is. You can have it.
26 The master was furious.
Master: You are a pathetic excuse for a servant! You have disproved my trust in you and squandered my generosity. You know I always make a profit! 27 You could have at least put this talent in the bank; then I could have earned a little interest on it! 28 Take that one talent away, and give it to the servant who doubled my money from five to ten.
29 You see, everything was taken away from the man who had nothing, but the man who had something got even more. 30 And as for the slave who made no profit but buried his talent in the ground? His master ordered his slaves to tie him up and throw him outside into the utter darkness where there is miserable mourning and great fear.
Matthew 25:14-30, The Voice
Talent in the story refers to a measure of gold, but it’s fitting because it speaks to the way we use our talents in the modern sense.
It can be tempting to hide our talents. To bury them and keep them safe, confident in the knowledge that we have them, but not putting them to use. Not exposing ourselves to the risk of losing them.
But to bury our talent is to put it to waste. When we use the gifts that we have, when we try to multiply our impact, we tend to be rewarded.
When we play small and only use a small portion of the gifts we are given, we tend to lose it.
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