Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| The Servant Who Owed a Hundred Pence. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
11. The Servant Who Owed a Hundred Pence.
Only, though he cannot pay the talents, for he has lost
them, he has a wife and children and other things, of which it is
written, “All that he has.”6111 And it was possible that when he had
been sold along with his own, he would have prospered if some one had
bought him, and, by his worth and the things that were his, have paid
the whole debt in full; and it was possible that he might no longer be
the servant of the king, but become that of his purchaser. And he
makes a request that he be not sold along with his own, but may
continue to abide in the house of the king; wherefore he fell down and
worshipped him, knowing that the king was God, and said, “Have
patience with me, and I will pay thee all;”6112 for he was, as is probable, an active man,
who knew that he could by a second course of action fill up the whole
deficiency of the former loss of many talents. And this truly
good king was moved with compassion for the man who owed him many
talents and then released him, having bestowed upon him a favour
greater than the request which had been made; for the debtor promised
to the long-suffering master to pay all his debts, but the Lord moved
with compassion for him did not merely forgive him with the idea of
receiving his own back as a result of his patience, but even entirely
released him and forgave him the whole debt. But this wicked
servant, who had besought his master to have patience for his many
talents, acted without mercy, for, having found one of his
fellow-servants which owed him a hundred pence, he laid hold on him and
took him by the throat, saying, “Pay if thou
owest.”6113 And did he
not exhibit the very excess of wickedness who laid hold of his
fellow-servant for a hundred pence, and took him by the throat and
deprived him of freedom to breathe, when he himself, for the many
talents, had neither been laid hold of, nor seized by the throat, but
at first was ordered to be sold along with his wife and children and
all that was his own; but afterwards, when he had worshipped him, the
master was moved with compassion for him, and he was released and
forgiven in regard to the whole of the debt. But it were indeed a
hard task to tell according to the conception of Jesus who is the one
fellow-servant who was found to be owing a hundred pence, not to his
own lord, but to him who owed many talents, and who are the
fellow-servants who saw the one taking by the throat, and the other
taken, and were exceedingly sorry, and represented clearly unto their
own lord all that had been done. But what the truth in these
matters is, I declare that no one can interpret unless Jesus, who
explained all things to His own disciples privately, takes up His abode
in his reason, and opens up all the treasures in the parable which are
dark, hidden, unseen, and confirms by clear demonstrations the man whom
He desires to illumine with the light of the knowledge of the things
that are in this parable, that he may at once represent who is brought
to the king as the debtor of many talents, and who is the other one who
owes to him a hundred pence, etc.; whether he can be the man of sin
previously mentioned,6114 or the devil, or
neither of these, but some other, whether a man, or some one of these
under the sway of the devil; for it is a work of the wisdom of God to
exhibit the things that have been prophesied concerning those who are
in themselves of a certain nature, or have been made according to such
and such qualities, whether among visible powers or also among some
men, in whatever way they may have been written by the Holy
Spirit. But as we have not yet received the competent mind which
is able to be blended with the mind of Christ, and which is capable of
attaining to things so great, and which is able with the Spirit to
“search all things, even the deep things of God,”6115 we, forming an impression still indefinitely
with regard to the matters in this passage, are of opinion that the
wicked servant indicated by the parable who is here represented in
regard to the debt of many talents, refers to some definite
one.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|