P1916:2, 176:3.2
"And even you, Thomas, fail to comprehend what I have been saying. Have I
not all this time taught you that your connection with the kingdom is spiritual
and individual, wholly a matter of personal experience in the spirit by the
faith-realization that you are a son of God? What more shall I say? The downfall
of nations, the crash of empires, the destruction of the unbelieving Jews,
the end of an age, even the end of the world, what have these things to do
with one who believes this gospel, and who has hid his life in the surety
of the eternal kingdom? You who are God-knowing and
gospel-believing have
already received the assurances of eternal life. Since your lives have been
lived in the spirit and for the Father, nothing can be of serious concern
to you . Kingdom builders, the accredited citizens of the heavenly worlds,
are not to be disturbed by temporal upheavals or perturbed by terrestrial
cataclysms. What does it matter to you who believe this gospel of the kingdom
if nations overturn, the age ends, or all things visible crash, since you
know that your life is the gift of the Son, and that it is eternally secure
in the Father? Having lived the temporal life by faith and having yielded
the fruits of the spirit as the righteousness of loving service for your fellows,
you can confidently look forward to the next step in the eternal career with
the same survival faith that has carried you through your first and earthly
adventure in sonship with God.
P1916:3, 176:3.3
"Each generation of believers should carry on their work, in view of the possible
return of the Son of Man, exactly as each individual believer carries forward
his lifework in view of inevitable and
ever-impending natural death. When
you have by faith once established yourself as a son of God, nothing else
matters as regards the surety of survival. But make no mistake! this survival
faith is a living faith, and it increasingly manifests the fruits of that
divine spirit which first inspired it in the human heart. That you have once
accepted sonship in the heavenly kingdom will not save you in the face of
the knowing and persistent rejection of those truths which have to do with
the progressive spiritual fruit-bearing of the sons of God in the flesh. You
who have been with me in the Father's business on earth can even now desert
the kingdom if you find that you love not the way of the Father's service
for mankind.
P1916:4, 176:3.4
"As individuals, and as a generation of believers, hear me while I speak a
parable: There was a certain great man who, before starting out on a long
journey to another country, called all his trusted servants before him and
delivered into their hands all his goods. To one he gave five talents, to
another two, and to another one. And so on down through the entire group of
honored stewards, to each he intrusted his goods according to their several
abilities; and then he set out on his journey. When their lord had departed,
his servants set themselves at work to gain profits from the wealth intrusted
to them. Immediately he who had received five talents began to trade with
them and very soon had made a profit of another five talents. In like manner
he who had received two talents soon had gained two more. And so did all of
these servants make gains for their master except him who received but one
talent. He went away by himself and dug a hole in the earth where he hid his
lord's money. Presently the lord of those servants unexpectedly returned and
called upon his stewards for a reckoning. And when they had all been called
before their master, he who had received the five talents came forward with
the money which had been intrusted to him and brought five additional talents,
saying, `Lord, you gave me five talents to invest, and I am glad to present
five other talents as my gain.' And then his lord said to him: `Well done,
good and faithful servant, you have been faithful over a few things; I will
now set you as steward over many; enter forthwith into the joy of your lord.'
And then he who had received the two talents came forward, saying: `Lord,
you delivered into my hands two talents; behold, I have gained these other
two talents.' And his lord then said to him: `Well done, good and faithful
steward; you also have been faithful over a few things, and I will now set
you over many; enter you into the joy of your lord.' And then there came to
the accounting he who had received the one talent. This servant came forward,
saying, `Lord, I knew you and realized that you were a shrewd man in that
you expected gains where you had not personally labored; therefore was I afraid
to risk aught of that which was intrusted to me. I safely hid your talent
in the earth; here it is; you now have what belongs to you.' But his lord
answered: `You are an indolent and slothful steward. By your own words you
confess that you knew I would require of you an accounting with reasonable
profit, such as your diligent fellow servants have this day rendered. Knowing
this, you ought, therefore, to have at least put my money into the hands of
the bankers that on my return I might have received my own with interest.'
And then to the chief steward this lord said: `Take away this one talent from
this unprofitable servant and give it to him who has the ten talents.'
P1917:1, 176:3.5
"To every one who has, more shall be given, and he shall have abundance; but
from him who has not, even that which he has shall be taken away. You cannot
stand still in the affairs of the eternal kingdom. My Father requires all
his children to grow in grace and in a knowledge of the truth. You who know
these truths must yield the increase of the fruits of the spirit and manifest
a growing devotion to the unselfish service of your fellow servants. And remember
that, inasmuch as you minister to one of the least of my brethren, you have
done this service to me.
P1917:2, 176:3.6
"And so should you go about the work of the Father's business, now and henceforth,
even forevermore. Carry on until I come. In faithfulness do that which is
intrusted to you, and thereby shall you be ready for the reckoning call of
death. And having thus lived for the glory of the Father and the satisfaction
of the Son, you shall enter with joy and exceedingly great pleasure into the
eternal service of the everlasting kingdom."
P1917:3, 176:3.7
Truth is living; the Spirit of Truth is ever leading the children of light
into new realms of spiritual reality and divine service. You are not given
truth to crystallize into settled, safe, and honored forms. Your revelation
of truth must be so enhanced by passing through your personal experience that
new beauty and actual spiritual gains will be disclosed to all who behold
your spiritual fruits and in consequence thereof are led to glorify the Father
who is in heaven. Only those faithful servants who thus grow in the knowledge
of the truth, and who thereby develop the capacity for divine appreciation
of spiritual realities, can ever hope to "enter fully into the joy of their
Lord." What a sorry sight for successive generations of the professed followers
of Jesus to say, regarding their stewardship of divine truth: "Here, Master,
is the truth you committed to us a hundred or a thousand years ago. We have
lost nothing; we have faithfully preserved all you gave us; we have allowed
no changes to be made in that which you taught us; here is the truth you gave
us." But such a plea concerning spiritual indolence will not justify the barren
steward of truth in the presence of the Master. In accordance with the truth
committed to your hands will the Master of truth require a reckoning.
P1918:1, 176:3.8
In the next world you will be asked to give an account of the endowments and
stewardships of this world. Whether inherent talents are few or many, a just
and merciful reckoning must be faced. If endowments are used only in selfish
pursuits and no thought is bestowed upon the higher duty of obtaining increased
yield of the fruits of the spirit, as they are manifested in the ever-expanding
service of men and the worship of God, such selfish stewards must accept the
consequences of their deliberate choosing.
P1918:2, 176:3.9
And how much like all selfish mortals was this unfaithful servant with the
one talent in that he blamed his slothfulness directly upon his lord. How
prone is man, when he is confronted with the failures of his own making, to
put the blame upon others, oftentimes upon those who least deserve it!
P1918:3, 176:3.10
Said Jesus that night as they went to their rest: "Freely have you received;
therefore freely should you give of the truth of heaven, and in the giving
will this truth multiply and show forth the increasing light of saving grace,
even as you minister it."