Matthew 25:14-30, verses 24-25, that is the master, this servant claims to serve and look at the specific accusation, reaping where you did not sow and gathering where you did not scatter seed, the servant is saying that the master profits from labor, he did not perform, he takes the harvest from fields he never planted. In the servant’s mind, the master is an explorer, someone who demands results without providing the means to achieve them, someone who sets people up to fail and then punishes the failure, that theology is the root of the burial. If you believe that about the person who gave you what you have, you will protect yourself first and serve second, you will minimize exposure, you will do the bare minimum and hope to escape, return the principal and hope to escape notice.
The burial is not a financial, it is a theological one, the servant has made a judgment about the master’s character and that judgment has produced paralysis, then he does something that looks like humility, but is actually an accusation, here you have what is yours as if to say, I kept your money safe, I did my duty, if you wanted more, you should not have been the kind of person people are afraid of. The master does not deny being demanding, that detail is important, he does not say, you misunderstand me, I am actually very kind, he takes the servant’s own premise and turns it inside out, verses 24-25. The logic is devastating, even on the servant’s own terms, the math does not work, if you truly believe the master was that hard, that exacting, that unforgiving of waste, then doing nothing was the worst possible response.
A demanding master would be more angry at inaction than at a failed investment, the servant’s own fear, if it had been genuine, should have driven him to act. Depositing the money with bankers required no skill, no courage, no strategic brilliance, it was the lowest possible effort and the servant did not even do that, which means the fear was not really fear, it was a cover. Underneath the fear was something else entirely, a quiet decision that this master was not worth the risk, not worth the effort, not worth engaging with at all, the servant did not fail, because he was timid, he failed, because he had already decided the relationship was not worth investing in and that is the fault line running through the entire parable.
The burial is not a financial, it is a theological one, the servant has made a judgment about the master’s character and that judgment has produced paralysis, then he does something that looks like humility, but is actually an accusation, here you have what is yours as if to say, I kept your money safe, I did my duty, if you wanted more, you should not have been the kind of person people are afraid of. The master does not deny being demanding, that detail is important, he does not say, you misunderstand me, I am actually very kind, he takes the servant’s own premise and turns it inside out, verses 24-25. The logic is devastating, even on the servant’s own terms, the math does not work, if you truly believe the master was that hard, that exacting, that unforgiving of waste, then doing nothing was the worst possible response.
A demanding master would be more angry at inaction than at a failed investment, the servant’s own fear, if it had been genuine, should have driven him to act. Depositing the money with bankers required no skill, no courage, no strategic brilliance, it was the lowest possible effort and the servant did not even do that, which means the fear was not really fear, it was a cover. Underneath the fear was something else entirely, a quiet decision that this master was not worth the risk, not worth the effort, not worth engaging with at all, the servant did not fail, because he was timid, he failed, because he had already decided the relationship was not worth investing in and that is the fault line running through the entire parable.