By common consent, this is considered Jesus’ most perplexing parable, but the puzzling part is often more in his commentary than in the story itself. The narrative is vivid and engaging, rich with detail.
A rich man heard that his steward was “wasting his goods” (the same phrase used in the story of the prodigal son!). Alarmed, he summoned the steward and demanded an account of his management. Dismissal seemed inevitable.
The steward thought anxiously about his predicament. Another lucrative job was out of the question. he was unfit for manual farm labor, and the very idea of it horrified him. Even the thought of becoming a professional beggar filled him with dread. Though he had no shame in misappropriating his master’s money, he felt deep shame at the idea of begging. Where had all the money he had fraudulently diverted gone? Surely, he had lived a life of indulgent extravagance as well.
Suddenly, an idea struck him: “I know what to do! I can make my master’s debtors into my friends.”
He called each debtor in turn. “What do you owe my lord?” he asked the first. “A hundred measures of oil? Here is your adjusted account, reduce it to fifty.” That debt represented the yield of about 150 olive trees. The next owed a hundred measures of wheat, the produce of roughly 100 acres and the steward reduced it to eighty, calculating who could be influenced more cheaply. He repeated this process for all outstanding debts, securing both their loyalty and their silence without directly incriminating himself.
When the master learned how the steward had been received by the debtors, his admiration was readily imagined. Unaware of the underhand dealings, he praised the man for acting shrewdly and being popular with the debtors.
The parable subtly links the steward’s “wisdom” to the craftiness of the serpent in Eden (Gen. 3:1 LXX), highlighting shrewdness used with cunning foresight.
A rich man heard that his steward was “wasting his goods” (the same phrase used in the story of the prodigal son!). Alarmed, he summoned the steward and demanded an account of his management. Dismissal seemed inevitable.
The steward thought anxiously about his predicament. Another lucrative job was out of the question. he was unfit for manual farm labor, and the very idea of it horrified him. Even the thought of becoming a professional beggar filled him with dread. Though he had no shame in misappropriating his master’s money, he felt deep shame at the idea of begging. Where had all the money he had fraudulently diverted gone? Surely, he had lived a life of indulgent extravagance as well.
Suddenly, an idea struck him: “I know what to do! I can make my master’s debtors into my friends.”
He called each debtor in turn. “What do you owe my lord?” he asked the first. “A hundred measures of oil? Here is your adjusted account, reduce it to fifty.” That debt represented the yield of about 150 olive trees. The next owed a hundred measures of wheat, the produce of roughly 100 acres and the steward reduced it to eighty, calculating who could be influenced more cheaply. He repeated this process for all outstanding debts, securing both their loyalty and their silence without directly incriminating himself.
When the master learned how the steward had been received by the debtors, his admiration was readily imagined. Unaware of the underhand dealings, he praised the man for acting shrewdly and being popular with the debtors.
The parable subtly links the steward’s “wisdom” to the craftiness of the serpent in Eden (Gen. 3:1 LXX), highlighting shrewdness used with cunning foresight.