03-Nov-2014



Dear Friend,




When we invest in anything or anyone we expect returns. Parents invest in their 
children and expect them to do well in their studies. Business people take 
risks with stocks and shares and hope to make a good profit from the same. 
Generous and benevolent individuals and institutions take calculated risks and 
invest in people and ventures and expect that their investments will be worth 
their efforts. Even God invests in us by giving us life and numerous blessings! 
Have we belied His trust? May his Word jolt us!   Have an introspecting 
weekend! -Fr. Jude




Sunday Reflections: 33rd ‘Using every talent we are blessed with for God’s 
service!’ 16-Nov-2014

Pro. 31: 10-13, 19-20, 30-31;      1Thes. 5: 1-6;     Matt. 25: 14-30;





The first reading from the book of Proverbs is part of the Wisdom literature of 
Israel. It sets forth how we are to live and behave in our daily life. Today’s 
excerpt from Proverbs idolizes the ideal wife, who is practical and manages the 
household so well that she is prized above all things by her husband. The 
reading reminds the Israelites of the great gift and companionship that an 
ideal wife is. She is diligent about household matters and is held up as a 
model of how a simple ordinary housewife can use her talents to the full in the 
service not only of her own family but for others as well. Are we living our 
lives to the fullest and making something of our lives?




What have I made of myself?

Once a re-union took place of past pupils and an elderly priest who had come 
back to be present at the re-union. It was obvious from the way they flocked 
around him that he enjoyed great respect among them. Without the slightest 
promptings they began to pour out their stories. One was an architect, another 
was a university professor, another was a head of a company, another was a 
highly successful farmer, another was a monsignor in the Church, and another 
was a principal of a very prestigious school. The old priest listened with 
pleasure, as there didn't seem to be a single failure or loser among them. Whey 
they had finished he complimented them on their achievements. Then, looking at 
them with affection, he said, “And now, tell me what you have made of 
yourselves?” A long silence followed. They were reluctant to speak of 
themselves. It seems they were so absorbed in their careers that they had 
neglected their personal lives. Their energies were so focused on efficiency 
and success that they didn't have time to grow emotionally, with the result 
that in terms of relationships many of them were impoverished.

Flor McCarthy in ‘New Sunday and Holy Day Liturgies’




In today’s Gospel Jesus uses a parable of the talents to illustrate how we 
should live our lives to the fullest if we are to be pleasing to God. In the 
parable the rich man, before he leaves for a journey gives incredible sums to 
three servants –the first, ten talents, the second, five talents and the third, 
one talent, which alone equaled the wages of an ordinary worker for twenty 
years! Without further instructions the man departs. Hurriedly, the first two 
servants doubled their gifts, while the one-talent man dug a hole in the ground 
and hid his. Upon returning the rich man asked his servants what happened to 
his money. After identical responses about doubling his gift, the first two are 
called ‘good and faithful servant’ and are placed in charge of even more 
possessions and welcomed into the joy of the master. While the first two 
servants were praised the third servant was treated differently. When he was 
asked what he had done with the talent received he said “I went off and buried 
your talent in the ground.” The master berates the man as wicked and lazy, and 
tells him that he should have invested the money with bankers, and then he 
takes the one talent and gives it to the one who already had ten, and exiles 
the timid servant to the outer darkness. Why was the timid servant condemned? 
The tragic flaw of the timid one is that he lived out of fear even when gifted. 
Every gift of God is also a mandate to bear fruit in God’s vineyard. Some 
people are so good that they are good-for-nothing! It does not matter how many 
talents we have but how well we use them. We also need to realize that life and 
everything we have is a gift from the Lord and we have to be accountable for 
the gifts received.




“Give it your best shot!”

Tom Demsey was born without a right hand and with only half a right foot. He 
went to school and played football. He even played on a junior college team in 
California. In time he began to place kick for the team. He got so good that 
eventually he was signed by the New Orleans Saints. On November 8, 1970, the 
saints were trailing Detroit 17-16 with two seconds to go. They had the ball on 
the Detroit 45-yard line. New Orleans coach J.D. Roberts tapped Tom on the 
shoulder and said, “Go out there and give it your best shot!” The holder set 
the ball down eight yards behind the line of scrimmage, instead of seven, to 
give Dempsey a split second more time to get the ball off. This put the ball 63 
yards from the uprights. The rest of the story is history. Tom’s half right 
foot made perfect contact. Tom later said in the Newsweek magazine: “I couldn’t 
follow the ball that far. But I saw the official’s arms go up, and I can’t 
describe how great I felt.” The saints won the game by 19-17, and Dempsey 
shattered the NFL field goal record by seven yards. - What does the story have 
to do with today’s gospel? Tom Dempsey had very few, if any, talent for playing 
football. Yet he used the very few talents he had to accomplish a great deal. 
He not only played pro football; he set a pro football record that still stands.

Mark Link in ‘Sunday Homilies’




“Today it is easy to let fear govern our lives. A whole political and social 
structure is nurtured by fear and it stalks our Christian life. Traditionalists 
fear the gift of Vatican II and a changing Church, and want to keep their 
treasure intact through a return to dated rituals and arcane theology. Those 
who welcomed the aggiornamento of John Paul XXIII often want to freeze it in 
time fearful of renewing the renewal. The wise women at the wedding feast, the 
enterprising servants in today’s gospel, and the good wife of Proverbs were 
people of foresight, initiative and independence. The Church today has been 
given vast treasures of ‘talents’. Will these increase or remain hidden and 
guarded?”

John Donahue




Foretaste of Heaven

The legendary American violinist, Yehudi Menuhin, was but seven when he 
performed Mendelssohn’s Violin Concerto in public. Aged ten, his violin recital 
at London’s Royal Albert Hall was so phenomenal that Albert Einstein who heard 
him reportedly whispered to the child prodigy, “Today you have proved to me 
that there is a God in heaven!” Indeed when one experiences talent developed in 
so short a time, one gets a glimpse of God, a foretaste of heaven. Today’s 
readings suggest that God wants us to use our talents and treasures before time 
runs out.

Francis Gonsalves in ‘Sunday Seeds for Daily Deeds’




Practice, practice, practice

Novelist Sinclair Lewis was once besieged by college students for a lecture on 
the art of writing. The students explained that they had a deep desire to be 
writers. Lewis began his lecture with: “How many of you earnestly yearn to be 
writers?” All hands went up. “Then,” said Lewis, “there is no point in 
lecturing to you. My advice to you is to go home and write, write, write!” We 
might add, “practice, practice, practice!” that some degree of perfection might 
pervade every talent we are invested with – but only so that we invest in it, 
ourselves. Then sometime we might hear those words: “Welcome into the joy of 
the Lord!”

Francis Gonsalves in ‘Sunday Seeds for Daily Deeds’




Name Your Talents

A friend of mine, a successful businessman, told me this story. Once, during a 
long season when his work was suffering, he began to wonder if he should find 
another occupation. One of his sisters’ kids listening to his doubts, took a 
pencil and wrote on a piece of paper what she must have learned at her 
catechism class: “God created you to use your talents. Name them.” The last 
words were underlined for emphasis. She taped the paper nearby his computer 
where they are to this day. –All life is a risk. People who are afraid of 
risking anything or taking chances do not win. Fear is not the mother of 
invention or discovery. Fear paralyzes action. Fearful people will be concerned 
about their own skin and security.

John Pichappilly in ‘The Table of the Word’




Never too late to make your mark

Antonio Stradivaris was born in Cremona, Italy. He had a very high and squeaky 
voice. Though he loved music and wanted to be a musician, he could not take 
part in a choir. His friends made fun of him because the talent he had was 
wood-carving. When Antonio was 22 he became an apprentice to a well-known 
violin maker Nicholas Amati. Under his master’s training Antonio’s knack for 
carving grew, and his hobby became his craft. He started his own violin shop 
when he was 36. He worked patiently and faithfully. By the time he died at 93, 
he had built over 1,500 violins. Stradivaris of Cremona are the most sought 
after and expensive violins in the world. He was not a singer, music player or 
teacher of music yet he used his ability to make beautiful music.

Elias Dias in ‘Divine Stories for Families’




It matters not how many talents we have but how well we use whatever we have, 
to better life!
 Fr. Jude Botelho [email protected]
PS. The stories, incidents and anecdotes used in the reflections have been 
collected over the years from books as well as from sources over the net and 
from e-mails received. Every effort is made to acknowledge authors whenever 
possible. If you send in stories or illustrations I would be grateful if you 
could quote the source as well so that they can be acknowledged if used in 
these reflections. These reflections are also available on my Web site 
www.NetForLife.net Thank you.

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