Every child’s future
Imagine a classroom of eight and nine-year-old children in
any elementary school in any town.
See the boy in the third row who watches the clouds all
day? He’s not daydreaming — he’s fascinated by the weather: he wants to know
why it rains, what makes it snow, how hurricanes form. As he gets older
he could transform his inquisitiveness into a career as a meteorologist or
science reporter . . . if . . .
Or the little girl in the fifth row? She is naturally
loving, generous, and kind. She helps her mom — a single parent — take
care of her younger brother and sister. At such a young age, she has
already discovered the joy of being a big sister. Some day she could be a
compassionate teacher, a wise counselor, a skilled pediatrician, a loving mom
. . . if . . .
That classroom is filled with many gifted boys and
girls. Every child in that room has the potential to do great things on any and every stage — from the laboratory to the board room, from the
studio to the halls of government. This girl could create the next
Microsoft; that boy may find the cure to cancer. They are limited only by
their imaginations and the opportunities they will have to learn and
grow. The possibilities for these bright, curious, enthusiastic students
are endless . . . if . . .
. . . if they’re willing to take the risks
that come with the gifts and talents they have been given . . . if they
invest the time, the energy, the hard work, the humility to learn and to try .
. . if they commit themselves to their studies and training .
. . Every one of us — child or adult, student or teacher — has been entrusted
by God with gifts and talents to contribute to the work of creation. The
challenge is to be willing to risk exposing our true selves, to risk
involvement with others, to risk failure, despair and ridicule. Jesus
urges us not to “bury” our talents in the safe ground of self-interest and
passivity but to “invest” them for the benefit of all. God will hold us
accountable not for what we have been given but for what we have done with what
we have been given. Christ calls us to a faith that is willing take the
risk of investing what we have in the greater good, and he promises us the
grace to work to enable others to realize a return on the investment of their
own talents in God’s kingdom in our midst.
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
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!
*****
FROM FR. TONY KADAVIL:
1) Chance-taking adventurous voyagers. Columbus
trusted his maps and calculations, considered his risks and sailed off to India
– only to encounter the “new world.” Magellan based his charts and maps on the
most current information then available, and boldly circumnavigated the
globe. A few centuries later in their search for a Northwest Passage,
Lewis and Clark set off, crossed the entire North American continent
and explored the nation. All these explorers had at least one thing
in common. They all based their momentous journeys on maps that were mostly
inaccurate, hopelessly flawed or vastly mistaken. Yet each of these adventurers
went ahead, accepted the risks, plunged into unknown territories, mapped them,
and changed the world. It is precisely because of their risk-taking that the
face of the planet was re-drawn and the dreams of future generations were
re-shaped. Those without the vision, without the courage to take risks, are
quick to label others as crazy, crackpots, fools, and failures. In the parable
of the talents this week, Jesus gives a stern warning — discipleship does not
promise complete safety. On the contrary, true disciples are called to take
risks and venture beyond the known and the secure. . (Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
2) Play it safe: There is an old story about two
farmers visiting over a fence in early Spring. “Jake,” the first one said,
“What are you going to plant this year, corn?” “Nope,” Jake replied, “scared of
the corn borer.” “Well, what about potatoes?” his neighbor asked. “Nope, too
much danger of potato bugs,” announced Jake. The neighbor pressed on, “Well,
then, what are you going to plant?” Jake answered, “Nothing! I’m going to play
it safe.” In today’s Gospel Jesus tells the story of a lazy servant, like Jake,
who buried his talent instead of doing business with it. . (Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
3) The man who did not bury his talent: Antonio
Stradivari was born in Cremona, Italy, in 1644. Because Antonio’s voice was
high and squeaky, he did not pass the audition for the Cremona Boys’ Choir.
When he took violin lessons, the neighbors persuaded his parents to make him
stop. Yet Antonio still wanted to make music. His friends made fun of
him because his only talent was wood-carving. When Antonio was 22, he
became an apprentice to a well-known violinmaker, 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,
each one bearing a label that read, “Antonius Stradivarius Cremonensis Faciebat
Anno……” (“Antonio Stradivarius of Cremona made in the year…”) They are the most
sought-after violins in the world and sell for more than $100,000 each. Antonio
couldn’t sing, or play, or preach, or teach, but he used the
ability he had, and his violins are still making beautiful
music today. Antonio is a challenge to people who have
only a single talent and who try to bury the talent for fear of failure — like
the lazy servant in Jesus’ parable. . (Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
4. How to stay safe without taking risk: 1.
Avoid riding in automobiles because they are responsible for 20% of all fatal
accidents. 2. Do not stay home because 17% of all accidents
occur in the home. 3. Avoid walking on streets or sidewalks
because 14% of all accidents occur to pedestrians. 4. Avoid
traveling by air, rail, or water because 16% of all accidents
involve these forms of transportation. 5.
Of the remaining 33%, 32% of all deaths occur in Hospitals. So, above
all else, avoid hospitals. But you will
be pleased to learn, only .001% of all deaths occur in worship services in
Church, and these are usually related to previous physical disorders.
Therefore, logic tells us that the safest place for you to be at any given
point in time is at Church! And Bible study is safe too. The percentage
of deaths during Bible study is even smaller. So for SAFETY’S sake:
Attend Church, and read your Bible. IT COULD SAVE YOUR LIFE!
5. Have you heard the old parachute joke
about the guy who was having trouble trusting? His friend said, “I know the
best solution for your problem. A parachute jump will fix your problem of trust
and lack of confidence.” So, they took this guy up for a jump. But just before
he was to jump he got very nervous. His friend assured him, “It’s very easy.
You jump out, and then pull the rip cord. If for some reason it doesn’t work,
you pull the second cord, which is a back-up – guaranteed absolutely to work!
Trust me! Then you just enjoy your trip down and a car will be waiting for you
and will drive you back to the airport.” So, the guy jumped out of the plane.
He pulled the rip cord and nothing happened. “Oh, no!” he thought. “I’ll pull
the back-up cord.” He did. Nothing happened. And the guy said to himself, “Oh,
no! And I bet the car won’t be there either”
27-Additional anecdotes:
1) Using one’s talents: Booker T. Washington started life as
a black American slave. At the age of sixteen, he walked almost five hundred
miles from his slave home to Hampton Institute in Virginia. When he got there,
he was told that classes were already filled. But that didn’t stop him. He took
a job at the school doing menial work: sweeping floors, making beds, and doing
anything they wanted, just so he could be around the environment of learning.
He did these jobs so well that the faculty found room for him as a student. He
worked his way up at the school, became a famous teacher, the first black
faculty member at Hampton Institute. He became a writer and the author of Up
From Slavery. He was a popular public speaker. And he eventually founded
Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, where he brought George Washington Carver to
teach and do all his research which changed and improved farming techniques.
Booker T. Washington used his God-given talents, and we all gained from them. .
(Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
2) Buried talent: Niccolò Paganini (1782 –1840) was an
Italian violinist, violist, guitarist, and composer. He was one of the most
celebrated violin vituosi of his time, and left his mark as one of the pillars
of modern violin technique. His Caprice
No. 24 in A minor, Op. 1, is among the best known of his
compositions, and has served as an inspiration for many prominent composers.
But he willed his violin to the city of his birth, Geno, Italy, with the
condition that the violin never again be played. What a pity! The absence of
use and handling resulted in the decay of the wood used in the instrument. A
violin that is constantly used can be preserved and in some cases even grow richer
in tone for hundreds of years, Paginini’s wish just resulted in the crumbling
of his precious violin in its case. . (Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
3) “If only I had her looks.” There is a story of the
thirty-eight-year-old scrubwoman who would go to the movies and sigh, “If only
I had her looks.” She would listen to a singer and moan, “If only I had her
voice.” Then one day someone gave her a copy of the book, The Magic of
Believing. She stopped comparing herself with actresses and singers. She
stopped crying about what she didn’t have and started concentrating on what she
did have. She took inventory of herself and remembered that in high school she had
had a reputation for being the funniest girl around. She began to turn her
liabilities into assets. When she was at the top of her career, Phyllis Diller
made over $1 million a year. In the 1960’s that was a great deal of money. She
wasn’t good-looking and she had a scratchy voice, but she could make people
laugh. Well, maybe God is saying something like that to us through today’s
parable of the talents. Maybe when we complain that we wish that we had more,
if only we were like someone other than ourselves, if only… He says to us: “Use
the gifts I have given you!” Stop crying about what you do not have and start
concentrating on what you do have. Use the gifts that God has given you. . (Fr.
Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
4) “Where is the piccolo?” Sir Michael Costa, the celebrated
conductor of the 19th century, was holding a rehearsal. As the mighty chorus
rang out accompanied by scores of instruments, the musician playing the piccolo
–a little pint-sized flute–thinking perhaps that his contribution would not be
missed amid so much music, stopped playing. Suddenly, the great leader stopped
and cried out, “Where is the piccolo?” The sound of that one small instrument
was necessary to the harmony, and the Master Conductor missed it when it
dropped out. The point? To the Conductor there are no insignificant instruments
in an orchestra. Sometimes the smallest and seemingly least important one can
make the greatest contribution and even if it doesn’t seem to make that big a
difference. Like the piccolo player in Sir Michael’s orchestra, we often (in
our own sovereignty!) decide that our contribution is not significant. But the
Conductor immediately notices. From our perspective, our contribution may be
small, but from His, it is crucial. For all piccolos who won’t play, or at
least aren’t playing, Jesus has something to say: “Use the gifts that God has
given you.” . (Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
5) “Do you want a chance to change the world?”: Steven Jobs
is the man who founded the enormously successful company called Apple Computer.
Jobs decided that Mr. John Sculley was the man he needed to help him fulfill
his dream of building a completely different kind of computer company, one
which would make computers available to every person in the world. However, Mr.
Sculley was comfortably and safely entrenched as president of the Pepsico
Corporation, the makers of the soft drink Pepsi-Cola. In this position, John
Sculley had obtained everything that a man could want: power, prestige, public
recognition, an enormous salary and a secure future. The thought of a career
change requiring a move to the West Coast frightened him. He was concerned
about losing pensions and deferred compensation and the adjustment to living in
California, in other words, “the pragmatic stuff that preoccupies the
middle-aged.” He says, “I was overly concerned with what would happen next week
and the week after next.” John Sculley knew that he was safe and happy at
Pepsico. But he also knew that he had grown to dislike the competitive nature
of the business. He also knew how bored he was. Steven Jobs at Apple Computer
sensed this. And so, he finally confronted his new friend with this pointed
question. He said to John, “Do you want to spend the rest of your life selling
sugared water, or do you want a chance to change the world?” That question
penetrated deep into the heart and mind of John Sculley. It changed the course
of his life. He therefore went to Apple Computer and helped it to grow into one
of the most successful corporations in the world. Mr. Sculley’s life was
changed because he took the risk and decided to invest in himself and others,
and to grow. [John Sculley, Odyssey (New York: Harper &
Row, 1987), p. 90.]
(Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
6) Talents- use them or lose them: There was an American
businessman by the name of Wilson. He was tired of the Great Depression, rising
taxes, and increasing crime, and in 1940 he sold his home and business and
moved to an island in the South Pacific to get away from it all. Balmy and
ringed with beautiful beaches, it was a paradise. Sounds like the perfect
setting doesn’t it. You know the name of the island? Iwo Jima. For those too
young to recall, Iwo Jima, was an island where the fiercest fighting between
American forces and the Japanese took place in the Second World War. You have
to use your talent or lose it. (Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
7) “What we are about is faithfulness.” Back in the 1940’s
Clarence Jordon founded a farm in Americus, Georgia, and called it Koinonia
[Christian Fellowship, Communion with God and with Fellow-Christians] Farm.
Koinonia was a community of poor whites and blacks who cooperated in earning a
living. The integrated status of the community bothered many local citizens.
They tried everything possible to wreck Koinonia. They boycotted its farm
products, and slashed the workers’ tires when they came to town. Finally, in
1954, the Ku Klux Klan decided to get rid of Koinonia Farms. One night they
came and burned every building except Dr. Jordon’s home. They chased off all of
the families except for the Jordons and one black family. The next day a local
newspaper reporter came to the farm to see what remained. The rubble was still
smoldering. But Clarence Jordon was busy planting and hoeing. With a haughty
spirit, the reporter said to Dr. Jordon, “Well, you got two of those Ph.D. s
and you’ve put fourteen years into this farm, and there’s nothing left to show
for it. Just how successful do you think you’ve been?” Clarence stopped hoeing,
turned toward the reporter with his penetrating eyes, and said quietly but
firmly, “Sir, I don’t think you understand us Christians. What we are about is
not success; what we are about is faithfulness.” In order to be faithful, we
must be willing to take risks for that One who dared to march into the very
jaws of Hell for us.
(Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
8) Earl Fitz was a doer. According to a recent article
in Christianity Today, Fitz is 81 years young and he has been
the mayor of Iowa Falls, Iowa four times. But that’s the easy part. In Earl’s
mid-fifties he left his teaching job and began a new career, selling Bibles.
Earl bought 10,000 Bibles from a publisher getting out of Bible sales and sold
them all. Today, Earl is the founder and president of Riverside Book and Bible
House, which sold $33 million worth of books last year. He’s succeeded with a
lot of hard work and a commitment to get Bibles into the homes of America. Earl
began a new career when most are preparing for retirement. He wasn’t ready to
buy into that classic American line, “I’ve done my time, I owe myself some easy
livin’.” And he’s going strong nearly thirty years later [Christianity Today (August
17, 1987), p. 14ff.] I believe Jesus loves the Earl Fitzes of this world. That
is the lesson of the parable of the talents. (Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
9) LVA: result of using one’s talents: A lady by the name of
Ruth Colvin was shocked at her hometown’s illiteracy rate. So, she decided that
God would have her do something about it. “I felt strongly motivated by the
Parable of the Talents,” she says. “We’re responsible for making good use of
the knowledge we’re given.” So Ruth, a teacher, set up a makeshift office in
her suburban basement, filing important matters in an old refrigerator, and
launched Literacy Volunteers of America in 1962. Today, LVA has helped 90,000
people learn to read thanks to a grandmotherly woman who saw a need and put her
talents to work meeting it. [Today’s Christian Woman (January/February
1987), p. 23.] Life is a gift. We live in a wonderful world of opportunity.
(Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
10) Use the gift of the vote: One voter in each precinct in
the United States can determine the next President of the United States. In
1948 just one additional vote in each precinct would have elected Thomas Dewey
as President. In 1960 one vote in each precinct in Illinois would have elected
Richard Nixon as President. Thomas Jefferson was elected President by one vote
in the Electoral College. So was John Quincy Adams. Rutherford B. Hays was
elected President by one vote. One vote gave Statehood to California, Idaho,
Oregon, Texas, and Washington. The Draft Act of World War II passed the House
by one vote. Your one vote is important, and a spiritual gift is just like a
vote. You either use it or you lose it.
(Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
11) One-note opera: Charles L. Allen once told about a
composer named Gioachino Rossini who would go out to some small village in
Italy one which could not afford an opera and he would write an opera which the
people of that village could perform. One summer, he auditioned all of the
talent in this small village, and the only woman who could possibly be a
leading lady was limited to only one good note. It was a middle B-flat. Rossini
was not discouraged; he went right ahead and wrote the opera in which the
leading lady had only that one note to sing. But, he surrounded that middle
B-flat with such beautiful harmony that when she sang her one note, it was like
an angel from heaven. That is what happens when we offer our meager gifts to
God. (Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
12) “Life is just a tiny little minute, / But eternity is in
it.” : Herman Cain, CEO and president of Godfather’s Pizza, Incorporated, is an
African-American man who was raised in poverty. He credits his hard-working
father for his success in life. Throughout Herman’s life, his father worked
three or four jobs at a time in order to support his family. In addition to his
father, Herman Cain also found inspiration from Dr. Benjamin Elijah Mays, a
former president of Morehouse College. Dr. Mays taught Herman a poem that has
guided him through the ups and downs of life. It is as follows: “Life is just a
minute/ Only sixty seconds in it, Forced upon you, can’t refuse it./ Didn’t
seek it, didn’t choose it, But it’s up to you to use it./ You must suffer if
you lose it, Give an account if you abuse it, Just a tiny little minute,/ But
eternity is in it.” (2) This catchy little poem perfectly captures our first
point for today. According to Jesus, parable of the kingdom, we will be held
accountable for our “stewardship” of our lives.
(Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
13) “But the recruiting office is on the other side of the
street!” The French Army was having a campaign to recruit paratroopers. On one
of the busiest streets in Paris they placed their poster. It read like this:
“Young Men! Join the parachutist forces of France. It is more dangerous to
cross this street than to jump with a parachute.” The poster was a great
success until someone scribbled this message at the bottom of the poster: “I
would gladly join, but the recruiting office is on the other side of the
street!” [Eric W. Johnson, A Treasury of Humor, (New York: Ivy
Books, 1994), p. 187.] I doubt that many potential parachutists were deterred
by having to cross the street, but there are also many people who would never
parachute no matter how safe it was. The very idea turns their knees to jelly.
They don’t want to take any risk in life just like the lazy servant in Jesus’
parable. (Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
14) “Do you like the house?” J. Wallace Hamilton in his
book What About Tomorrow? tells the story of a wealthy
builder. He called in his top assistant manager and said, “I am going away for
a while. While I am gone, I want you to oversee the building of my home. I am
going to be retiring in a few years, I have these wonderful plans, and
excellent parcels of land by the lake, and I want you to oversee the building
of our home.” As he left on his journey, the assistant said to himself, “He
lives in luxury and has done very little for me. When he retires, what will I
have?” So the assistant used every opportunity to feather his own nest. He
hired an immoral builder, he used inferior products, he hired inferior workmen
and when the house was completed, it looked fine on the outside, but its
deficiencies in workmanship and material would soon show as the test of time
came. It was not a job “well done.” When the wealthy builder came back, he
said, “Do you like the house?” The assistant manager replied, “Yes, I do.” The
wealthy builder then asked, “Is this house beautiful?” “It certainly is,” the
assistant manager replied. “Great,” said the wealthy builder, “because it is my
gift to you. The house is yours.” Each of us lives in the house we are building
each day. Where are you in this story tonight?
(Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
15) “If you are lonely or have a problem call me.” Tony
Campolo told of meeting a woman who is confined to a wheelchair. Although Nancy
had a handicapping condition, she developed a unique ministry to people who are
lonely and hurting. Nancy ran ads in the personals section of the newspaper
that read: “If you are lonely, or have a problem, call me. I am in a wheelchair
and seldom get out. We can share our problems with each other. Just call. I’d
love to talk.” From that simple ad, the results were truly amazing. Nancy
claims that she receives at least thirty calls each week from persons who need
someone to talk to and listen to their pain. Nancy spends most of her day
comforting and counseling people. She has become someone to lean on, for
hundreds of people with problems. Campolo asked her how she became handicapped.
Nancy’s answer surprised, even shocked him. “By trying to commit suicide,” she
said. Nancy went on to explain, “I was living alone. I had no friends. I hated
my job, and I was constantly depressed.” Nancy decided to jump from the window
of her apartment “to end it all. But instead of being killed, she ended up in
the hospital paralyzed from the waist down. While she was in the hospital,
Nancy said, “Jesus appeared to me and told me that I’d had a healthy body and a
crippled soul but from then on I would have a crippled body and a healthy soul.
I gave my life to Christ right there and then,” she said. “When I got out of
the hospital, I tried to think of how a woman like me in a wheelchair could do
some good, and I came up with the idea of putting the ad in the newspaper.” [Wake
Up America! Tony Campolo (San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco, 1991),
pp. 87-88.] Nancy does not have some of the opportunities you and I have. But
she is making maximum use of the opportunities she has. She is among the
blessed of this world. Today’s Gospel challenges us to show gratitude to God by
making use of the talents which God has given to us. (Fr. Tony)
16) There are actually seven forms of intelligence: There is
a psychologist at Harvard named Howard Gardner who is trying to revolutionize
the study of intelligence. He says we have been studying I.Q. all wrong. On our
intelligence tests we only measure one or two forms of intelligence. Gardner
says that there are actually seven forms of intelligence. Some people are
gifted with linguistic intelligence, he says. These are our writers and poets.
Others have what he calls logical/mathematical intelligence. They make good
accountants and scientists. Some people are gifted spatially. These are our
artists and architects. Some are gifted kinesthetically. Their bodies are
unusually graceful and coordinated. These are our athletes and dancers. Others
are gifted interpersonally. They know instinctively how to get along well with
the people around them. These are our sales persons, counselors, teachers. Some
are gifted in their ability to look within. These are our philosophers “our
wise people.” Some are gifted musically. Here is the important point. Gardner
claims that everyone he has ever tested has scored high on at least one
of these seven forms of intelligence. All of us are gifted in our own
way. Many of us are smarter than we think we are. Don’t you wish that someone
had told you that a long time ago? Do tell your children, please. Many of them
will go through life thinking they are dumb because their form of intelligence
is not valued in school. All of us are gifted. All of us have what we need to
succeed. God has created us differently so that different tasks will get done
in this world. But all of us have a place where we fit in. All of us have what
we need to succeed. WE ALL HAVE WHAT WE NEED TO SUCCEED. God has given us all
we need! The sad thing is that we do not appreciate the gifts we have.
(Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
17) Give it your best shot! Tom Dempsey was
born without a right hand and with only half a right foot. Tom 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 a right foot made perfect contact.
Tom later said in 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 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, talents 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)
18) Sharing the best you have: Mother
Theresa of Calcutta was summoned to Court on the charges of converting children
to the Catholic faith. When she stood in the dock, the judge asked her if the
charges were true. She asked for a baby to be given to her. She held the baby
in her arms and said, “This child I picked up from the dust bin; I don’t know
to what religion this child belongs or what language it speaks… I give this
child my love, my time, my care, my food… but the best thing that I have in my
life is the faith in Jesus Christ. Can’t I give this child the best I have in
my life?” The case was dismissed in favour of Mother Theresa. (John Rose in
John’s Sunday Homilies; quoted by Fr. Botelho).
19) Wasted talent: I don’t believe there is any
such thing as a born footballer, or writer, or painter. But Paul came very
close to being an exception. He was a star footballer. Of course, he had to
work at it. But everybody agreed that he was a natural. He knew he was better
than any of the kids around him. It came as no surprise when at fifteen he was
snapped up by a top professional club. He didn’t have long to wait for his big
chance. He had only just celebrated his sixteenth birthday when he found
himself selected for the first team. He made an immediate impact. Almost
overnight he shot from obscurity to fame. From there on it was one
success after another. Within two years he was the club’s leading scorer. By
now he was also playing for his country. Everywhere football was talked about
his name was mentioned. To the fans he was a hero. To the media he was
celebrity. He reveled in his success. A few years ago, he had been a poor kid
playing in the back streets of a provincial town. Now he was rich and famous.
He married a beautiful model, drove a Mercedes, and was the envy of every
schoolboy who played football. However, things soon started to go wrong. There
were rumors that he was drinking heavily. The rumors proved to be well-founded.
His football began to suffer. His personal life began disintegrating. His wife
suddenly left him, claiming that he was selfish and immature. Sadly, Paul’s
glittering career came to a premature end. He was remembered as much for the
manner in which he squandered a rare talent as for what he achieved with it. It
is dangerous when a talent springs up overnight. Far better that it should grow
up quietly and almost unnoticed, like a seed that grows into a tree. When a
talent grows up like that, a kind of wholeness results. (Flor
McCarthy in New Sunday and Holy Day Liturgies)
20) Staying Awake: In his autobiography, Report to
Greco, Nikos Kazantzakis recounts a conversation he once had with an old
monk. Kazantzakis, a young man at the time, was visiting a monastery and was
very taken by a famed ascetic, Father Makarios, who lived there. But a series
of visits with the old monk left him with some ambivalent feelings as well. The
monk’s austere lifestyle stirred a certain religious romanticism in
Kazantzakis, but it repelled him too; he wanted the romanticism, but in a
more-palatable way. Here’s their conversation as Kazantzakis records it: “Yours
is a hard life, Father. I too want to be saved. Is there no other way?” “More
agreeable?” asked the ascetic, smiling compassionately. “More human, Father.”
“One, only one.” “What is that?” “Ascent. To climb a series of steps. From the
full stomach to hunger, from the slaked throat to thirst, from joy to
suffering. God sits at the summit of hunger, thirst, and suffering; the devil
sits at the summit of the comfortable life. Choose.” “I am still young. The
world is nice. I have time to choose.” Reaching out, the old monk touched my
knee and said: “Wake up, my child. Wake up before death wakes you up.” I
shuddered and said: “I am still young.” “Death loves the young,” the old man
replied. “The inferno loves the young. Life is like a lighted candle, easily
extinguished. Take care—wake up! Wake up! Wake up, before death wakes you up!”–
In a less dramatic expression that’s a virtual leitmotif in the Gospels. Jesus
is always telling us to wake up, to stay awake, to be vigilant, to be more
alert to a deeper reality. What’s meant by that? How are we asleep to depth?
How are we to wake up and stay awake? (Fr. Ron Roklster, Center for
Liturgy)
21) “That was the happiest moment of my life.” : It has been
said that our true birthplace is the place in which we awaken to our gifts and
talents. Often it takes an outsider to recognize the talents. Just as the sun
helps to bring to birth the fragrant flowers that lie hidden in the soil
of the fields, so there are people who find their fulfillment in helping to
unfold the talents God has deposited in others. The Russian writer, Fydor Dostoevsky,
was only 20 when he wrote his first book, entitled, Poor Folk. The
foremost critic of the day was a man by the name of Belinksy. When Belinsky
read the manuscript of the young Dostoevsky he said: “You have a great gift.
Take good care of this gift and you will become a great writer.”
Dostoevsky was intoxicated by the words of the famous critic. Many years later
he wrote, “That was the happiest moment of my life.” The recognition of
Belinsky confirmed him in his belief of his own talent. It did more. It
launched him on his way. He spent the rest of his life expressing himself
through his writing. One of our greatest needs is to express ourselves. Unless
we express ourselves, we cannot realize or fulfill ourselves. Sadly, a lot of
talent goes unexpressed. It is in living that we discover our talent. Every
talent has to be discovered. A lot of discipline, patience, and hard work are
required if a talent is to bear full fruit. We see this in the first two
servants in Jesus‘ story. We see the opposite of it in the case of the third
servant. It wasn’t the harshness of the master that prevented him from using
his talent, nor was it lack opportunity, He himself was to blame. We can’t take
credit for our talent. Life is God’s gift to us. What we do with our life is
our gift to God. (Flor McCarthy in New Sunday & Holy Day Liturgies). (Fr.
Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
22) “Today you have proved to me that there is a God in
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).
23) In 1644, Antonio Stradivari 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, and today, they 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.)
24) “Michelangelo, talent is cheap; dedication is costly!”
Bertoldo de Giovanni is a name even the most enthusiastic lover of art is
unlikely to recognize. He was the pupil of Donatello, the greatest sculptor of
his time, and he was the teacher of Michelangelo, the greatest sculptor of all
time. Michelangelo was only 14 years old when he came to Bertoldo, but it was
already obvious that he was enormously gifted. Bertoldo was wise enough to
realize that gifted people are often tempted to coast rather than to grow, and
therefore he kept trying to pressure his young prodigy to work seriously at his
art. One day he came into the studio to find Michelangelo toying with a piece
of sculpture far beneath his abilities. Bertoldo grabbed a hammer, stomped
across the room, and smashed the work into tiny pieces, shouting this
unforgettable message, “Michelangelo, talent is cheap; dedication is costly!”
(Gary Inrig, A Call to Excellence). (Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
25) “America’s Got Talent” is one of a dozen or more
copy-cat “spin-offs” from the grand-daddy original “discover-unknown-talent”
show “American Idol,” a franchise we copied from Great Britain’s “Pop Idol” franchise.
This genre of television that includes “The Voice,” “X-Factor” and “America’s
Got Talent,” focus on finding that rare pearl of stardom embedded amidst the
grit and gravel of everyday gifts. Ferreting out someone’s ability to excel at
something, identifying an individual’s unique “talent,” has its roots in this
week’s Gospel text. In fact, you might call our text the original “talent
contest.” In the first century a “talent” was actually a measure of weight for
gold, silver and copper. We do know it was not a specific value of currency or
wealth. We do not know exactly what the weight was that a “talent” measured. We
do know it was recognized as the largest weight in normal everyday use. One
“talent,” then, was a considerable amount, especially when it expressed the
weight of such valuable commodities as gold and silver and copper. In this
week’s Gospel parable these weighty “talents” are distributed by a Master to
his some of his slave-servants in varying amounts. (Fr. Tony) http://frtonyshomilies.com/
26) Caught Off-Guard: In 79 AD, the volcano Vesuvius, which
rises just off the Bay of Naples, Italy, erupted violently, totally destroying
Pompeii, a city of 20,000 people. Much of the city was excavated in the
nineteenth century, but archaeologists are still uncovering certain neighbourhoods.
Sometimes the volcanic ash simply buried victims alive. Their bones have long
since turned to dust, but the ash in many cases formed a firm mold around them
at the moment of death; and by filling the mold with plaster, the excavators
can obtain perfect images of those who died in the anguish of the disaster. In
1949, the archeologists reproduced a startling cast of one of the Pompeian
victims. He lay face down as if death had taken him completely unawares. In one
hand was a small crowbar. In the other, clasped tight in his fist, were several
gold coins. To all appearances he was a thief who had taken advantage of the
confusion of others to break into a building and rob the owner. The gold had
done him little good. “… You are not in the dark, brothers, that the day should
catch you off guard, like a thief.” (1 Thessalonians, 5:4. (Today’s second
reading). (Father Robert F. McNamara).
27) Trading with God-given talents: Some years ago, a
Filipino girl who studied in the United States of America (USA) made big news
because of her incredible intellectual prowess. Maricel Aragon-Yicks, a
relative of the late Philippines President, Manuel Quezon, finished her grade
school in two years. At eight, she graduated from high school and at eleven,
she took up, not one but two courses simultaneously – law and medicine.
Everybody considered her as extraordinary, a “bionic.” Fr. San Luis continued
to narrate another true story that what was most touching is the story of a
Chinese boy who came from a very poor family in Hong Kong never dreamed that
would go far. His parents left him behind to do a housekeeping job in
Australia. Gifted with talents for doing stunts and acrobatics, he developed
and cashed in on these until he rose to become a famous movie actor multi-millionaire
and Asia superstar. That is Jacky Chan, the Kung Fu kid. (Fr. Benitez)
***********
3. In Whose Hands
A basketball
in my hands is worth about $19.
A basketball in
Michael Jordan's hands is worth about $33 million. It depends whose hands
it's in.
A baseball in my hands is worth about $6. A baseball in Mark
Mcguire's hands is worth $19 million.
It depends whose hands it's in.
A tennis racket is useless in my hands. A tennis racket in
Pete Sampras' hands is a Wimbledon Championship.
It depends whose hands it's in.
A rod in my hands will keep away a wild animal.
A rod in Moses' hands will part the mighty sea.
It depends whose hands it's in.
A sling shot in my hands is a kid's toy.
A sling shot in David's hand is a mighty weapon.
It depends whose hands it's in.
Two fish and 5 loaves of bread in my hands is a couple of fish
sandwiches.
Two fish and 5 loaves of bread in God's hands will feed thousands.
It depends whose hands it's in.
Nails in my hands might produce a birdhouse.
Nails in Jesus Christ's hands will produce salvation for the entire
world.
It depends whose hands it's in.
As you see now it depends whose hands it's in.
So we can put our
concerns, our worries, our fears, our hopes, our dreams, our families, and our
relationships in God's hands because --
It depends whose
hands they're in.
May God Bless you
and those you love, and keep you safe,
Father Pat
**********
4. From Sermons
Illustrations:
Bertoldo de Giovanni is a name even the most enthusiastic
lover of art is unlikely to recognize. He was the pupil of Donatello, the
greatest sculptor of his time, and he was the teacher of Michelangelo, the
greatest sculptor of all time. Michelangelo was only 14 years old when he came
to Bertoldo, but it was already obvious that he was enormously gifted. Bertoldo
was wise enough to realize that gifted people are often tempted to coast rather
than to grow, and therefore he kept trying to pressure his young prodigy to
work seriously at his art.
One day he came into the studio to find Michelangelo toying
with a piece of sculpture far beneath his abilities. Bertoldo grabbed a hammer,
stomped across the room, and smashed the work into tiny pieces, shouting this
unforgettable message, "Michelangelo, talent is cheap; dedication is
costly!"
Gary Inrig, A Call to Excellence.
We have nothing to do with how much ability we've got, or
how little, but with what we do with what we have. The man with great talent is
apt to be puffed up, and the man with little (talent) to belittle the little.
Poor fools! God gives it, much or little. Our part is to be faithful, doing the
level best with every bit and scrap. And we will be if Jesus' spirit
controls.
S.D. Gordon, The Bent-knee Time.
*************
5. From
Sermons.com
Jesus once told a story of a wealthy landowner who was
preparing for a long journey. He called his three servants and divided his
money between them, each according to their ability. To one servant he gave
five talents, meaning a sum of money, to a second two, and to a third one.
Why is life like that? I don't know. We are all equal in the
eyes of God. We are all guaranteed equal rights under the Constitution. In an
election our votes are all equal. But when it comes to our abilities, we are as
different as different can be. God simply did not make us all the same. There
are some people who can handle five talents; there are some who can handle only
one. There are some persons who have great intellectual capabilities, and some
who do not. There are some who have the ability to project and articulate their
thoughts, and there are some who cannot. There are some who have physical
prowess and attractive looks, and there are some who do not.
The important thing to remember is that each servant was
given something. No one was left idle. You may not be a five-talent person, but
you have some talent. We all do. And you know something. I think that there are
a whole lot more one and two talent people in this world than there are five
talent people. Oh, there are some people who seem to have it all. I won't deny
that. But most of us are just one or two talent servants.
The landowner now went on his journey. When he returned he called together his
three servants and asked them to give an account...
"America's Got Talent" is one of a dozen or more
copy-cat "spin-offs" from the grand-daddy original
"discover-unknown-talent" show "American Idol," a franchise
we copied from Great Britain's "Pop Idol" franchise. This genre of
television that includes "The Voice," "X-Factor" and
"America's Got Talent" focus on finding that rare pearl of stardom
embedded amidst the grit and gravel of everyday gifts.
Ferreting out someone's ability to excel at something,
identifying an individual's unique "talent," has its roots in this
week's gospel text. In fact, you might call our text the original "talent
contest."
In the first century a "talent" was actually a
measure of weight for gold, silver and copper. We do know it was not a specific
value of currency or wealth. We do not know exactly what the weight was that a
"talent" measured. We do know it was recognized as the largest weight
in normal everyday use. One "talent," then, was a considerable
amount, especially when it expressed the weight of such valuable commodities as
gold and silver and copper.
In this week's gospel parable these weighty
"talents" are distributed by a master to his servants in varying
amounts. One received ten "talents." A second received five
"talents." A third was entrusted with one "talent." This
master obviously "invested" in each of these three servants according
to his perception of each of their individual abilities. It is because of this
parable that the monetary weight of a "talent" became a term used to
describe the natural ability of someone to do something...
"The major themes of the Christian faith - caring,
giving, witnessing, trusting, loving, hoping - cannot be understood or lived
without risk." Fred Craddock
__________________________________________
God's Kingdom Comes through Small Acts of Kindness
Have you ever felt like giving up? Have you ever wondered,
even in what you try to do for God, whether it is doing any good? Let God be
the judge of that! I remember reading about a little girl named Annie who in
1876 was ten years of age. She was put into a poor house for children...called
the Tewkesbury Alms House in Massachusetts. Her mother had died and her father
had deserted her. Her aunt and uncle found her too difficult to handle. She had
a bad disposition, a violent temper...stemming in part from eyes afflicted with
painful trachoma. She had been put in the poorhouse because no one wanted her.
She was such a wild one that at times she had to be tied down.
But there was another inmate named Maggie who cared for Annie. Maggie talked to
her, fed her, even though Annie would throw her food on the floor, cursing and
rebelling with every ounce of her being. But Maggie was a Christian and out of
her convictions she was determined to love this dirty, unkempt, spiteful,
unloving little girl. It wasn't easy, but slowly it got through to Annie that
she was not the only who was suffering. Maggie also had been abandoned. And
gradually Annie began to respond.
Maggie told her about a school for the blind and Annie began
to beg to be sent there, and finally, consent was given and she went to the
Perkins Institute. After a series of operations her sight was partially
restored. She was able to finish her schooling and graduate at age twenty.
Having been blind so long she told the director of Perkins that she wanted to
work with blind and difficult children. They found a little girl seven years
old in Alabama who was blind and deaf from the age of two. So, Annie Sullivan
went to Tuscumbia, Alabama to unlock the door of Helen Keller's dark prison and
to set her free.
One human being, in the name of Christ, helping another
human being! That's how God's kingdom comes, through small acts of
kindness! Robert W. Bohl, Reluctant Servants
Making a Difference
There is a little story that comes from a book called the
Star Fisher. Picture if you will an early morning along a California beach. An
elderly man is walking along the edge of the water and stops occasionally,
picks up something, and then tosses it into the ocean. He then walks a few
steps more, picks up something, and tosses it into the ocean. A young jogger is
running along and has been watching the man. Finally his curiosity gets the
best of him and he stops and goes over to the old gentleman and asks:
"Excuse me, what are you doing?"
The man answered: Well, I am saving the life of these star
fish. The storm washed them ashore last night, the sun will be up in thirty
minutes, and then they will all die. I am throwing them back into the water to
save their lives.
The jogger was a bit astounded. Old man, he said, don't you
know that you have thirty miles of beach ahead of you and that millions of
those star fish were washed ashore last night. What possible difference do you
think that you are going to make. The old man took another step picked up a
star fish, and with all his might hurled it into the ocean, then turned to the
jogger and said: "Well, son, I guess I made a difference in that one's
life."
Traditional, www.Sermons.com
______________________
Fulfilling Your Calling
An anonymous writer has said, "My small son and I were
taking a walk. In the far corner of the field we found a small patch of
beautiful and fragrant flowers. They were in the middle of weeds, almost
completely hidden and unnoticed, yet these flowers were blooming in full beauty
and we sensed their fresh fragrance. All of us have met persons unnoticed by
many, but who in the middle of struggle and unlikely surroundings far from the
center of attention live lives of beauty and fragrance. And living lives which
seemed obscure they faithfully fulfilled God's calling for them. God's question
on the last day will not be, 'How much were you noticed?' or even 'How much did
you do?' Rather, his question will be, 'Were you faithful in fulfilling your
calling where I placed you?' "
Peter J. Blackburn, Using What We Have
______________________
Investing in God
It had been a hard winter in the Appalachian area. The snow
had piled up deeper and deeper, the mercury dropped, rivers froze, people
suffered. The Red Cross used helicopters to fly in supplies. One crew had been
working day after day--long hours. They were on their way home late in the
afternoon when they saw a little cabin submerged in the snow. There was a thin
whisper of smoke coming from the chimney. The rescue team figured they were
probably about out of food, fuel, perhaps medicine. Because of the trees they
had to put the helicopter down a mile away. They put on heavy packs with
emergency supplies, trudged through heavy snow, waist deep, reached the cabin
exhausted, panting, perspiring. They pounded on the door. A thin, gaunt
mountain woman opened the door and the lead man gasped, "We're from the
Red Cross." She was silent for a moment and then she said, "It's been
a hard winter, Sonny, I just don't think we can give anything this
year."
You might think this message is about a plea for money, but
it's not. It's not about investing in stocks or bonds or IRA's. It's about
investing in God and what God wants to do in the world.
David Beckett, Spiritual Investment
____________________________________
Service
Sir Michael Costa, the celebrated conductor, was holding a rehearsal. As the
mighty chorus rang out, accompanied by scores of instruments, the piccolo
player, a little pint-sized flute, thinking perhaps that his contribution would
not be missed amid so much music, stopped playing. Suddenly, the great leader
stopped and cried out, "Where is the piccolo?"
The sound of that one small instrument was necessary to the
harmony, and the Master Conductor missed it when it dropped out. The point? To
the Conductor there are no insignificant instruments in an orchestra. Sometimes
the smallest and seemingly least important one can make the greatest
contribution and even if it doesn't seem to make that big a difference to the
audience at large, THE CONDUCTOR KNOWS IT right away!
In the Church the players and the instruments are diverse -
different sizes, different shapes, different notes, different roles to play.
But like the piccolo player in Sir Michael's orchestra, we often in our own
sovereignty decide that our contribution is not significant. Our contribution
couldn't possibly make a difference. And so we quit playing. Stop doing that
which we've been given to do. We drop out. But the Conductor immediately
notices. From our perspective, our contribution may be small, but from His, it
is crucial.
I just have to believe I'm talking to some piccolo players
this morning, who have dropped out of the orchestra, for whatever reasons:
pain, exhaustion, insecurity, criticism, laziness, misbehavior. Convinced that
your contribution doesn't mean a hill of beans in the bigger scheme of things.
We have buried our talent in the ground.
For all piccolos who won't play, or at least aren't playing,
Jesus has something to say.
Adapted from Richard Love, Blowing Your Horn, Sermon
Illustrations.
________________
Starting Is the First Step
Starting is the first step to succeeding. We cannot be
afraid of failure. I am a baseball junkie so I can bring you this: in 1915 Ty
Cobb set the record for stolen bases, 96. Seven years later, Max Carey of the
Pittsburgh Pirates became second best with 51 stolen bases. Does this mean that
Cobb was twice as good as Carey, his closest rival?
Look at the facts: Cobb made 134 attempts, Carey, 53. Cobb
failed 38 times; Carey only failed twice. Cobb succeeded 96 times, Carey only
51 times. Cobb's average was only 71 percent. Carey's average was 96 percent.
Carey's average was much better than Cobb's. Cobb tried 81 more times than
Carey. But here is the key: His 81 additional tries produced 44 more stolen
bases. Cobb risked failure 81 more times in one season than his closest rival
and Cobb goes down in history as the greatest base runner of all time. Why?
Because he tried.
The one in the middle - the faithful servant who does the
best he or she possibly can with what has been given - the one who tries. And
the result is pleasing, perhaps even surprisingly pleasing, to the Master.
David E. Leininger, www.Sermons.com
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Indifference
In this passage Jesus, in judging the nations, reveals the importance of caring
for believers. We all consider it proper to share food, and other things, to
others in the church who have needs. We would all acknowledge that it is
important to do so. But Jesus considers it of the utmost priority. Here He
judges people by how much they care.
In the book The Screwtape Letters, by C. S. Lewis, a devil
briefs his demon nephew, Wormwood, in a series of letters, on the subtleties
and techniques of tempting people. In his writings, the devil says that the
objective is not to make people wicked but to make them indifferent. This
higher devil cautions Wormwood that he must keep the patient comfortable at all
costs. If he should start thinking about anything of importance, encourage him
to think about his luncheon plans and not to worry so much because it could
cause indigestion. And then the devil gives this instruction to his nephew:
"I, the devil, will always see to it that there are bad people. Your job,
my dear Wormwood, is to provide me with people who do not care."
Dan Vellinga, What Would You Do?
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I Can Be a Good Business Man
Henry P. Crowell contracted tuberculosis when a boy and
couldn't go to school. After hearing a sermon by Dwight L. Moody, young Crowell
prayed, "I can't be a preacher, but I can be a good businessman. God, if
you will let me make money, I will use it in your service."
Under the doctor's advice Crowell worked outdoors for seven
years and regained his health. He then bought the little run-down Quaker Mill
at Ravanna, Ohio. Within ten years Quaker Oats was a household word to
millions. Henry P. Crowell faithfully gave 60 to 70 percent of his income to
God's causes, having advanced from an initial 10 percent.
Brett Blair, www.Sermons.com
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Our Greatest Enemy
The greatest enemy of faith is not doubt; the greatest enemy
of faith is fear. Most of the world is controlled by fear, petty and big. Petty
fears control people; great fears control nations. We could feed all the people
in this world if we would stop building arms, but we are afraid. In the
Beatitudes (Sermon on the Mount) Jesus said, "Those of you who make peace
will he happy. You will be God's own." Yet even Christians are preoccupied
with fear and protecting ourselves because we don't believe what Jesus said.
The Sermon on the Mount is an antidote to fear. But we have never seen fear as
the crucial issue, only "doubt."
Richard Rohr, Radical Grace, p. 349
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A Little Effort
Apathy is the opposite of Faith: Some years ago in South
America, a crew of Peruvian Sailors, headed up the Amazon river came upon a
strange sight. It was like a scene from "The Twilight Zone." A
Spanish ship was anchored off the coast and all the sailors were stretched out
weakly on the deck of the ship. As the Peruvians drew closer, they saw that the
Spaniards were in terrible physical condition. They looked the picture of death
itself, their lips parched and swollen. They were literally dying of thirst.
"Can we help you?" shouted the Peruvians.
The Spaniards cried out, "Water! Water! We need fresh
water!"
The Peruvian sailors, surprised at this request, told them to lower their
buckets and help themselves.
The Spaniards, fearing they'd been misunderstood cried back,
"No, no we need FRESH water!
But they received the same reply form the Peruvians to lower
their buckets and help themselves. They finally did lower their buckets into
the ocean waters and when they brought the buckets on deck they discovered to
their amazement fresh water....
**********
Memorable quotes from world great leaders
Without your involvement
you can’t succeed.
With your involvement you can’t fail.- Dr. Abdul Kalam
1. Henry Ford
Ford is known for his
innovative success but he failed five times before he founded the FORD Company.
2. R. H. Macy
Before the success of
MACY, he failed in seven businesses and finally succeeded with his new
store.
3. Soichiro Honda
The billion-dollar business, that is Honda, started initially with a series of
failures. He started making scooters of his own at home and spurred on by his
neighbors, finally started his own business.
4. Bill Gates
Gates didn’t seem like a shoe-in for success after dropping out of Harvard and
starting a failed first business with Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen called
Traf-O-Data.
5. Harland David Sanders
Sanders founded KFC and his famous secret chicken recipe was rejected 1,009
times before a restaurant accepted it.
6. Walt Disney
Walt Disney had a bit of a rough start and he was fired by a newspaper editor
because, ‘he lacked imagination and had no good ideas’. He kept plugging along,
however, and eventually found a recipe for success that worked.
Scientists 7.
Albert Einstein
Einstein did not speak
until he was four and did not read until he was seven, and his teachers and
parents thought he was mentally handicapped, slow and anti-social. But he
caught on pretty well in the end, winning the Nobel Prize and changing the face
of modern physics.
8. Charles Darwin
In his early years, Darwin gave up on having a medical career and considered as
a lazy boy. Now, Darwin is well-known for his scientific studies.
9. Isaac Newton
Newton was failed so many times in his school days and was sent off to
Cambridge where he finally blossomed into the scholar we know today.
10. Thomas Edison
Edison was fired for being unproductive In his early years. Even as an
inventor, Edison made 1,000 unsuccessful attempts at inventing the light
bulb.
11. Orville and Wilbur Wright
After numerous attempts at creating flying machines, several years of hard
work, and tons of failed prototypes, the brothers finally created a
plane.
Public Figures
12. Winston Churchill
This Nobel Prize-winning,
twice-elected Prime Minster of the United Kingdom struggled in school and
failed the sixth grade. After many years of political failures, finally became
the Prime Minister at the ripe old age of 62.
13. Abraham Lincoln
After Lincoln was failed many times in business and defeated in numerous runs,
he became a greatest leader.
14. Oprah Winfrey
Oprah faced a rough and abusive childhood as well as numerous career setbacks
in her life to become one of the most iconic faces on TV.
Writers and Artists
15. Steven Spielberg
Spielberg’s name was rejected from the University of Southern California School
of Theater, Film and Television three times. Thirty-five years after starting
his degree, Spielberg returned to school in 2002 to finally complete his work
and earn his BA.
16. J. K. Rowling
Rowling may be rolling in a lot of Harry Potter dough today, but before she
published the series of novels she was nearly penniless, severely depressed,
divorced, trying to raise a child on her own while attending school and writing
a novel.
Athletes
17. Michael
Jordan
Most people wouldn’t believe that a man often lauded as the best basketball
player of all time was actually cut from his high school basketball team. ‘I
have failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I
succeed.’
“I have missed more than 9000 shots in my career. I have almost lost 300
games.
26 times I have been trusted to take the game winning shot and I missed.
I have failed over and over and over again in my life. And that’s why I
succeed.”