Lisa came up with a wonderful new view of the
Parable of the Talents.
You can look at the Talents of how much annual salary
they buy. Lisa estimated that each talent was equivalent to five years
of labor. That would make five talents worth 25 years of living and two
talents worth 10 years, therefore converting these talents into TIME or
a lifetime.
I look at this parable as a tale of life, judgment, and reward.
We all have varying lengths of lifespan. For
instance, Jesus lived a short 33 years, Joseph Smith was on earth for
only 38.5 years, I'm told. If you were to translate that to a cost of
living as above and figure life begins at say 20 years of age, Jesus
would be a bit more than a 2 talent person and Joseph was a bit less
than a 4 talent person.
God give us our livespans to spend as we wish, which can be translated as above. Given the lifespan we have, what did we do with our time?
In the parable, the servants get their talents, and
the Lord goes off to let the servants do what they will. This is just
like coming to mortality, where we have our time to spend as we wish.
In the story, two servants double their talents (make productive use
of their time) and one servant buries his talent (is that like spending
your life watching television and little else?).
The Lord returns and demands an accounting of talents
from his servants. It is an analogy of death that ends our lifetime and
looking at what we spent the years of our lives doing - productive or not. This is the final judgment that I speak so much about.
The Lord looks at the product of the time (measured in
talents) that each servant produced in their lifespan. Both the
servants that doubled their talents (they had different lifespans so
their productivity is resultantly different) are given the same reward -
lordship over many things (just like the Lord).
The remaining servant spent his talent (time)
unproductively, burying his talents, and the Lord cast him off, a
resolution that we should all ponder. If we waste the time that the Lord
has bequeathed to us (long or short), the Lord punishes this waste of lifetime that he gifted to the servant.
Our greatest gift from God is the mortal lifespan that
we have (or perhaps should have had if we don't shorten it through
misuse of our bodies). As we spend our years of mortal life (talents) in
service to the Lord, whether we have many years or relatively few, we
will be rewarded for our "investment" in pleasing the Lord.