Matthew 25:16

Then he that had received the five talents went and traded with the same, and made five other talents.
All Commentaries on Matthew 25:16 Go To Matthew 25

Cornelius a Lapide

AD 1637
Then he . . . five talents, &c. To gain talents is to increase the gifts of God by using and increasing them, especially by means of good works, and helping our neighbour to increase and multiply the grace of God in ourselves and others. This parable intimates that every one ought to co-operate with the grace of God with all his might. For example, he who has, as it were, five degrees of charity, ought to exercise charity in a corresponding degree of intensity. By this means he will gain from God five degrees more. Again, by exercising charity thus increased as ten degrees, in acts of corresponding intensity, he may gain other ten decrees, and possess, as it were, twenty degrees. And so on, marvellously doubling, and multiplying the gain of his talents, that is to say, the degrees of his charity. Let it be, therefore, that a man by his charity should gain few or none to Christ by preaching, yet will he have the same merit and reward of his charity and preaching as if he had converted multitudes. The conversion of others is not often in our power, but the merit of doing so is always in our power. Moraliter: S. Gregory says (Hom9 , in Evang.), "This passage of the Gospel admonishes us anxiously to beware lest we, who seem to have received somewhat more than others in this world, should, for that reason, be judged more severely by the Maker of the world. For in proportion as gifts are increased, so is the account to be rendered of the gifts." And likewise he that had received two, &c. This man also, by diligently and correspondingly using his talent, that Isaiah , co-operating with grace, doubled it.
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Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation - 2 Peter 1:20

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