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Growing up in church, I heard this parable preached often. There were good applications made from the text such as the fact that there will be accountability one day for what God has entrusted to us, and that God only expects us to work with what He has given us. All of these are applications made to Church Age Christians about faithful stewardship. But deeper study of the parable makes me wonder if that is the point that Jesus was intended to make when He used this literary device. How does the context impact the primary application? Jesus is speaking to the Jews in the story. The intended audience of the Book of Matthew is the Jews. This story is part of a set of three parables—all with similar scenarios. The arrangement and construction of the parables indicate all three parables are intended to be seen together and drive home a main point, or at least closely related points. If the parable is intended for believers and about stewardship, how are we to interpret the punishment for the unprofitable steward in Matthew 25:29-30 [https://ref.ly/Matt%2025.29-30;esv?t=biblia]? … Read the rest of the article here [https://www.proclaimanddefend.org/2026/05/03/problems-with-the-parable-of-the-talents-in-matthew-2414-29/], or just listen to the podcast. Get full access to the Proclaim & Defend Podcast at proclaimdefend.substack.com/subscribe [https://proclaimdefend.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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