The first story is the Parable of the Ten Virgins.
Traditionally it has often been interpreted as a warning about being ready for
the Second Coming. While there may be truth in that reading, I now hear
something deeper. The wise virgins possess oil, while the foolish virgins do
not. Throughout scripture, oil often symbolizes illumination, anointing, and
spiritual awareness. Through my current lens, the oil represents consciousness
itself. It represents an awakened awareness of the divine presence. The tragedy
of the foolish virgins is not that they are evil people. They are simply
unprepared. They have not cultivated the awareness necessary to recognize the
arrival of the Bridegroom. They are asleep to what is happening around them.
This resonates with one of the central themes of my own
spiritual journey. I have come to see sin not primarily as moral failure but as
forgetfulness. Humanity suffers because it forgets its divine origin, forgets
its connection to the whole, and forgets the presence of the Logos within and
around us. The wise virgins represent those who have begun to awaken. They are
watchful. They are attentive. They have cultivated an inner awareness that
allows them to recognize the sacred when it appears. The foolish virgins, by
contrast, symbolize a state of spiritual sleep. They are living, but they are
not truly awake.
The second story, the Parable of the Talents, takes us one
step further. Awakening alone is not enough. Once consciousness expands,
something must be done with what has been received. Each servant is entrusted
with a treasure. Traditionally this treasure has been understood as gifts,
abilities, opportunities, or resources. Through my present understanding, the
talents can represent everything that has been entrusted to us by life itself.
They include creativity, compassion, wisdom, consciousness, relationships,
opportunities, and the divine spark within every soul.
What stands out to me most is the explanation given by the
servant who buried his talent. He says, "I was afraid." Fear becomes
the central issue. Fear prevented him from participating. Fear prevented
growth. Fear prevented expression. Fear caused him to hide what had been
entrusted to him. Throughout my own reflections on spirituality, I have
increasingly come to see fear as the opposite of love. Fear contracts. Love
expands. Fear hides. Love expresses. Fear buries potential. Love manifests it.
The servant who buried the talent is not condemned because he lacked ability.
He failed because he allowed fear to keep him from participating in the
unfolding process of life.
Viewed this way, the Parable of the Talents asks a profound
question. Once we awaken to the divine presence, what do we do with that
awakening? Do we allow it to transform our lives? Do we express it through
creativity, service, compassion, and growth? Or do we retreat into fear and
bury the very gifts that were given to us? Awakening is only the beginning.
What matters next is participation.
Then Jesus brings us to the final scene: the sheep and the
goats. Here the focus shifts once again. The question is no longer whether we
are awake. Nor is it whether we have used our gifts. The question becomes
whether our awakening and participation have matured into love.
This is where the sequence reaches its climax.
The sheep are not praised for having correct theology. They
are not rewarded because they mastered religious doctrine. In fact, they seem
unaware that they have done anything extraordinary. They simply responded to
human need. They fed the hungry. They welcomed the stranger. They visited the
sick. They cared for the imprisoned. Their lives had become expressions of
compassion.
The goats reveal something different. They do not recognize
Christ in those who suffer. They see the hungry, the thirsty, the stranger, and
the prisoner, but they fail to perceive the sacred presence hidden within them.
Their blindness is not primarily intellectual. It is spiritual. They continue
to live from a consciousness of separation.
This is why I believe these three stories belong together.
The virgins ask whether we have awakened to the presence of
the Logos.
The talents ask whether we have expressed the gifts
entrusted to us.
The sheep and the goats ask whether that awakening and
expression have blossomed into love.
In a sense, the three stories describe a spiritual journey.
First we awaken.
Then we participate.
Then we learn to love.
Or perhaps, in language closer to my own understanding,
first we remember. Then we manifest. Then we recognize.
We remember our connection to the divine source. We manifest
the gifts and possibilities entrusted to us. Finally, we recognize the divine
presence in others and respond with compassion.
This progression feels remarkably consistent with the
broader teachings of Jesus. The goal is not merely religious belief. The goal
is transformation. The goal is awakening into a deeper awareness of reality and
allowing that awareness to shape how we live and how we treat one another.
There may also be another layer to these stories. Much of
Matthew 24 and 25 is spoken in the shadow of the coming crisis that would
eventually culminate in the destruction of Jerusalem. Many scholars see these
teachings as addressing that first-century transition. If so, the emphasis
shifts even further away from speculation about the distant future and toward
preparedness for moments when divine reality confronts us directly.
Some are awake and recognize the moment.
Some hide in fear.
Some respond with love.
Whether one interprets these passages historically,
spiritually, or both, the underlying message remains powerful. Jesus seems less
concerned with predicting future events than with revealing the qualities of
consciousness that align with the kingdom of God.
The three stories together describe the path of spiritual
maturity. Awakening leads to participation. Participation leads to compassion.
The journey begins with recognizing the divine presence, but it reaches
fulfillment when we learn to see that same divine presence in every human being
we encounter.
In the end, the progression is beautifully simple.
Awaken.
Express.
Love.
Or, as I might say today:
Remember who you are.
Manifest what has been given to you.
And learn to recognize Christ in every face.
