A Talent for Growing

Spiritual growth is the movement from an ego-centric view of the  world and "what's in it for me" to an open and loving acceptance of  one's self and others as children of God;   created by a loving Father  to learn and grow in understanding and compassion and to become good  stewards of the natural world.   When we develop healthy, creative  interdependent relationships and begin consciously living in the now, we  discover a deep and abiding joy welling up from within us. 
 
 
 Happiness has  been defined as an emotional response to a positive event,  such as  getting a raise or receiving an unexpected gift--a temporary event  dependent upon external events. Joy is often defined as the product of   happiness, but true joy comes from deep within one's own being and is  not bound or limited by people,  places or events.   And therein lies  its power.
I can still experience true joy, even when the world around me  appears to be spinning out of control.  Instead of trying to fix  everything and everyone,  I turn my attention to the inward journey of  spiritual growth.  My personal growth has a ripple effect in my world.
When  my inner life is lively and well nurtured my relationships improve  dramatically. 
We  need to learn how to value and care for ourselves, to enrich our  "centers" in order to make them safe, strong, renewing places to be.  We  need to relate to other people and to the world out of this center, out  of inner wholeness.
Jesus used  parables, earthly stories with a heavenly meaning, to teach the  multitudes and His disciples.  The Parable of the Talents  appears with slightly different details in both Matthew and Luke.   It  is set in conjunction with other stories teaching that we know not when  He (the Master) shall return and must be ever ready.  In Matthew, the  Master gives His servants 1, 2 or 5 talents, each according to his  ability, to be invested during the Master's absence.  Both the servants  with 2 talents and 5 talents invested wisely and doubled the Master's  return. But the servant with 1 talent hid his for safekeeping rather  than risking loss.
Those who invested (used) their talents and multiplied their good  were blessed and rewarded by the Master, but the one who hid his talent  lost that which he had as punishment for not using it.  And then, Jesus  states what appears to be an inexplicably hard teaching:
For  to everyone who has, more will be given, and he will have abundance;  but from him who does not have, even what he has will be taken away.
If we develop  the spiritual gifts (talents) which God has given us, then our lives  will be blessed with the riches of the Kingdom of Heaven.  But if we  deny our spiritual gifts and hide away for fear of loosing that which we  have been given, then even that which we have received will be lost in  our fears and doubts.  Job stated it best, I think: That which I have  feared has come upon me. 
I believe  that the greatest reward of spiritually empowered wholeness in my life  is the feeling of a deep and abiding sense of peace and joy.  Oprah  offered this definition:
Rev.  Claudia Naylor
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