The Irony of Burying the Gospel Deposit
1 Timothy 6:20
"O Timothy, guard the deposit entrusted to you. Avoid the irreverent babble and contradictions of what is falsely called "knowledge," for by professing it some have swerved from the faith.
Grace be with you. [you all]"
A deposit is something entrusted to another. Something placed in trust with another person, who must guard it intact and return it unchanged to the owner. So in a sense, this God-given unchanging gospel truth is "on loan" from God. And the one entrusted with that truth is drawing from that deposit.
The trustee’s job is simple but a serious one. Guard it faithfully. Do not tamper with it, alter it, or mix it up with other things. And in the end, return it intact to the owner when required.
However, as we learned from the parable of the Lord, something more is required of the trustee.
In his parable about the "talents", the master does not commend the servant who simply buried the talent in the ground and returned it unchanged. In fact, the master calls him lazy and wicked (Luke 19:22).
What didn't he do? What did he neglect to make from this trust?
"You wicked and slothful servant!...You ought to have invested my money with the bankers, and at my coming I should have received what was my own with interest."
If all the master wanted was to find someone to protect his money, he could have buried it, vaulted it, or put it in the safest bank in Jerusalem himself. But he didn’t. He deliberately entrusted it to his servants and then left on a journey. So, he obviously wanted an increase. He wanted his resources working, multiplying, bearing fruit in the world while he was away. And he set his servants on the path toward investing. The servants were not hired simply as security guards. The master did it because He wants it multiplied; more disciples, more churches, more transformed lives, more glory to His name.
The wicked servant who only protected the deposit thought he was being careful. He even said, "I knew you were a hard man…" (Matthew 25:24). But his master called that unfaithfulness, not prudence.
I don't know about you, but I recognize a BS line when I see one, and this comment from the lazy one is very obvious. He's not concerned about a stern master. If he was he would have done something with his trust. He's just making excuses, pure self-justifying BS. Burying the talent was the lazy option, not the fearful one. The servant’s real problem wasn’t fear. It was indifference mixed with selfishness. He didn’t want to work. He didn’t want to risk. He just wanted to be left alone; and then blame the master for his own laziness.
Jesus is showing us that inaction in the face of a trust is not prudence. It's rebellion dressed up as caution.
"I’ll just guard it privately in my heart."
He's not going to testify about Jesus to his friends and family. He's not going to apply the law of God to his ways. He's not going to share the truth with the rest. He's got his way to go and things to do.
Just "my own way and my own things to do."
The deposit is meant to multiply through transmission, not stay internal. The private guardian thinks he’s playing it safe. In reality, he’s sterilizing the gospel. He’s turning the living seed into a decorative rock. And the Master calls that wicked laziness, not cautious wisdom.
So the question the parable forces onto every one of us who holds the gospel deposit is this:
Am I burying it, or am I investing it?
If you're trying to decide about whether or not you're going to invest your life for the gospel, remember this, the path of fruitfulness is riskier in the eyes of the world, but it is the only path that ends with "Well done."
You don't want that weeping and gnashing of teeth outcome.
You know what that servant did when he buried his talent thinking he was safe guarding it?
He dug his own grave.