(November 17, 2008) Fear is the wrong attitude when it comes to putting talents at
the service of our neighbours, says Pope Benedict XVI. The Pope affirmed this Sunday
when he reflected on the Gospel reading from Mass before he prayed the midday Angelus
with crowds gathered in St. Peter's Square. The reading was on the parable of the
talents. "The 'talent' was an ancient Roman coin of great value and precisely on
account of the popularity of this parable it has become synonymous with personal gifts,
which everyone is called to develop," the Holy Father explained. He said that "such
gifts, apart from natural qualities, represent the riches that the Lord Jesus has
left us as a legacy, so that we bear fruit with them: his Word, deposited in the holy
Gospel; baptism, which renews us in the Holy Spirit; prayer -- the 'Our Father' --
that we address to God as sons united in the Son; his forgiveness, which he commanded
to be brought to all; the sacrament of his immolated Body and his Blood that he poured
out. In a word: the Kingdom of God, which is Christ himself, present and living among
us." This is the treasure that Jesus has entrusted to his friends, the Pontiff affirmed.
And he said that "today's parable considers the interior attitude with which this
gift is accepted and valued." "The mistaken attitude is that of fear," the Bishop
of Rome stated. "The servant who fears his master and fears his return, hides the
coin in the ground and it does not produce any fruit. "But," Benedict XVI continued,
"the parable puts greater emphasis on the good fruits born by the disciples who, happy
at the gift received, did not hide it with fear and jealously, but made it fruitful,
sharing it, participating in it. Indeed, what Christ gives us is multiplied when we
give it away! The Pope thus concluded that the central message of the parable "regards
the spirit of responsibility with which the Kingdom of God is to be accepted: responsibility
toward God and toward humanity." And he pointed to the Virgin Mary as the perfect
example of one who has this responsibility as God wants. “This attitude is perfectly
incarnated in the heart of the Virgin Mary who, receiving the most precious of gifts,
Jesus himself, offered him to the world with great love," the Pontiff said. "