False analogy.
I don't accept your interpretation of Romans 10:9 (KJV), and you arguing that I should, isn't succeeding.
The will of their master was that they not permit fear of Him, to stop them from trying to earn profit for the master.
And if the servant makes the biggest bets possible in order to gain the most profit possible for the master, that is what I would expect of a servant of this particular master, if they really and truly understood exactly and precisely what is the master's will.
False, everything you say after this, because you're appealing to authority, your own, in making your determination, and you're not quoting Sacred Scripture. Why should I believe you? I shouldn't, on the merits. And I don't. And I'm being abrupt on purpose.
I believe HE IS RISEN. I don't know much, but I know that. I know HEISRISEN.
HE IS RISEN. If you conclude from this one thing, anything dark, then you're doing it wrong. Recalculate. Try again and again. It's Good News. It can't be bad news, in any way. If you think it's bad news, you're objectively incorrect, though I condemn any attempt, to condemn anybody else, on that mark. That's all I'm sayin.'
Well congratulations, even the devils know he is risen. What I don't understand is how you read this parable without recognizing that Jesus is that master, that it is about him and us, the kingdom of heaven, and eternal life. Jesus didn't come to tell us about smart gambling, profits, or how to provide jobs for the economy.
You said you stopped listening because I wasn't using an appeal to scripture. I think that you didn't recognize the appeal to scripture. Perhaps the few words I were using weren't being recognized.
James 2:19 KJV
(19) Thou believest that there is one God;
thou doest well: the devils also believe, and tremble.
James speaks on the matter of faith and belief, and the issue is that people have different ideas of what it means to believe and have faith. The
literal wooden minimalist interpretation is the
wrong interpretation. That's the topic of this epistle. If the faith and belief isn't life changing, it isn't the faith and belief that Jesus was talking about... thus, as James puts it,
dead.
James 2:20 KJV
(20) But wilt thou know, O vain man,
that faith without works is dead?
Let's talk again about the parable of the talents. There were three servants in that parable. Two of them understood that their Lord was going away for a time, but would return. They understood this as GOOD NEWS. Because this was good news for them, the prepared for his coming with everything they were given.
But one servant saw this as BAD NEWS. He was fearful of his Lord's return, and as such he did not fully invest himself for his coming. I am concerned that you are terming this "BAD NEWS." Yes, faith and belief requires a total investment from us, a willingness to sell all that we have to purchase this pearl of great price. That's not bad news.
Not for the believer. It's bad news for the one that does not truly confess with his mouth and believe with his heart. For him it's bad news, not for the believer.
Think about this please. If you consider this bad news,
why?