Let's check:
“How about Jesus's Parable of the Talents (talents were a form of money in Jesus's day)? A man entrusted three of his workers with his wealth. The two who invested the money and made a profit were praised and the one who buried his share so he wouldn't lose any of it was reprimanded. Sounds a lot more like an endorsement for capitalism than socialism, doesn't it?
You are confused in this part.
Jesus used the parable as an analogy.
In other words, if you become a religious person and you keep it to yourself and make no other people to become followers of God, then you have buried the treasure of the word of God and make it non worthy.
The one who received the same word of God and he spread it on others, then he has increased it like profit.
Remember that parables are not to be understood literally.
….Jesus offers his Parable of the Workers in the Vineyard. In it, a landowner hires some laborers to pick grapes. Near the end of the day, he realizes he needs more workers to get the job done.
To recruit them, he agrees to pay a full day's wage for just one hour of work. When one of the laborers who had worked an entire day complains, the landowner answers, "I am not being unfair to you, friend. Didn't you agree to work for a denarius?
Don't I have the right to do what I want with my own money?" That's a testament to the principles of supply and demand, of private property, and of voluntary contracts, not socialism.” Was Jesus a Socialist?
Can I get an
"AMEN!!!"
You still can't understand what parables mean.
In this case, the Hews were mad at Jesus, they hated this parable.
This parable is about Jews always keeping the law since birth or age of reasoning, and will receive their reward. But it happens that the gentile, after being a depraved man, idolater, eating pork and rats and roaches, he changed and started to obey the word of God same as the Jews. And this gentile will receive the same reward.
Oh, this was reaching the limit, the Jews didn't agree with that.
But this is what the parable was about, and the mention of the salary and workers is just the analogy, not the literal interpretation.