Diaglott(i)
2 And having called him, he said to him: What this I hear concerning thee? render the account of the stewardship of thee; not for thou wilt be able longer to be steward.
3 Said and in himself the steward: What shall I do, for the lord of me takes the stewardship from me? To dig not I have strength, to beg I am ashamed.
4 I know what i will do, that, when I may be put out of the stewardship, they may receive me into the house of themselves.
5 And having summoned one each of the debtors of the lord of himself, he said to the first: How much owest thou to the lord of me?
6 He and said: A hundred baths of oil. And he said to him: Receive of thee the bill, and sitting down quickly write thou fifty.
7 Then to another he said: Thou and how much owest thou? He and said: A hundred cors of wheat. And he says to him: Receive of thee the bill, and write eighty.
8 And praised the lord the steward the unjust, because prudently he had done; for the sons of the age this more prudent above the sons of the light for the generation that of themselves are.
9 And I to you say: Make you to yourselves friends out of the mammon of the unjust; that, when you may fail, they may receive you into the age-lasting tabernacles.
10 He faithful in least also in much faithful is; and he in least unjust, and in much unjust is.
11 If therefore in the unrighteous mammon faithful not you have been, the true who to you will entrust?
12 and if in the another faithful not you have been, the yours who to you will give?
13 No one domestic is able two lords to serve; either for the one he will hate, and the other he will love; or one he will cling to, and the other he will slight. Not you are able God to serve and mammon.