Vending Machine
Theology – 27th Sunday in Ordinary Time Year C
Most people regard our relationship with God as akin to our
relationship with a vending machine.
With a vending machine, we put money in the slot, select our preferred
snack or beverage, and we have what we want and what we perceive we need at
that moment. Analogously, many people
think of our relationship with God as putting in our prayer to God, making our
selection, and then getting what we want and what we perceive we need at that
moment or sometime thereafter. When we
do not get what we want, we get angry at God or we create some apologetic
answer about God’s time God saying no.
The readings today suggest that we abandon such apologetics and seek a
deeper understanding of our relationship with God.
The prophet Habakkuk is frustrated at God’s inaction with
respect to his prayer. The prophet sees
violence all about, and he implores God to come at once to solve the myriad of
problems that beset Israel and Judah.
Habakkuk has inserted his prayer, but God has not reacted in the way the
prophet thought. Instead, God provides
the prophet a vision of what will come in terms of deliverance, but God
provides no timetable for the fulfillment of this vision. God promises that it will come, and that the
just one will live because of his faith in God.
This vision, of course, is Messianic in nature and will not be fulfilled
in Habakkuk’s time or in any time soon thereafter. However, the fulfillment is not important for
the prophet. God has promised life for
those who are faithful and just in every generation. The prophet will see Israel and Judah
besieged and the people taken into exile, but those who remain faithful and
just in these circumstances will live.
This message of fidelity and justice is the theme of the
second letter to Timothy. The Messianic
promise has come in the person of Jesus, and yet the people of God continue to
face hardships. Why? The promise of the prophets did not consist
of the absence of hardships, but rather the ability to endure them with faith
while persevering in justice. Jesus the
Lord has given us an example of how to live in the midst of hardship and
persecution: we are not to resort to
violence or any other human tactic.
Instead, we must suffer as Jesus suffered, for in His death and
resurrection He has given us “power and love and self-control.” Is this not what was promised in the
prophetic age? Yet, we continue to
complain about hardships and suffering.
How little is our faith.
The disciples in the Gospel passage today realize their lack
of faith, and so they ask Jesus to increase their faith. They have inserted their prayer, and now they
await the attainment of their selection.
However, Jesus responds to them in the same enigmatic way He always
responds in such situations, and it remains for us to discern what Jesus
intended. He responds that if they had
faith it could move mountains, but since they lack such faith what are they to
do? Jesus then tells us the parable of
the servant who serves both in the fields and in the house, not seeking any
reward for the servant is merely doing what he ought.
The image of servant is not one we readily take to in modern
times, and yet it is the only apt image for the life of faith. We expect the life of faith to be one of
ease, warm feelings, and joyful experiences.
The prosperity gospel has taught us to expect such – and riches on earth
besides! And yet Jesus tells us that if
we want our faith to increase we must decrease in our own estimation of
ourselves. Jesus the Lord left His
heaven to become a human being. He was
born of humble human origins in an obscure part of the world. He bent down to wash our feet – something not
even a servant would do for his master.
In the end, Jesus died a humiliating death for our redemption. The Lord Jesus Himself became even less than
a slave for us, and yet we expect to live like kings and use God as a vending
machine!
Pope Francis recently stated, “The ministers of the Gospel
must be people who can warm the hearts of the people, who walk through the dark
night with them, who know how to dialogue and to descend themselves into their
people’s night, into the darkness, but without getting lost.” Jesus calls us to humble service, not haughty
triumphalism and pugilistic apologetic.
Jesus has given us an example to follow in the path of humble service,
for in this service we will find the answer to all of our requests for an
increase in faith.
As we gather together to find strength and inspiration in
the journey of faith, we pray: “Let us
pray before the face of God, in trusting faith.
Almighty and eternal God, Father of the world to come, your goodness is
beyond what our spirit can touch, and your strength is more than the mind can
bear. Lead us to seek beyond our reach and
give us the courage to stand before your truth.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.”
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