Twenty-seventh Sunday in Ordinary Time
“Is
anybody there?” This is the
question the Prophet Habakkuk asks God in the first reading. He is frustrated by the evil that is all
around him, how violence and wickedness seem to be everywhere. And yet God, who is supposed to be the
source of justice, the one who punishes the wicked, seems absent from the
situation. The wrongs are not
being righted. The oppressed are
not being liberated. The wicked
are not being punished. Where is
God in this situation?
“Is
anybody there?” This is probably a
question that we have asked God from time to time. “Don’t you care what’s going on in my life? Don’t you care how bad things
are?” Maybe it’s not violence like
the Prophet Habakkuk is frustrated by.
Maybe you’re a senior citizen and no one comes to visit you and you feel
alone. Maybe you’re married, yet
the spark of love seems to have died, and all you seem to do is fight with your
spouse. Maybe you’re divorced and
feel alienated. Maybe you’re a
college student and the pressure of midterms is weighing heavily upon you and
you feel like you’re drowning in your classes. Maybe you’re a child and nothing seems to be going right
with friends, family, or school.
Maybe someone you love has just died and you don’t know how to live
without him or her. No matter what
the scenario, many people have dark times in their life. And what makes it particularly dark is
when God doesn’t seem to care, and when the answer to prayer that we want, the
thing we are sure will fix the whole situation, doesn’t come.
But
in our first reading, God responds.
He does not leave Habakkuk in silence. He says, “Write down the vision clearly upon the tablets…For
the vision still has its time…if it delays, wait for it, it will surely come,
it will not be late.” In essence,
God tells the prophet, “Just wait.
I am going to work things out in my own time.” That’s probably not the answer we want to hear when we feel
like everything is going wrong.
But God doesn’t answer our prayers exactly the way we want. He loves us too much to give us only
what we want. He loves us so much,
that He knows how and when to give us what we need. But to persevere through the tough times takes trust and
faith in God.
It’s
easy to say with St. Paul, “All things work for the good of those who love
God,” when we’ve just won the lottery, when we feel on top of the world, when
everything seems to be going well.
It is much harder to say that same phrase when loss and darkness seem to
be the norm. But the gift of faith
gives us the strength to trust that all things are working for our good if we
love God, and to say with Job, “The Lord
gives and the Lord takes
away. Blessed be the name of the Lord!” With faith, great things are possible.
Certainly
this is the point of what Jesus said to the apostles in today’s Gospel. Jesus wasn’t talking about landscaping
when he said you could move mulberry trees if you have faith. In some sense, that’s quite easy. How much harder is it to trust in God
when everything seems to be working against us! And how much more impressive is it to continue to remain faithful
to God and persevere than just to move a tree! In one sense, moving a tree with faith is easy. Remaining faithful to God and
continuing to trust in Him when your heart and your will tell you just to give
up is much more of a miracle. And
that is possible if we have faith the size of a mustard seed. That’s not a lot of faith. Mustard seeds are not big. If I were to hold a mustard seed
between my finger and thumb, no one could see it, unless you’re Clark Kent.
Think
of a few, small, burning embers in a fire that was burning the night
before. All it takes is some paper
and small twigs, some gentle breaths of oxygen, and that fire can start burning
once again the next morning and can return to the greatness of the night
before. The same is true with our
faith: even when we feel our faith is nothing but a small ember, a small
remnant of what it was before, with the proper fuel, our faith can once again
be a roaring fire. How does this
happen? Through reading the Word
of God, either alone or in a Bible Study; by sharing with others the little bit
of faith we have through Small Faith Sharing Groups; by taking time for prayer,
especially before the Blessed Sacrament in Adoration; by removing any obstacles
to faith through the Sacrament of Penance. In that way we nurture the mustard seed of faith, until it
grows into a large tree that provides home and comfort for others.
In
a country song, Rodney Atkins sings, “If you’re going through hell, keep on
going.” By the gift of faith we
can persevere through all the trials of life, even when we feel like it’s going
through hell, knowing that God never abandons us, but sometimes asks us to wait
to receive the best things that He has in store for us in the way and the time
that He wants to give it. “If it
delays, wait for it, it will surely come, it will not be late.”