Twenty-Seventh Sunday in Ordinary Time
It seems to me that recently, Hollywood in general does not know how to make good movies anymore. They simply rehash old ones that were popular. A case in point in the newer version of “Willy Wonka” released in 2005, called “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory,” which re-told the story of the movie released in 1971. For me, Willy Wonka is always Gene Wilder, not Johnny Depp, even though the 1971 has some pretty scary scenes in it.
While we don’t prefer to think of ourselves this way, this approach, that we want what we want and we want it now, can creep into our faith life. We heard in the first reading from the Prophet Habakkuk, who probably wrote this book in the 7th century (600s) BC. Perhaps, in our prayers, we have even used words like his: “How long, O Lord? I cry for help but you do not listen!” God, I’m praying to you! You’re supposed to give me what I want as soon as I ask for it!! Habakkuk, expressing that cry of his people, was not asking for anything bad. The Babylonians are about to capture Jerusalem, God’s Holy Dwelling. So they’re asking for His protection. This is not a bad thing. But remember, God had previously sent prophets to instruct the people to turn away from their evil, and they had not listened. The consequences of their rebellion against God are about to fall on their own heads.
Sometimes, we, too, ask for things that are not bad. We seek some good that God can give us. We feel that something should be in accord with God’s will. And so we want it now. Of course, we know that God allowed the Babylonians to sack Jerusalem, and the Jews went into exile from 587-539 BC. But, God conveys through Habakkuk, that “the vision still has its time, pressed on to fulfillment, and will not disappoint; if it delays, wait for it, it will surely come.” God will answer the cries of the people, but it will be on His schedule, not on theirs.
God invites us to be patient, and to trust that He will give us what we need, even if it’s after when we think we need it. That takes faith, which Jesus encourages in the Gospel. But there’s the curious follow-up to Jesus’ invitation to us to have faith, where He talks about us as servants, who need to wait for the Master’s schedule of dining. Still, with ears to hear, we can see how often our prayers requests can come from an attitude where we are in charge, and we are the ones around whom God should make His plans. But we are not the Master, but the unprofitable servants, whose job it is to serve the Master. God’s will doesn’t have to conform to ours; quite the opposite: our will needs to conform to God’s.
I admit, I do not always exemplify that trust in God’s timing and the priority of God’s will over mine. Because of my strong will (which can help me cling to God even in difficult times), I struggle saying “Thy will be done” and acknowledging that if it didn’t happen, then it’s not for the best. When I want something, I automatically presume it’s for the best. But, compared to God’s omniscience, we are like children who want dessert all the time, rather than eating our peas and carrots first.
I think this struggle to accept God’s will and timing is most evident when someone we love is struggling with poor health and is approaching death. There’s nothing wrong with seeking alternative treatments and second opinions, to make sure that we have explored every option. But sometimes there is no other outcome than death. Still I have seen adult children struggle greatly with accepting that reality, and wanting to keep trying every new medicine and prolong life, even when doctors are clear that there is no cure, beyond a miracle, and death is the only end to a disease or condition. It’s not wrong to pray for miracles and have faith that God can accomplish mighty deeds, but are we willing to accept when God’s plan is different than ours, no matter how hard that is to accept?
And it is hard, especially when the answer we want in prayer deals with someone we love. Love, we so often think, is doing everything we possibly can for the beloved. But sometimes love is also accepting that God’s will is not ours, that what we love will not continue in the same way as before, and that love will simply treasure the days, weeks, or maybe months that we have left.
Faith is hard; faith requires us to battle our own desires and wills. If it were easy, everyone would have faith, and it wouldn’t be so important for us in our relationship with God. But today God invites us to make that move from “I want it now!” to “the just one, because of his faith, shall live.”