(A meditation on patience, technology, and the stubborn holiness of parish administration)

I feel as though I should preface this parable for readers from Christ Church with an assurance that our photocopier is currently in perfect operation, and Thanksgiving material is all successfully printed. This is a parable.
There are few things in parish life that test one’s sanctification quite like the parish photocopier. I have often thought that if Jesus had lived in the age of office technology, one of his parables would have begun, “The kingdom of heaven is like a photocopier that jammed just as the bulletin was almost finished.”
It is a tale as old as time — or at least as old as toner. It begins innocently enough: you approach the machine with faith and optimism, bulletin master copy in hand, heart full of purpose. You press “Start,” and for a few glorious seconds, the hum of productivity fills the air. Then — clang, grind, flash — a small screen lights up with that most unhelpful of pastoral phrases: “Error. See technician.”
And that’s when the real spiritual formation begins.
I have stood before that machine and other of its ancestors as if before the burning bush — removing trays, checking for paper jams, pressing mysterious buttons with the same desperate hope that one might apply to a defibrillator. “Please, Lord,” I mutter, “just let it finish the last ten bulletins.” (Sometimes, I even promise greater holiness if only the toner will cooperate.)
Of course, the copier does not listen. It humbles the clergy, confounds the administrator, and gives parishioners yet another opportunity to practise patience in the face of adversity. If grace perfects nature, then the parish photocopier is clearly the furnace of sanctification.
Yet, if we look beneath the frustration and flying paper, there may actually be a parable worth hearing. The broken copier reminds us that much of ministry — indeed, much of life — is about persistence and patience in the midst of imperfection. Things break. Plans unravel. Toner runs dry. And somehow, God still shows up.
Sometimes it’s in the person who quietly steps in to hand-fold bulletins after the machine gives up the ghost. Sometimes it’s in the laughter that erupts as the choir realizes the hymn numbers are all wrong. And sometimes, it’s in the humility that comes when the priest realizes that not everything can be fixed by pressing the power button twice.
The parable of the broken photocopier, then, is not really about machines at all. It’s about the community that gathers when things don’t go as planned — the people who make do, who show grace, who remind one another that ministry is not measured in perfect bulletins but in the shared laughter and faith that get us through the chaos.
In the end, the kingdom of God might look less like a perfectly printed order of service, and more like a group of faithful people gathered around a jammed machine, laughing, praying, and finding holiness in the hum of human imperfection.
And yes, the technician eventually arrives. He opens one obscure panel, removes a single scrap of paper, presses a hidden button, and the copier bursts back to life. It’s like resurrection—complete with the smell of warm toner and second chances.
So, perhaps the next time your own plans jam, when things just won’t align, you might remember: even a broken photocopier can proclaim good news. Grace, after all, still manages to print, even when the machine doesn’t.
A Prayer for Patience in the Age of Photocopiers
Gracious God,
You who bring order from chaos and calm to anxious hearts,
grant us patience when the toner runs dry
and wisdom when the machine says, “See technician.”
Teach us to find joy in imperfection,
grace in small frustrations,
and laughter in the holy absurdities of ministry.
Remind us that even jammed paper can proclaim your presence,
and that your love is never out of alignment.
Through Christ our patient Redeemer,
Amen.








