Luke 18:1-8 · The Parable of the Persistent Widow
A Bridge Between Two Worlds
Luke 18:1-8
Sermon
by King Duncan
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If you ever read stories or watch movies about spies and espionage, then you know that spies live in constant tension of being found out. Because spies are hiding their true identity and purpose, even the tiniest false move could blow their cover and put them in danger. That kind of premise guarantees that a spy story or movie will be filled with tension and excitement.

One of the most famous true spies of modern times was a Spanish man by the name of Juan Pujol Garcia. At the start of World War II, Garcia approached British intelligence agents in Spain and offered his services as a spy for the British government. Garcia was a brilliant man who cared deeply about defeating the Nazis, but the British government kept turning down his offers of help. So Juan Pujol Garcia decided to defeat the Nazis in an entirely different way. He approached German intelligence agents in Spain and, pretending to be a fanatical Nazi sympathizer, offered to spy against the British. The Nazis hired him immediately.

This was the start of the most brilliant intelligence operation in modern history. Garcia and his handler, Tomás Harris, created hundreds of false reports detailing the “secret” plans of British troops and fed these plans to the Germans. Garcia’s greatest deception was convincing German military commanders that the invasion of Normandy was not the biggest assault planned in France. He provided intelligence reports that convinced the Germans that a much bigger invasion was planned for a different site in France. The German commanders believed him and reserved some of their best forces far away from Normandy. The British government believes that it was this tactic that allowed the Allies to succeed against the German forces on D-Day.

Garcia was such a successful double agent that he is the only known person to have been awarded highest military honors from both the German and British governments. (1)

For those of us who aren’t world-famous spies, the danger in living between two worlds is that we might forget our true identity. Jesus knew that this was a very real danger for his followers.

Jesus knew that his followers live in the tension between two worlds. That is still true today. The Bible says that our citizenship is now in heaven. And our values and priorities and relationships now reflect the character and the values of God. But our bodies are still living in this world—a world full of sin, a world in which people neither fear God nor care for their fellow man.

Walter Payton played thirteen years as a running back for the Chicago Bears. During his career he rushed for 16,726 yards. Sounds impressive, doesn’t it? That’s a lot of running, more than nine miles worth of rushing yards. You know what makes it even more impressive? He achieved that record with someone knocking him down every 4.6 yards. (2)

Jesus knew that his followers were going to get knocked down over and over again. That’s just the way the world is. How could he convince them to get back up and keep running? He told them this parable to show them that they should always pray and never give up.

This passage today about the persistent widow and the unjust judge is actually part of a larger teaching that is all about the kingdom of God. To understand this story in Luke 18, we have to go back to the end of Luke, chapter 17. In Luke 17: 20-37, Jesus warns his followers that the kingdom of God is coming and they need to be prepared because most people will not be ready for it. We will be in the middle of our ordinary, busy lives, and the kingdom of God will suddenly be here.

And then we get to Luke 18, which begins, “Then Jesus told his disciples a parable to show them that they should always pray and not give up.”      

The parable is about a poor widow. In Jesus’ day, widows had nothing. If their family or their community didn’t watch out for them, then they were in trouble. The very word for “widow” in Hebrew literally means “one who is silent.” Widows didn’t have a “voice” in their society. And this widow is in trouble. She has been wronged, and she goes to the courts to ask for justice.

But the judge is heartless, corrupt. It says he didn’t care about God or man. No morality and no compassion. The judge is a good example of our fallen world. Our world doesn’t respect God or show much compassion for the weak and needy. And this corrupt judge has all the power over this needy woman’s life.

The poor widow is a picture of all those believers who are holding on to their faith in a corrupt and unjust world, who are praying to know God’s will, to hear God’s voice, who are praying for mercy and enough grace to get through another day. And Jesus is saying, “Don’t stop praying. Don’t stop believing that God can and will give you justice. Don’t give up on the kingdom of God, because it’s coming. No matter how bad things look right now . . . God will redeem this world back to Himself. His kingdom will come.”

In 1979, an Indian teenager named Jadav Payeng began planting trees on a small island in Assam, India. Jadav saw how deforestation had killed off so much animal life on the island. He had a vision of a lush, green ecosystem where animals could thrive again. At the age of 16, he planted his first trees along the edge of the island. But Jadav couldn’t get his local government or the other citizens of his town interested in his project. They didn’t see his vision, and they didn’t care about the condition of the island. So for the next 30 years, Jadav continued his work alone. Today, the area Jadav tended is called the Molai forest. It is full of trees and plants and flowers, and is home to tigers, elephants, rhinos, monkeys, deer and rabbits. (3) 

Jadav Payeng looked at a barren, sandy stretch of island and he saw a lush, green forest full of life. No one else saw his vision. No one else encouraged him. But he persisted until his vision became reality.

Jesus spent most of his ministry creating a vision of the kingdom of God. More than anything, he wanted people to understand who God is and what God’s original plan for creation was. And he wanted them to understand that no matter how corrupt and unjust this world can be, he would come back as Messiah someday and establish the kingdom of God, God’s vision for this world. And how do we fight off frustration and weariness in the meantime? First of all, Jesus commands us to pray.

Prayer is the bridge between this sinful world and the kingdom of God.  As the Union Pacific Railroad was being constructed in the West, an elaborate trestle bridge was built across a large canyon. Wanting to test the bridge, the builder loaded a train with enough extra cars and equipment to double its normal payload. The train was then driven to the middle of the bridge, where it stayed an entire day.

One worker asked, “Are you trying to break this bridge?”        

“No,” the builder replied, “I’m trying to prove that the bridge won’t break.” (4)

In Matthew 6, Jesus says that God knows what we need before we ask Him. So what is the purpose of prayer? Prayer puts us in the presence of God. Prayer may or may not change our circumstances, but it changes us. Prayer helps us to see this world, to think about this world, to respond to this world the way that God would. Prayer gives us the strength and the wisdom of the Holy Spirit, a strength and wisdom that give us an eternal perspective on our current circumstances. And persistent prayer reminds us that God is working in this world whether we see the results or not.

Natan Sharansky was a human rights activist, working to protecting the rights of oppressed citizens in the Soviet Union. For his human rights work, Soviet officials sentenced him to thirteen years in a prison labor camp.

For nine long years, Sharansky lived in a barren prison cell and performed hard labor daily. The story of his unjust imprisonment caught the attention of politicians and supporters around the world, and they finally pressured the Soviet government into releasing Sharansky in a prisoner exchange.

The exchange took place on February, 1986 in East Germany, which was under the control of the Communists at that time. The Soviet officials and Natan Sharansky stood on the east side of the Glienecke Bridge in Berlin; politicians, human rights activists and journalists crowded the west side of the bridge. A guard released Sharansky and he began to cross the bridge to freedom. But he did a strange thing. Instead of just walking across the bridge, Natan Sharansky zig-zagged and skipped and danced from the east side of the bridge into the cheering crowd of supporters on the west side of the bridge.  

When a reporter asked him later why he had chosen such a strange way to cross the bridge, Sharansky replied that the KGB had told him to cross the bridge in a straight line, and his last act of defiance against his oppressors was to dance his way across the bridge into freedom. (5)

Prayer is the tool God gave us to set us free from the values, priorities and powers of this world. The poor widow in our parable had no power against the unjust judge. Yet she wasn’t afraid. She wasn’t afraid to demand the justice due her. She wasn’t afraid to stand up to his apathy and corruption. Her faith in a just God gave her the courage and determination to persevere.

We too can persist in prayer because we have a God who keeps His promises. And God promises that we will see justice and mercy when Jesus returns to establish the kingdom of God on earth.

So what about our poor widow? Jesus notes that she kept coming back day after day. She kept demanding justice until her persistence wore the judge out. It says in vs. 5: “Even though I don’t fear God or care what people think, yet because this widow keeps bothering me, I will see that she gets justice, so that she won’t eventually come and attack me!”

The Greek verb he uses here is hupopiazo. It's a boxing term and it means to strike someone with a full blow in the eye.  This widow has no power whatsoever in her society. But she has faith in the Almighty God. She refuses to give up. And her faith is so powerful it’s like a punch in the eye to this corrupt judge. Even though he has all the power—as the world measures power—he is powerless in the face of a woman of God.

Rev. Ron Holmes tells of a young missionary who felt God calling him to minister in China during World War II. He went to a missionary training school to learn the language and culture of China. He spent three years in intensive preparation for this ministry. But at the end of his training period, the Communist revolution broke out in China, and those Christian missionaries who were still in the country were either killed, or they escaped the country as fast as possible. This missionary who had trained so hard to reach the Chinese people was now denied entry into the country.

He went back to school and trained to reach the people of South Korea instead. He spent 25 years as a missionary in South Korea. But in all that time, he never lost his passion for China. He prayed regularly for the people of China. He begged God to open up Chinese society to Christian missionaries. He wept over all those people in China who would never get to hear of their Savior, Jesus Christ.

But after President Richard Nixon visited China in 1972, the country began to open up its borders to more tourists from the outside world. This devoted missionary was finally able to visit China, but only as a tourist, not as a missionary. And what he found there amazed him! The underground church in China was flourishing. The persecution by the Communist government had not destroyed the Christian church. Instead, it had inspired believers there to share their faith with more boldness. There were now thousands more Christians in China than there had been before the Communist revolution. Today there are more Christians in China than members of the Communist Party. (6)

We are living between a world of righteousness, peace and joy, and a world of injustice, sin and suffering. And the only thing that keeps us going is the certainty of God’s faithfulness, the certainty of God’s love. How do we keep from giving up? Pray. And God promises that our faithfulness will be rewarded. And what is that reward? We will have the power to endure now, and the joy of seeing justice and restoration when His kingdom comes.


1. Charlotte Lennon, October 13, 2015. https://www.careeraddict.com/top-5-most-badass-real-life-secret-agents.

2. “Persevere in Obedience” by Rick Ezell https://www.lifeway.com/en/articles/sermon-persevere-in-obedience-jeremiah-37-38.

3. “10 Unbelievable Stories of Persistence” by Steve Moramarco, May 29, 2014,   https://www.oddee.com/item_98975.aspx.

4. Mark Collins, http://www.northwoodunited.org/sermons/042504.php.

5. Barbara Amiel, “A timeless hero for troubled times,” MacLean’s, September 25, 1995, 9. Cited in Mark Buchanan, Hidden In Plain Sight (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, Inc., 2002), pp. 139-140.

6. “Stories from Jesus: Persistent Prayer” by Rev. Ron Holmes, http://www.soth.net/sermons%202006/sermon%203-26-2006.htm.

Dynamic Preaching, Fourth Quarter Sermons, by King Duncan