Luke 18:1-8 · The Parable of the Persistent Widow
God Is Good But Not Easy
Luke 18:1-8
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And he told them a parable, to the effect that they ought always to pray and not lose heart. He said, "In a certain city there was a judge who neither feared God nor regarded man, and there was a widow in that city who kept coming to him and saying, 'Vindicate me against my adversary.' For a while he refused; but afterward he said to himself, ‘Though I neither fear God nor regard man, yet because this widow bothers me, I will vindicate her, or she will wear me out by her continual coming.’ " And the Lord said, "Hear what the unrighteous judge says. And will not God vindicate his elect, who cry to him day and night? Will he delay long over them? I tell you, he will vindicate them speedily."

You are invited to allow the light of this parable to filter through the life of Antonio Salieri, the main character in Peter Shaffer’s play, Amadeus. Salieri was a peer of the great musician Wolfgang Mozart and had a burning desire to be the outstanding composer of his time. His desire to be the greatest composer of his era was so all consuming that he went to God for help and struck a bargain with his God.

For years he had watched this God whose picture was painted on the church walls. Longingly he had stared into those "Dealer eyes" of this God who was anxious to make a deal and strike a bargain. This was the only God Salieri knew and at age sixteen he approached this God to make his request, to offer his promise and do business with the Almighty. Humbly and with a "desperate sense of right" he came to bow his head and lift his heart in prayer. Up out of the depths of his soul came this prayer to the "God of the bargains:"

"Signore, let me be a composer! Grant me sufficient fame to enjoy it. In returns I will live with virtue. I will strive to better the lot of my fellows. And I will honor You with much music all the days of my life!" As I said Amen, I saw His eyes flare. (As "God") "Bene. Go forth Antonio. Serve Me and mankind, and you will be blessed!" ... "Grazie!" Icalled back. "I am Your servant

for life."1

Salieri reports that the very next day good things began to happen to him and he was convinced in his heart that things would be right and good and prosperous for him because God was on his side. A bargain had been made. It was that easy. A fervent prayer in the night was to bring the fullness of life to him. He would be a great composer.

There is a strong temptation for any of us to see God as Salieri saw God and to convince ourselves that those "dealer eyes" make bargains. Many of us experience a desire to reduce the words of our God to the simple formula, "You give to me - I’ll give to you." Consequently, many times desperate and hurting people have reached out for that God and in the wink of an eye have attempted to bargain with the creator. Such people have come away from that altar of prayer convinced that God is their "private partner" who will affect their lives in such a way that all the pieces of life will fall conveniently into place and the obstacles of life will vanish away. If sickness comes, God will bring healing. If financial woes come, God will reveal a gold mine. It’s that easy and that simple for those who like Salieri have "Knelt before the God of the Bargain" and made a deal.

Isn’t Jesus speaking specifically to this point in the parable of the widow and the judge? The cue is given in this line that introduces the parable: "And he told them a parable, to the effect that they ought always to pray and not lose heart." (Luke 18:1) Then Jesus told the story of the widow who was persistent in "tracking" the judge until he vindicated her. The widow did not get what she wanted after the first knock at the judge’s door or after the first call to the judge in the street. She was vindicated only after she wore him out by her persistence. The theme of this story is the persistence of the widow.

The God revealed to us in Jesus Christ is not a god who waits for us to come to strike a quick and easy bargain that will satisfy our selfish needs but a God who invites us to come and establish a relationship. That requires persistence. It’s not easy. Many well-intended people have "lost heart" in this effort. In this parable, Jesus is giving us fair warning. God is not a bargainer. God is not an easy touch for our private goals. God is not a computer into which we feed our personal requests and from which we take our instant solutions and answers. The great invitation of our God has never been for us to come and use God but for us to come and relate to God. That does not happen quickly and easily. Persistence is required.

Isn’t this the center of Salieri’s problem? He went to God to make a deal rather than to establish a relationship. He knew how to cry out, "Give me, give me." This was the alpha and omega of his prayer. With deep feeling and great emotion he cried out to God to make a bargain in which he would guarantee Salieri his private ambition. We cannot fault him for insincerity, but we can point out with sadness that he did not know what it was like to grow from the place where he said to God, "Give me, give me," to the place where he said to God, "Show me your glory." Unlike Jacob who wrestled with God all throught the night, Salieri made one visit and expected that encounter to bring the answers and solutions which he sought. Jacob stayed persistently with God until he grew to the place where he stopped saying to God, "Give me, give me," and said instead, "Tell me ... thy name." (Genesis 32:29) Nevertheless, in Salieri’s experience God was seen as a bargainer. So he made a bargain. That was the basis of his relationship to his God.

As indicated previously, things went well for Salieri for a while after the bargain. In fact life was very good to him. The winds of fortune were at his back pushing him toward his goal, and he had a good feeling about himself and his partner, God. Then Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart entered the picture, and fear gripped the heart of Salieri. He saw in this contemporary a musical genius that he himself did not possess. He was aware that there was a greater musical composer on the face of the earth than Antonio Salieri. Worry, fear and frustration quickly beset him, and he became obsessed with his struggle against this gifted musician, Mozart.

He felt betrayed by his God because he had seen with his own eyes a giggling child who was far more musically gifted than he himself. Mozart could write better music casually than Salieri could write under the discipline of great struggle. Like the fisherman who plays with the hungry fish only to finally hook it because it is a victim of its own appetite, Salieri felt lured on and "hooked" by God. In his own mind, he saw himself as a pawn that had been used and sacrificed by a laughing God who played carelessly with people in the game of life. He felt his emptiness as Adam and Eve had felt their nakedness. In great anger he lashed out at God saying:

From this time we are enemies, You and I: I’ll not accept it from You - do you hear? ... You are the Enemy! I name Thee now - Nemico Eterno! And this I swear: To my last breath I shall block You on earth, as far as I am able!2

The private partnership between Salieri and God came apart. It had begun in tragedy, and it ended in tragedy. Misunderstanding ruled on either end. The relationship was built on the sands of a bargain, and the sands eroded when the storms of life came to beat upon Salieri. The sad point is that Salieri’s name is legion. There are millions who have stood in his shoes and walked in his tracks. Their only relationship to God has been built on the unreliable sands of a bargain, and the storms of life have washed away their foundations and left them victims of despair and hostility.

A doctor was present while a young man was dying of cancer. The patient was comatose and in the final moments of his life. While the doctor waited in the room for death to come, the family was gathered around the bed of the patient. The dying man’s wife was on one side of the bed and his parents were on the other side. During this death watch, the dying man’s pastor entered the room. He went immediately to the bedside and spoke to the wife. Knowing that death could come at any minute, he offered to pray with the family. While he prayed, the doctor could not help overhearing a disturbance in the room. It was an interruption to the pastor’s prayer. The doctor was curious, and he looked up to see the source of the muttering that seemed to be running contrary to the prayer. He noticed that the muttering was coming from the dying man’s father who was on the opposite side of the bed from the pastor and who was cursing. When the doctor looked directly at the father, he could understand the words. The man was addressing God and cursing God. In one obscene line after another, in the style of Salieri, he was telling God what he thought of God.

The doctor was never certain, but he always thought that this hurt and disappointed father was so angry at God because he felt God had let him down. He had made a bargain with God for his son’s life, and now death was obvious. In despair the father cursed his God. More often than not, this is what happens to people who reduce God to a bargainer and attempt to use God for their own selfish ends.

In an effort to help us evade this pitfall, Jesus gives us this parable of the widow and the judge and, through it, reminds us: God is not easy but God is good. That’s it: God is good but not easy. In this parable, the judge who did not regard either God or man was able to give goodness to the widow. If this judge was able to give her the gift of goodness, think how much more God is able to bless her with goodness. Jesus was using this story to point to God’s goodness. He was telling in story form what he told us more directly in another place: "If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father who is in heaven give good things to those who ask him?" (Matthew 7:11)

Salieri never saw this part of God. He believed that God was easy, and he stopped there. Consequently, he was never able to experience the goodness of his God. That’s very sad because through God’s goodness Salieri may have learned to rejoice in the gifts of Mozart and to celebrate them. He may have learned to see his own mediocre musical gifts as beauty rather than failure. He may have lived as a man at peace with himself rather than as one eaten alive by envy, greed and hatred. What a great difference the goodness of God could have meant in his life. He could have been a different man if he had learned from this parable, God is good but not easy.

The only people who experience the goodness of God are those who try to relate to God rather than to use God. Of course, it is a vicious cycle. The times when we are most likely to turn to God are the times when we want something, and yet if we turn to God just to make a deal, we are tempted to stop there. When this happens we do not experience God’s goodness. The goodness of God is experienced in the long-term friendship rather than in the short-term deal. In our daily, persistent relationship to God in prayer, worship and service, we gradually learn that the goodness of our Lord is our strength in good times and in bad times. God is our friend at all times. When the winds of fortune are at our backs and when they are in our faces, when the circumstances of life work for us and when they work against us, when there is joy and when there is sadness, God shares God’s goodness of love with us.

In this parable, Jesus reminds us that God’s goodness is better than a bargain, and he encourages us to persist In our relationship to God until we experience God’s goodness. Yes, Jesus invites us to come to God to form a friendship rather than to make a deal. In the long run, a friend is better than a deal. Ask Salieri.

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