Luke 18:1-8 · The Parable of the Persistent Widow
Hope For Those Whom Life Has Cheated
Luke 18:1-8
Sermon
by King Duncan
Loading...

According to Victor Borge, the composer Bizet was the original hard-luck man. He stayed up nights to finish an opera by the deadline, only to find out afterwards that the production had been postponed for a year. He wrote a symphony and misplaced the manuscript before anybody could play it. He entered a composing contest with only one other entrant, and ended up with second prize. Once he went to visit his girl friend and tapped on her window at the precise moment her mother was emptying a chamberpot from the room directly above his head. (1) Have you ever noticed that some people always seem to be in the wrong place at the wrong time?

Many people speculate that they would be better off with a new spouse or a different set of circumstances. John Micofsky was confident his life would be greatly improved once he ridded himself of his wife. His dream came true on January 20, 1993, when his divorce from Maryann Kulpa was finalized. On January 21st, she claimed the $10.2 million jackpot in the New Jersey Pick-6 Lottery. When the press asked about Micofsky's condition, attorney Thomas Kline spoke for his client by saying, "Very upset, I think that's the word I would use."

(2) Do you get the feeling sometimes that life is not fair? C. S. Lewis felt that the feeling of unfairness within each of us is a signpost pointing to God.

For example, when we see a movie, we want to see justice done. That is what a happy ending is usually about. We want to see wrong righted. We want to see the good guy win. And we feel cheated if virtue does not triumph. Feelings like that are so universal that Lewis felt they are evidence that we are created in the image of God.

The Hebrew Bible is obsessed with the idea of the justice of God. Remember Abraham's argument with God concerning Sodom. The Lord had revealed to Abraham that Sodom would be destroyed because of its great wickedness. Abraham asked rather boldly, "What if there were fifty righteous people in the city, would you still destroy the city?" Then Abraham argues God down to ten righteous people. But at the heart of the argument is a question that resounds throughout the entire Old Testament, "Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?" And the answer is affirmed by both the Law and the Prophets: Above all else, God is a righteous and just God.

When we think of Jesus we think of God's mercy and grace. But Jesus affirmed the principle of God's righteousness. Jesus told about a woman who had a problem. She was a widow and someone was treating her in an unjust manner. She went to a judge who feared neither "man nor God," to try to get some relief, but the judge ignored her plea. Some people would have stopped right there, but not this woman. She "rejected the judge's rejection." She hounded him at every opportunity to give her justice. Finally the obstinate judge gave in to the more obstinate woman and justice prevailed.

Then Jesus added a moral to his little parable, "And will not God bring about justice for his chosen ones, who cry out to him day and night?" God is a just God.

Let's begin here: WE LIVE IN A WORLD THAT IS SOMETIMES VERY UNJUST. We learned early in our discipleship that whatever a person sows, he or she also reaps. But the truth of the matter is that we sometimes reap things we did not sow.

U.S. tennis champion Arthur Ashe underwent heart-bypass surgery in 1983. At that time, hospitals were not checking blood samples for H.I.V. ” the virus that causes AIDS. Through a blood transfusion, Ashe contracted that much dreaded disease. He did not suspect that he was infected until 1988, when he had to have brain surgery after his right arm became paralyzed. The surgery revealed a parasitic infection that quickly led to a diagnosis of AIDS. Ashe had not planned to reveal his illness until the time came when he would be noticeably changed by the disease physically. But USA TODAY demanded he confirm or deny the rumor that he had AIDS in 1992. The tennis star, ranked seventh in the world before he was forced to retire, bravely held a press conference and announced that he was indeed an AIDS victim.

Like anyone else, Arthur Ashe was tempted to aim his rage at God, but he conquered that temptation. Speaking at the Niagara County Community College in the fall of 1992, he testified to the place Jesus Christ held in his life.

"I've had a religious faith, growing up in the South and black and having the church as a focal point of my life," Ashe said. "And I was reminded of something Jesus said on the cross: My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?' Remember, Jesus was poor, humble, and of a despised minority. I wasn't poor in that my father was a policeman, but we certainly weren't rich. And Jesus asked the question, in effect, of why must the innocent suffer. And I'm not so innocent ” I mean, I'm hardly a perfect human being ” but you ask about yourself, Why me?' And I think, Why NOT me?'

"Why should I be spared what some others have been inflicted with," he continued. "And I have to think of all the good of my life, of having a great wife and daughter, and family and friends, and winning Wimbledon and the U.S. Open and playing for and coaching the Davis Cup team, and getting a free scholarship to U.C.L.A. ” all kinds of good things. You could also ask about this, Why me?' Sometimes there are no explanations for things, especially for the bad." (3)

What an extraordinary testimony. There are no explanations for many of the bad things that happen ” at least no explanation understandable by our limited brains. But we need to admit that sometimes innocent people suffer. Life is sometimes very unfair.

We also need to admit something else. SOMETIMES SUFFERING CAN BE REDEMPTIVE. Not all the time, perhaps. There are events in life that seem to have no redemptive characteristics ” at least not from our perspective. But there is some truth to the expression, "what does not kill me makes me stronger."

That has been one of the things Dave Dravecky has learned in his battle with cancer. You'll remember that Dravecky was a major league baseball pitcher with the San Francisco Giants. Then he was diagnosed with cancer in his pitching arm. He underwent treatments and after a heroic comeback attempt lost his arm to the disease. "From spending so much time in hospitals," Dave said, "I've learned that when we walk through someone's door who is suffering, we have to respect the sanctity of that room." During his frequent stays in the hospitals Dave has spoken with many other patients. They share their stories and encourage each other. "Something sacred happens when a person is suffering," Dave claims. It is when persons suffer that they turn to God for assurance, for answers, for comfort.

Spending time in hospitals gives persons a lot of time to think about what is really important and reflect on their lives. "God doesn't promise us a life full of mountaintop experiences," Dave Dravecky says. We will also experience valleys in our lives as well. "Dark valleys," Dave claims, "disorienting valleys ” valleys of depression and despair." Dave Dravecky has learned that God does not give us a map to detour the valleys of life either. Rather God will be with us, will walk beside us, during those valleys.

"When we emerge from those experiences," Dave declares, "we look back and realize that that is where the growth is. It isn't on the mountaintops above the timberline; it's in the valleys." (4) What a wise analysis of the place of suffering in our lives.

George Matheson, the great poet, developed that same kind of wisdom. When Matheson's eyesight vanished, so did his fiancee. Twenty years later he wrote the immortal hymn, "Oh, Love, that Will Not Let Me Go." But he also penned these very meaningful words that are sometimes overlooked:

"My God," he wrote, "I have never thanked Thee for my thorns. I have thanked Thee a thousand times for my roses, but not once for my thorns. I have been looking forward to a world where I shall get compensation for my cross: but I have never thought of my cross as itself a present glory. Teach me the glory of my cross: teach me the value of my thorn. Shew me that I have climbed to Thee by the path of pain. Shew me that my tears have made my rainbow." (5)

That's beautiful, isn't it? "Shew me that I have climbed to Thee by the path of pain. Shew me that my tears have made my rainbow." Not everyone can thank God for the thorns. Some people are in too much pain. But sometimes life's most dreaded situations can lead us to a deeper and more profound relationship with God. Doubtless, there are some of you who have experienced that in your own life. And that brings us to our final truth: JUSTICE WILL BE DONE.

Mark it down. Write it in indelible ink. Justice will be done. As sure as there is a God, the innocent shall not suffer forever.

Go with me to Prague, Czechoslovakia to those last days of the Soviet empire. In the Prague demonstration that sparked the Czech revolution on November 18, 1989, students began chanting to the communist party leadership, "You have lost already! You have lost already!" ” though the ultimate victory was still in the future. "We know that we can win," said Karel Srp, leader of the demonstrations, "this is unstoppable." (6)

I believe he was right. There is something in this world that is unstoppable ” it is the justice of God. Tell it to any who would oppress God's people. God's justice will prevail. Hold on to it like a piece of driftwood when you are about to sink from the raging flood of life's heartaches. God's justice will prevail. Teach your children when it appears that evil is in control. God's justice will prevail. Live your life and conduct your business with this guiding principle. God's justice will prevail. And when you think of letting go ” and giving in ” and going over to the other side ” discipline your thoughts with this sure warning: God's justice will prevail. It will prevail.

There was a bit of poetic justice last year in Berlin, Germany. The San Francisco Giants and the San Diego Chargers played an exhibition football game in Olympic Stadium there. But there was an interesting sidebar to this athletic event. Marty Glickman's seat for the game was in the same box that was built for Adolph Hitler to view the 1936 Olympics. Glickman, a broadcaster and one-time world-class sprinter, was not allowed to run on the American 400-meter relay team in 1936, primarily because of Hitler's hatred of Jews. But now Hitler is dead ” the victim of his own hand and of the evil, insane policies that he pursued. Now Hitler's former viewing stand was Marty Glickman's viewing stand. "It was weird sitting there," Glickman said. "It made me remember marching in the stadium and looking up to the box and seeing him." (7)

Hitler has gone the way that all tyrants will eventually go. Why? Because God's justice will prevail. One day all of God's people will live in freedom and justice and dignity under the Lordship of Jesus Christ. That is the promise of the Scriptures ” both Old Testament and New. "Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?" asked Abraham. "Will not God bring about justice for his chosen ones, who cry out to him day and night?" Jesus asked. These are both rhetorical questions. Both men already knew the answer. It may not happen as quickly as we might prefer but it will happen. God's justice will prevail.


1. Victor Borge and Robert Sherman, MY FAVORITE INTERMISSIONS, (Garden City, New York), p. 89.

2. THE HOUSTON CHRONICLE, 2/18/93, p. 8A. IN OTHER WORDS. . . , Mar/Apr 1993, p. 2.

3. Dr. William P. Barker, TARBELL'S TEACHER'S GUIDE, (Elgin, Illinois: David C. Cook Church Ministries, 1994).

4. Dave and Jan Dravecky, WHEN YOU CAN'T COME BACK, (Grand Rapids: Zondervan Publishing House, 1992), pp. 70-71.

5. Charles R. Swindoll, COME BEFORE WINTER AND SHARE MY HOPE, (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1985).

6. THE INTERNATIONAL LESSON ANNUAL 1994-95, (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1994), p. 211.

7. LEXINGTON HERALD-LEADER, Lexington, Kentucky, Monday, August 15, 1994, p. C2.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan