Luke 18:1-8 · The Parable of the Persistent Widow
Tough Faith In Tough Times
Luke 18:1-8
Sermon
by Larry R. Kalajainen
Loading...

Two qualities which we Americans value highly and in which we take pride are speed and efficiency. Think of how many products or services which all of us use that are built principally around one or both of these qualities. Hundreds of thousands of microwave ovens have been sold, not because they make food taste better, but because it's possible to cook much faster in them. Since so many people lead such busy lives, anything that shortens time in the kitchen has an instant appeal.

A colleague told of meeting a woman from West Germany at a seminar on prayer in Princeton. She was marvelling over one of our speedy and efficient inventions, the tea bag. She said that the Germans don't make teabags, and she found it a very convenient way to have a cup of tea. Of course, she then went on to mention that teabags didn't produce nearly as tasty a cup of tea as loose tea does.

Our banking procedures are also marvels of efficiency. A friend who served as a missionary in Malaysia always used to complain that it took him anywhere from 20-45 minutes to cash his paycheck because of the inefficient banking procedures. Instead of having each teller be a cashier as we do, the tellers and the cashiers were different people. The teller looked over your check, made sure that your deposit slip was filled out correctly, got the initials of one of the bank officers on the cashier's approval slip, and then placed it on the bottom of the pile of similar checks waiting to be cashed by the cashier who sat enclosed in a little cubicle. After standing in line at the teller's counter, one then went over and stood in line at the cashier's counter, and waited some more. Cashing a paycheck was a great lesson in patience each month, a quality that we Americans are notably short on.

Because of our cultural preference for speed and efficiency, our gospel lesson this morning has something to say to us that each of us needs very much to hear. The themes of patient waiting, of persistence, of faithfulness in the face of the seeming indifference of God to our troubles are addressed by this rather strange story in Luke's gospel.

The story of the "unjust judge" as it's often called, raises an age-old human question: why, if God is righteous, is he so slow in seeing that justice is done? Why does it seem like justice is constantly perverted? Why doesn't God act quickly and efficiently to rectify injustice and vindicate those who are righteous and punish those who are wicked? It's probably the most common human complaint and question there is, isn't it? Is there any one of us who hasn't asked it scores of times?

When we read in Newsweek about the terrible situation in Bosnia, we ask, "Why doesn't God intervene in some way?" When we hear of the massacres of innocent people including children in Rwanda and Burundi, we shiver at the horror of it all and wonder why the people of those lands cannot see that ancient rivalries are preventing them from achieving prosperity in the modern world.

Closer to home, we see the blight in our inner cities; we deplore the violence that is so frequently related to the drug traffic in areas of poverty. Since our orientation is toward problem-solving, we look for immediate solutions. Get tough on drug dealers. Mandatory prison sentences, more police, cut off aid to Colombia. Yet our solutions don't seem to solve the problem. They have the virtue of speed and efficiency, but the problems themselves prove more recalcitrant and intractable than we imagined. Because we lack patience and the persistence to search for solutions that may not be speedy and efficient, but which, in the long term, would be more effective, we become frustrated and lose interest. Long-term issues don't have much media appeal.

The same holds true for our personal lives as for our social and international problems. Our washing machine breaks down, and we immediately call the repairman. Problem solved. But let us break a hip or develop a heart condition, and we lose patience quickly. We get depressed or we become complainers. We want to be back at full steam, and we don't like having to wait.

Jesus' parable of the persistent widow and the unjust judge offers a corrective to our impatience and our fascination with short-term problem-solving. The experience of the widow is one which is instantly familiar to us. We've all known the frustrations of delay in having our needs and wants gratified. We've all known what it's like to be treated unjustly; we've all known what it's like to have our plea for fairness, for justice, go unheard or unheeded. Those who have ever tried to reason with an IRS auditor know exactly how this poor widow felt. The cards were stacked against her. The judge may even have been in league with her opponent who was exploiting her in some way. The widow cries to the judge for justice, and the only reason she eventually gets it is because the judge gets weary of listening to her lament. She wears him down with her persistence until he finally does the right thing just to get rid of her.

Interpreters of this parable have sometimes made the mistake of turning this parable into an allegory, assigning the role of the judge to God. Not only does that cause us to miss the main point, it also casts God in a very unflattering light. The parable does urge us to be like the widow, praying persistently without giving up. But the only point of contact between God and the judge is one of contrast. God is not like the unjust judge, and God's response to our persistent requests will not be like the response of the unjust judge to the widow's pleas. In contrast to the judge who delays because of his venality or his indifference, God "will quickly grant justice to his chosen ones who cry out to him." Jesus says. He won't delay long in helping them like the unjust judge delayed helping the woman. God's help will come speedily. The emphasis is not on the negative picture of justice which the parable itself portrays, but rather on the contrast between the reluctance of the unjust judge and the willingness of God to act on behalf of those who cry out to him. If a corrupt and unjust judge will render justice because the plaintiff is so persistent, how much more is God, who loves us and is concerned about us, willing to answer us when we call to him?

In view of the parable's insistence that God will bring justice and bring it speedily, what then are we to make of our sense that God seems to be taking his own sweet time about fulfilling his promises to make things right? The parable suggests a two-fold answer: In the first place, our notion of when and how a problem ought to be solved does not necessarily correspond to God's solutions. That's why the widow can represent the human side of the experience of waiting for justice, but the judge does not represent God's response. God, however, does not operate by human time-clocks. God sees the end from the beginning, and he answers the cry of his people speedily, but speedily in relation to God's own knowledge of the situation and according to his own timetable. It is our impatience and our desire to have every problem solved immediately that leads us to experience the situation as justice delayed.

I heard a story which illustrates how we often confuse God's timing with ours. A country newspaper had been running a series of articles on the value of church attendance. One day, a letter to the editor was received in the newspaper office. It read, "Print this if you dare. I have been trying an experiment. I have a field of corn which I plowed on Sunday. I planted it on Sunday. I did all the cultivating on Sunday. I gathered the harvest on Sunday and hauled it to my barn on Sunday. I find that my harvest this October is just as great as any of my neighbors' who went to church on Sunday. So where was God all this time?" The editor printed the letter, but added his reply at the bottom. "Your mistake was in thinking that God always settles his accounts in October." That's often our mistake as well, isn't it -- thinking that God should act when and how we want him to act, according to our timetable rather than his. The fact that our vision is limited, finite, unable to see the end from the beginning, somehow escapes our mind. So we complain; we get frustrated; we accuse God of being indifferent to us; we do not live by faith.

In fact, it may be our actions or behavior that cause what we experience as delay or unfair treatment. God always takes human freedom seriously. God does not will the ancient feuds in Rwanda and Burundi, nor does he will the violence that they spawn. But he does will human beings to be free to make decisions, even if those decisions are motivated by evil or wrong desires. So while God is at work to bring about his ends, he is at work through human individuals and human agencies, despite the injustice that often characterizes human relationships, because God respects our freedom.

In the second place, it is not our part, while waiting in patience to complain or to sulk or to be passive, but to be faithful and persistent in prayer. This is why Jesus says that we ought always to pray and not to lose heart. It is not our part to set the terms of how justice will be meted out; our part is to be faithful in prayer and faithful in life, and our faithfulness will enable us to wait in patience for God to act, even though in our limited time frame, we may not see God's will accomplished like we would like to see it.

Such persistence in prayer is what faithfulness to God is all about. It means refusing to give in to appearances and continuing to trust God to act in his way and in his time. It may appear that God does not hear. It may appear that we are alone and without supernatural help. It may appear that injustice and evil are prevailing. But faith dares to go on praying, to grasp the reality that we cannot see and live by it. This is really what makes people of faith different from others. We are willing to live by what we cannot see, but which we believe to be real, rather than by what we can see, and which the world, or our culture, tells us is real. Only someone who believes in a reality that is unseen will persist in praying. Everybody prays, but many people only pray when they're in a jam and are desperate because they can't come up with any fast and efficient human solution.

If we do not experience the power of God in our lives, it is probably due more to our failure to pray persistently than it is to God's reluctance to answer. When we don't get the answer we expect when we expect it, the temptation is to stop praying and start asking why. That is not faith; it is not faithful living. And the end of our gospel lesson drives this point home. For after affirming God's willingness to hear our prayers and vindicate his people, Jesus poses this very poignant question, "Nevertheless, when the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on earth?" The real question is not about God's faithfulness, but about ours. The message of Luke is that God is faithful; therefore, the way to experience God's faithfulness is for us to have faith in him, to live by faith in God, to persist in trusting God, even when appearances do not seem to support either his existence or his concern for us. The righteous person lives by faith.

"When the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on the earth?" That is the question this parable asks of each of us. Where is the point in your life at which you need to let go of your fears, your frustrations, your impatience, your anger, and sink down into patient trust in God's timing and in his way of working? There's a point like that in each of our lives, a point where we need to let go of our desire for speed and efficiency and just sit back and let God work in his way and in his time, all the while living faithfully and praying persistently.

CSS Publishing Company, Inc, Extrodinary Faith For Ordinary Time, by Larry R. Kalajainen