Luke 18:1-8 · The Parable of the Persistent Widow
What Will He Find… When He Comes? - Shorter Version
Luke 18:1-8
Sermon
by Theodore F. Schneider
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In Paul’s great letter to the Corinthians he addresses many issues: conflicts, divisions and hardships abound on every side. The crowning achievement of that letter is the 13th chapter. The chapter on love. At the end of that chapter Paul says that of all the qualities of our faith there are three most important: Faith, hope and love. I would like to spend our time this morning on hope.

In difficult times we must have hope. But hardship is relentless and can come in many ways. I am reminded of Lucy's encouragement to Charlie Brown in one of the Peanuts cartoons. "Look at it this way, Charlie Brown," she consoles. "These are your bitter days. These are the days of your hardship and struggle ..." The next frame goes on: "... but if you just hold your head up high and keep on fighting, you'll triumph!" "Gee, do you really think so, Lucy?" Charlie asks. As she walks away Lucy says: "Frankly, no!"(1)

Hope is like that. We speak of it more often than we believe in it. Hope is not a strong word for us. It has more to do with "wishing" than "expecting." It has the sound of resignation, an inability to bring about, influence, or even believe that a desired event or goal might ever come to be. "Well, I hope so" we say sarcastically. Hope, as we understand it, is not a word of excitement and expectation. It speaks more often of resignation and helplessness.

How then can we understand the New Testament's use of the word? Repeatedly Paul writes about hope. To the Thessalonians he writes of the armor of God, including the "hope of salvation" as a helmet. To the Colossians he writes of the "hope laid up in heaven," and of the "hope of glory." Peter writes in his first letter "we have been born anew to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, and to an inheritance which is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading, held in heaven for you."

The secular non-religious understanding of the word, sends shivers up and down my spine. I don’t like the word without it’s Christian meaning.

I

When the world says “I hope so..” doubt resides in the sentiment. Our hope is different. Our hope is not a sentiment. First, our hope is a hope that does not disappoint. How differently the Bible uses our word. Rather than resignation, the word bristles with excitement and expectation. It is for the writers of both the Old and New Testaments a strong word filled with encouragement. Consider Paul's words to the Christians at Rome:

We rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, and hope does not disappoint us, because God's love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit which has been given us. (Romans 5:2-5).

"Hope does not disappoint us!" Perhaps so, but our experience of that word often has been otherwise. How can this be so?

The test is: "Upon what or whom is our hope based?" If our hope rests in "good luck" or an unexpected turn of the game late in the fourth quarter, then hope is likely to disappoint us. On the other hand, if our hope is based upon the integrity of God and his promises, built upon the gifts of the Holy Spirit, then the meaning and experience of hope is a different matter altogether.

It's more than a word game. A lively and excited hope is a necessary ingredient in the Christian life. Similarly, an understanding of the role hope plays is pivotal if we are to comprehend what Jesus would have us learn from his parable about the widow and the uncaring judge.

Our being able to hang in there in the difficult times is determined by the nature of our hope. For Christians, it has to do with our holding to the promises of God, the integrity of God. We know in whom we have put our trust. Even if hope's fulfillment is delayed, we have no doubt that God is faithful.

There’s the story at an airport terminal. A sea of people, hurrying and pushing. A snowstorm snarled schedules in the air and on the ground. In the midst of the terminal, by herself, there sat a little girl who could not have been more than a first grader in school, six years old, maybe seven. She sat quietly. One might have expected tears, but her big eyes never closed. Wide-eyed she watched. Now and again she smiled. A security guard spoke to her softly, asking if he might be of help. "No," she answered, "I'm waiting for my daddy." She waited for more than an hour. Finally there was a huge smile as she recognized a snow-covered man coming toward her. "See," she said, "I told you he would come." There never had been a doubt. Never did her hope falter. She knew him in whom her hope was fixed. She believed in his love. She believed in his integrity. She knew no storm would keep her father from meeting her. And she was not disappointed.

Our "hope that does not disappoint us" must rest always in God's love and his faithfulness.

II

Second, our hope is consistently challenged because hope is almost always deferred. Keeping that hope focused and vibrant was a great challenge to the first-century Christians. They had expected an early return of the risen and victorious Lord. There was an urgency about their preaching and their missionary work. Christ was coming soon, they believed. By the time Luke set his hand to writing the gospel that carries his name, 40 or perhaps 50 years had passed since the crucifixion. It was the late first century when the evangelist was writing, sometime between 70 and 90 C.E.(2) Many (and supposedly conflicting!) accounts already had been written. There was need to gather information from eyewitnesses and others and to write an accurate account. Luke considered himself to belong to the "third generation" of Christians. Still Christ had not returned. No longer was anyone sure just when that time would come. Some began to doubt that it would come at all.

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. It is remarkable that Paul and Peter and James and John all expected Christ to return before they passed. They wrote as if it would happen that day. What would they say if they stood here with us today some 2000 years later with Jesus still delayed in his coming. I know what Luke would say. He would tell us again about this parable that Jesus told.

III

First we have a hope that does not disappoint but secondly it is a hope that often is deferred. And so, third, let me offer you this parable of reassurance. The early Christians of the late first century, in the context of all this turmoil, found great usefulness in retelling today's parable about the widow and the uncaring judge. The introduction and conclusion of the parable addresses the church's need to be steady and steadfast in hope, depending confidently upon the integrity of God.

What is the meaning of this parable? It is simply this. While persistent prayer does not bend God’s will toward ours it is a sign of our faith and trust that God will one day vindicate his church. And God promises that he will not be delayed in doing so. Look at the first verse with me. Luke says, "He told them a parable to the effect that they ought always to pray and not lose heart."

Given the turmoil of their day, first-century Christians had nothing other than the Word of God and the promises of the gospel. For them, everything depended upon the integrity of God. Everything!

The parable is first about our prayer: "They ought always to pray and not lose heart." The parable is second about our faithfulness: "When the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on earth?" But third the central truth here is the faithfulness of God which gives a solid hope to the people of God. There must be no doubt that God will come. The issue is always "When?" and never "If."

One more thing. Look at the widow. The widow is pivotal for us in understanding Jesus. Widows in New Testament times were symbols of all who were reduced to poverty through no fault of their own. Though this widow had a legitimate claim, the judge appears disinterested. Perhaps he was lazy, or perhaps he operated as a local village lawyer he operated off "honorariums." I nice word for bribes. Everything was against the widow. The judge appears to be on the side of her adversary, and he cares neither about God nor about his neighbors. She has no money to pay legal fees. Her friends appear silent. She has not even a just judge to whom to look. She has no hope whatsoever. Yet, she continues!

There's the key. The widow has no hope. The judge was not one who cared one whit about either God or duty. She had no reasonable expectation that anything good would ever come from her claim. Still, she continued!

In days of turmoil, do Christians persist? A man in his late 20s or early 30s was at a meeting in a congregation in which unrest had prevailed for a long while. "I'm just tired," he mumbled over and over, shaking his head. A saint of many more years watched for a while and then said, "Young man, if you're tired already, you are not going to make it."

That's the question Jesus addresses in this parable. Are we going to make it? Do we pray constantly, keeping our eyes fixed on him whose will is our guide and whose faithfulness is the root of our hope? Do we live in the faith, expecting great things to happen in our lives, in our congregation, and even in our world? It was a Scottish preacher who once observed that to say something is hopeless is to slam the door in God's face!

Again, it's Lucy who has planned a picnic for the next day. She says to Charlie Brown, "I just hope to goodness that it doesn't rain ..." Walking away, Charlie answers, "Hoping to goodness is not theologically sound."(4) Charlie's right. "Hoping to goodness" is not sound. Fixing our hope upon God is.

When he comes, what will he find? My hope is he find us faithful?

Amen.


1. Robert L. Short, The Parables of Peanuts, (New York, Harper and Row, Publishers, 1968), pp. 265-266.

2. Joseph A. Fitzmyer, S.J., The GospelAccording to Luke 1-IX, The Anchor Bible, Vol. 28, (Garden City, Doubleday and Company, Inc., 1985), p. 55.

3. Robert L. Short, op. cit., p. 273.

by Theodore F. Schneider