Luke 18:1-8
“Always Pray and Do Not Lose
Heart”
Today Luke tells us a parable
from Jesus and begins with the desired effect:
that we should always pray and not lose heart. It’s easy to lose heart in this sin-filled,
broken-down, world of sorrows. Many
Christians are tempted to abandon the faith when the going gets tough, or at
least to shirk our prayers when it seems like they are falling on divinely deaf
ears.
Jesus’ words today, and the
parable of the Persistent Widow show us something different. We should not lose heart. And Luke says this not as a
“shame-on-you-if-you-lose-heart”. But
rather, a powerful word of encouragement.
A reminder of the true nature of the God to whom we pray, and a promise
regarding the effectiveness of our prayers.
Faith doesn’t see as the eyeball sees.
Faith sees what is unseen. Faith
hearkens to the words of Christ, even when everything appears otherwise.
So what’s going on in this
parable?
We are told about the judge
that he “neither feared God nor respected man”.
So he was kind of a creep. Some
even name this parable, the Parable of the Unrighteous Judge. It makes it all the worse that he’s in a
position of public trust – he has no particular moral compass – either with
respect to God or man. And so he is
untrustworthy and unreliable. And yet he
seems the only option this poor widow has.
This widow has some kind of
issue – we don’t know what it is, exactly, but it doesn’t matter. She wants a ruling from this judge, against
her adversary. She wants justice.
Justice! I think we can
relate to that yearning, for we too live in a world of injustice. Most of us are probably not involved in a
formal court case, looking for civil or criminal justice. That’s not what this is really about. That’s the earthly story, not the heavenly
meaning here.
And we don’t mean “social
justice” either, the kind of politically correct posturing and victimhood
claims that some contend for in certain quarters of our world.
Rather, we mean the kind of
injustice the Psalmist often cried out in response to. Why do the wicked prosper, and the righteous
perish? Why does there seem to be so
much WRONG in this world? Why do the
good people, the righteous see evil, and the unrighteous never seem to pay for
their evil deeds?
For example: Why does the
person who’s never smoked a day in their lives get terminal lung cancer, and
the life-long smoker lives into their 90s?
Why does the person who faithfully arrives on time every day, does their
job, never complains, and goes above and beyond – why does that one get passed
over for the promotion and the slacker who just happens to be the bosses’ favorite
gets the job?
Why does the law of the land seem
to favor the lazy, the cowardly, the ungodly, the rich and powerful over
against the poor, the godly, the hard workers, and especially the most
vulnerable?
And to make matters worse,
not only does injustice seem to so often prevail, but the prayers of the
faithful seem, to outward appearances, to have little effect. How many prayers have gone unanswered, at
least from the perspective of the pray-er?
How often have our cries and pleas gotten us nowhere, or at least so it
has seemed? How long, O Lord? Don’t you hear me? Aren’t you listening?
Take heart, Christian. All is not as it seems. We have a judge to hear our case, who is far
better than the unrighteous scoundrel of the parable. And he encourages us to be faithful, to be
persistent, to veritably pester him with our prayers. And he promises to hear and answer.
So often Jesus’ teaching
flies in the face of our worldly experience, and goes even contrary to what we
would expect. The first shall be last
and the last shall be first. Whoever is
least in the kingdom is the greatest.
And so on.
But here the argument is what
we might call, “From the lesser to the Greater”. That is, if something is true in an earthly
sense, with a worldly example, here is a case where it is even more so with the
heavenly reality.
We think of Jesus’ comparison
of an earthly father, who though wicked, knows how to give good gifts to his
children – and won’t give a scorpion when asked for an egg, or a serpent
instead of a fish. Jesus then concludes,
“how much more will your Heavenly Father give us good things?”
If persistence pays off in
earthly matters, with the things below, how much more will the prayers of the
faithful avail answer from the giver of all good things? If bothering an earthly judge who cares
nothing for what is right, and cares not a whit for you – can possibly get you
an answer – then how much more your faithful appeals to the loving and kind,
merciful and mighty one? Answer – so
much more!
But it also works from the
greater-to-the-lesser. Consider the words of Paul in Romans 8, in which he asks
a rhetorical question, “He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us
all, how will he not also with him graciously give us all things?” In other words, if God went to all the
trouble of sending his own beloved Son to die for us, how will he not do
everything else good for us? Since he
has given us his most dear, most precious, one-and-only, how can he refuse that
which is a far lesser request?
But still, we don’t see
it. And so he encourages us to be
persistent, and not lose heart. God
answers prayers in his time, and in his way.
He answers them with our best interests in mind. He answers according to his own counsel, and
not our own limited definition of what is best.
And if the unjust judge will
give relief just to get the pesky widow out of his hair – how much more will
the just and merciful judge of all, our good and gracious Father – how much
more will he answer us, and give us good things, and the justice we so desire.
In one sense he already
has. For he has sent us his Son, Jesus
Christ. And Jesus suffers the ultimate
injustice, the innocent of innocents – betrayed into the hands of sinful
man. Jesus the blameless victim takes
all blame, pays the ultimate price, and so satisfies God’s wrath and justice in
himself. Jesus, by his cross, so that
God may be just and the one who justifies.
In the cross, Jesus answers
all wrongs, and makes all things right and good and new. Any sorrow or trouble or injustice we face is
now only temporary. The ultimate victory
is ours. Even death is destroyed by
Christ’s death. And so all of our
prayers are answered in Jesus.
But there is still a payoff
yet to come. Here we wait, in the time
between. Here in these last days, Christ
reigns and rules all things from his throne at God’s right hand – and yet he
hasn’t returned just yet to be the final judge of all. Then, on that day, we will see every scale
evened, every claim settled, accounts reconciled, and the final reward will be
ours. Then and there, the one true Righteous
Judge will make all things new and right once again. There and then all prayers are answered and
finally fulfilled.
Jesus has this in mind with
his final comment, “when the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on the
earth?” A probing question which
challenges us to remain faithful to the end – so that we can answer,
“yes!” You will find faith – for we
trust in you, and we will, to the very end.
And so, we take heart. And so, we persist in our faith, and in
faith’s voice of prayer. We dare even to
pester God with our petitions and requests.
We pray for all good things, just as he has taught us, and place our
trust in God to grant us all good things through Jesus Christ. We don’t give up when the prayers seem
futile. Rather, we press on, enduring to
the end. For we know the One to whom we
pray, and he is faithful, and he will do it.
We know him through his Son our Savior, and he will not let us down. Take heart, Christian. Persist in your prayer!
No comments:
Post a Comment