16 October 2022
St.
Athanasius Lutheran Church
Pentecost 19
Vienna, VA
“Praying to a Merciful God”
Text:
Luke 18:1-8;
Genesis 32:22-30
Grace, mercy, and peace
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
The parable Jesus tells today is a pretty simple
one to understand. They’re not all like that. Some are quite challenging. But not this one. At least, on the
surface. There’s a corrupt judge. He doesn’t care what God thinks about
him and the job he’s doing. He doesn’t care what men think about him and the
job he’s doing. He cares only about himself. What’s in it for him. He is 100% in it for himself. He is selfish to the
core.
But one day a widow shows up. She can’t do
anything for him, so he ignores her, sends her away. But she won’t go away. He
closes the door but she yells through the door. He kicks her out but she yells
in the window. She’s there when he’s trying to eat breakfast. She’s there when
he dining with his friends. She’s there when he’s trying to sleep. She won’t
let him go until he blesses her. This widow’s taking the definition of pest to
a whole new level! Just to get him to do his job.
So finally he relents. Just so he can eat and
sleep in peace! Just to shut her up and give his ears a rest. The widow wins.
It’s a story to cheer, right? We like to root for
the underdog. For the team that can’t possibly win to win.
For the little guy to knock off the big corporation. For the tortoise to beat the hare. We like that.
But then Jesus turns the parable around . . . in
getting to its meaning and why He told it. And here’s how it would go if He
retold the whole thing in that way:
In a certain city there was a judge who loved God
and was devoted to the people. Nobody better. Nobody
more fair. Nobody a better judge than he. And there
was a widow in town who had been wronged, taken
advantage of, and robbed of the little she had. The judge saw the injustice,
saw the need, and burned with anger and wanted to do something about it. But
the widow never came to him. The widow never asked. Instead, she tried to take
care of it herself. The judge was able to help, had the means at his disposal
to right this wrong, all she had to do was ask . . .
Which judge, do you think, is your heavenly
Father more like?
Luke started by telling us that Jesus told this
parable so we would always pray, so we would always ask, and not lost heart.
Because we have a God, a Father, who wants to give, who wants to help, who is
100% invested not in Himself, but in us. But do we ask?
This parable is often called The Parable of
the Persistent Widow, which puts the emphasis on the widow and her
persistence. And maybe we need to learn that. Sometimes we are
persistent. Children can be persistent, nagging their parents, keep asking
their parents ’til they get what they want. People are persistent in playing
the lottery, even though the odds of winning are longer than the widow in the
parable getting the judge to give her justice! And yet year after year they keep
buying tickets, hoping this will be the year!
But really, that’s not what this parable
is about, teaching us to be persistent, even if we need to, even if we’re
lacking in that. This parable is really to teach us about God. That He
is not like that first judge. That He is not only able to help
but wants to help. So ask. Pray. Don’t lose heart. Because of who He is. Because you have a God who is
not just God but your heavenly Father. Not just powerful but powerful for
you. Because you have a God who is just, and while maybe not always
doing what we ask, will always do what is right and best. What will help us not
only in the short term but in the long run. What will
help us not only physically, in this world and life, but spiritually, that we
might have eternal life. Like He did
with Jacob - hurting him now to save him forever.
Which we really and truly know, what God is like,
because of the one telling this parable. Because
before we even knew to ask, God came to us to help and save. When Adam and Eve
sinned in the Garden, and all they knew to do was hide because surely God was
going to come and swiftly give them judgment for their sin . . . We’ll, God did
come, and it was swift, and He did pronounce
judgment, but ultimately on Himself. He had done nothing wrong. He had
given only what was good. Yet He would take the sin of
His children upon Himself. He would take the punishment. His heel would be
bruised in order to bruise the serpent’s head. Adam and Eve had made themselves
widows, cut themselves off from God, but God came to them, because that’s the
kind of God He is.
And that promise He made them, to do that, that
promise passed down to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, was now being
fulfilled in the one telling this parable, in Jesus. For very soon now, not
long after Jesus told this parable, He would be up on the cross because of
unjust judges who cared only for themselves. Because of Jewish leaders and
worldly rulers who cared only about their power and positions and enriching
themselves.
That’s the kind of God do you have! Who didn’t just have a
hip put out of joint, but who was crushed under the weight of our sins and died
that you might live. Because He wants only good for
you. To give you blessings in this world and life, yes, but who also loves you
enough not to - because your spiritual life and well-being are
more important. So He comes poor and lowly to us who are poor and lowly. He is
rejected and suffers for us who the world also has no use for, who the world
thinks dangerous because of the truth we proclaim. And He dies and rises to
life again for you, that you might die and rise to
eternal life in Him.
Why wouldn’t we ask, pray, to such a God?
Well, there are many reasons, I’m sure. Not the
least of which is that satan
has blinded us and convinced us that’s not the kind of God we have. We
Christians should know better! Yet how are your prayers? How persistent? How
consistent? How often forgotten? Or put off because we think we have more
important things to do? And then we never get to them . . .
So part of our confession at the beginning of the
Divine Service is for this - that I have not prayed as I should, that perhaps I
have thought wrongly of God. And then God Himself forgives you for that!
Not just the pastor - those are God’s words to you: I forgive you all your
sins. That’s the kind of God you have.
But there’s another blessing, too, to think about
here. That your God who forgives you has also baptized you. Which
you know, but maybe don’t think about big enough. Because
when you are baptized and made a child of your heavenly Father, that also means
you gain a family. Brothers and sisters in Christ. You
are baptized into a church, into a community, into a communion. Which means not only do you pray - you have people
praying for you. That when your prayers falter, when your prayers
fail, when you run out of time, you have others praying for you. And not just
here, in this congregation, but all around the world! Christians
in Africa, in Asia, in Central America, South America, in Europe, praying for
the church in America. Praying for you. Maybe
not by name, but your Father hears, and knows.
Which means the widow in the parable, asking at
all times, never giving up, so persistent, so consistent, is not you or me, but
the Church. The Church in all the world.
Which is the really cool thing about the earth’s
rotation and the sun rising and setting at all different times around the world
- there are always Christians getting up and praying in the morning, there are
always Christians going to bed and praying in the evening, there are always
prayers ascending to God, and, like the widow, giving Him no rest or peace. Always drumming our needs into His ears. But unlike the
judge in the parable, He loves it! The constant prayers music
to His ears.
And as part of this church, you also get to pray
for them. And for people who can’t pray, who do not know what God
is really like, who aren’t children of God who can come to their loving Father.
You pray for them. And they need us to do so.
So we do. Here. Together.
And think about our prayers, here, together . . .
Did you ever pay attention to the words of the Kyrie that we sing? We pray for
peace and salvation and help not just for us or for the church, but for the
whole world. When we pray the long prayer of the church, we are praying for all
kinds of people in all kinds of needs. When we pray the Lord’s Prayer, we don’t
pray: MY Father, give ME MY daily bread, and forgive ME, and lead ME not into
temptation and deliver ME from evil - it’s all US and OUR. And when we come to
the Lord’s Supper at the Lord’s Table, we pray and sing with angels and
archangels and all the company of heaven - which is not just people who
have died, but all Christians everywhere, gathering around different altars but
all of us around the same Body and Blood of the same Lord. The
Lord who is gracious and merciful and here for us. For
us who need - and have - His help.
So when the Son of Man comes, will he find
faith on earth? He will. But not because of us and our
persistence, but because of Him and His love. His
mercy and love that will keep and sustain His Bride, the Church, until He comes
again. He promised.
But until that day, it is for us, the Church, to
pray. To pray and not lose heart. To Entrust
Our Days and Burdens to God’s Most Loving Hand (LSB #754). Because we have a God
who is not an unjust judge that we have to wear down, but a merciful Saviour and a loving Father, who loves the prayers of His
children, and always wanting and doing the best for you.
In the Name of the
Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.