Our gospel reading this morning begins with a very important little word: “then” — “Then Jesus told them a parable about their need to pray always and not to lose heart.” This word, ‘then’, stuck out to me as I began preparing to preach this week, because I’d not really noticed it in past readings of this passage. When I’ve read this parable in the past, I’ve read it as another teaching about how we’re supposed to approach prayer (which it is), but I’ve not paid attention to the context. “Then” means that this parable is told in the context of a larger scene, that it’s a continuation of something already happening — why does Jesus tell this story now, and who is he talking to? Is there more going on here than a general teaching about persistence in prayer?
If we look back a few verses, we’ll see that Jesus is talking to the disciples. After being asked by a Pharisee about when and how the Kingdom of God would appear, Jesus turns to his followers and begins to speak directly to them. In unnerving language, he tells them that ‘the days of the Son of Man’ are coming, but that they will be different than expected. This language is from the book of Daniel, and the ‘day of the Son of Man’ for Jesus’s audience would have been a sort of shorthand for the people’s Messianic expectations — the day of God’s triumphant appearance in the world, when he would expose and destroy the corruption of Israel’s oppressors, liberating and bringing justice to his chosen people. Jesus tells them that these times are coming, but that they will come with suddenness and with terror, like Noah’s flood or the rain of fire that consumed Sodom & Gomorrah. When the Son of Man is revealed, Jesus says, it will happen after he has been rejected by his people, in a time of terror and violence, when many will be lost. When the disciples ask where this will happen, Jesus simply answers, “where the corpse is, there the vultures will gather,” — and then our gospel reading begins.
Luke’s audience, reading these words around the end of the first century, would recognize that Jesus seems to be talking about the destruction of Jerusalem in 70AD, when the city, the temple, and the nearby region were besieged, starved, and brutally destroyed by Roman armies. Jesus is warning his followers that they were about to enter a time when political and religious turmoil would become even more intense than it already was and would begin spilling over into violence, when injustice in the land would finally reach such a fever pitch that it would bring about its own destruction in a catastrophe terrible enough to be compared to Noah’s flood and the destruction of Sodom & Gomorrah, and that somehow ‘the Son of Man will be revealed’ in the face of all this. ‘I will be with you and God’s justice will be revealed’, Jesus is saying, ‘but it won’t look like it at first. Dark days are ahead, and I want you to be ready.’
To prepare them, he tells them today’s parable, ‘about their need to pray always and not to lose heart.’ Why this? Why now? Destruction is going to rain down on the disciples’ world, after they wait for almost four decades for Jesus to return, and instead of telling them to go stock up on canned goods and potable water, to build a bunker in the desert caves, to pass out pamphlets and preach from street corners about the destruction to come, or to stockpile swords and bows to protect themselves from what is coming — instead of all this, he tells them a story about a stubborn old widow and a corrupt official. He tells them that this woman fought for justice to be given to her by a judge who didn’t care about justice, who ‘neither feared God nor had respect for people.’ She was so tenacious and persistent in her appeals that the corrupt judge finally granted her justice, just to keep her from continuing to bother him. And, he says, the disciples should be like her, because if she could get justice from this evil judge, how much more will God grant them justice when they cry out to him in prayer with persistence and faith. The parable ends with Jesus asking the disciples a question, almost wondering aloud: “And yet, when the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on earth?” The question is striking — why wouldn’t he find this kind of faith on the earth?
The widow, we’re told, is a picture of what it means to ‘pray always’ and to ‘not lose heart.’ She stands in a long line of faithful women in the Scriptures who cultivated the kind of faith that endured in the face of long suffering and waiting. She is like Sarah, who was promised a child in her old age and waited something like 25 years before she saw that promise fulfilled, like the widowed prophetess Anna, who spent decades in the temple fasting and waiting to see God’s chosen Messiah until toddler Jesus arrived there, or like Elizabeth and Mary, who each believed that there would be a fulfillment to the promises they received of a miraculous child, despite the doubt and ridicule they would have endured from their community. The list goes on and on; the Scriptures are full of faithful women who cling to God’s purposes and God’s promises, in spite of the opposition, exhaustion, and long waiting that they faced. The widow is also like Jacob, who is willing to wrestle for an entire night, fighting for hours and hours through weariness and pain, blood and sweat, ferociously demanding a blessing from God until he gets it, even though that blessing comes with a shattered hip and a limp that would mark him for the rest of his days.
I think as we remember some of these examples, we start to see why Jesus wonders if he will see this kind of faith. I have had seasons, sometimes even long ones, where my prayers are frequent and consistent, where my rhythms of prayer nourish and uphold me day in and day out, and God feels close, but this is only the beginning. To be like Jacob or one of these women — to have a faith that continues in prayer, that believes God will make good on his promises, that he is still working and moving and bringing justice, even if I can’t see it, even if I have to wait months, years, decades to see it — to have a faith that cries out for God to act and believes, insists that he will show up, even in the face of great grief or pain or darkness — to have a faith like this that prays ‘and does not lose heart’ — this is something else entirely. Many of you know how different it is, how hard it is, to not lose heart when it seems like your prayers are falling on deaf ears, when injustice continues unchecked, when your pain drags on and it would be so much easier to just stop believing, to say ‘I guess it isn’t God’s will’ and to explain away God’s silence, when the waiting goes on and on and continuing to pray in earnest feels unbearable. Some of you know the kind of faith that Jesus is describing, because you have wrestled through the dark with God, clinging to him through long suffering, loss, and grief, stubbornly insisting that the love of God will have the last word, no matter how long it takes to see it.
This is the kind of faith that Jesus is talking about, the kind of faith that his followers will need, the kind of faith that could nourish a community and sustain them through the long waiting, adversity, and destruction that Jesus is warning his disciples they will face. This is the kind of faith that Jesus says will bring about God’s justice, will see God’s promises fulfilled, will reveal the presence of God in the midst of a land that appears to have been forsaken by God.
This is also the kind of faith that we need, and that Jesus is inviting us, as his followers, to cultivate in our time. I’m sure it’s not lost on any of you that the world we live in doesn’t sound all that different from the one I’ve been describing in the years leading up to the destruction of the temple. We too know what it’s like to look around and see increasing political and religious turmoil, to open up our phones and be met with another story of hatred or of the lust for power bubbling over into some fresh injustice enacted upon the vulnerable, to be shocked and exhausted in the face of another act of devastating violence — and for so much of it to be cloaked in the name of God. Like the disciples in Luke, we also live in a time when it is not always easy to discern the presence and love of God in the world around us, let alone to know how to respond faithfully, to follow him through the turmoil of these darkening days. The Spirit holds out this gospel to us today — we too must become like the widow, because if we learn to pray and to not lose heart, to cry out for God to show up and to follow him where he leads, to stubbornly trust that he will fulfill his promises no matter how hard things get, then we too will become the instruments of God’s love and justice in the midst of a darkening world.
May we each become like the faithful widow, learning to pray always and, by the grace of God, to not lose heart. Lord have mercy. Amen.
