God Is True to Himself
Luke 18:1-8
1And he told them a parable to
the effect that they ought always to pray and not lose heart. 2 He said, “In a certain city there was a judge who neither feared God
nor respected man. 3 And
there was a widow in that city who kept coming to him and saying, ‘Give me
justice against my adversary.’ 4 For
a while he refused, but afterward he said to himself, ‘Though I neither fear
God nor respect man, 5 yet
because this widow keeps bothering me, I will give her justice, so that she
will not beat me down by her continual coming.’ ” 6 And the Lord said, “Hear what the unrighteous judge says. 7 And will not God give
justice to his elect, who cry to him day and night? Will he delay long over
them? 8 I tell
you, he will give justice to them speedily. Nevertheless, when the Son of Man
comes, will he find faith on earth?”
In my job as the Director of Christian Education at a
church, I lead several adult Bible studies during the week. I follow the same pattern
in every group. We open the Bible, read a passage and discuss it. Every now and
then a passage comes across our attention that makes me shudder inside a little
because I know that grasping the concepts is going to be a challenge. That’s
when I internally look heaven ward and silently ask God why He put that in
there. This parable is exactly that type of passage.
First of all, let’s examine the culture situation wherein
Jesus tells this story. Both of the characters, the widow and the judge, are
people bound by the culture in which they live. The widow is indeed completely
helpless and the judge controls all of the power. When the widow comes
persistently, annoyingly, and without a break she is behaving shamefully. This
was unacceptable behavior on her part. When the judge refuses to hear her, he
is behaving shamefully because it is his responsibility to hear her plea and
give her justice. So both characters are equal in their shame.
Now let’s look at one verse that seems to be the pivot point
in the story – verse 5.
“. . . because this widow keeps bothering me, I will give her
justice, so that she will not beat me down by her continual coming.”
“So that she will not beat me down” is rather poorly
translated here. It literally means “she will give me a black eye.” That black
eyes can be seen as a ruining his reputation (as we would use the term today) as he is not being a responsible
judge, or she might actually strike him and give him a physical black eye (although this is certainly less likely).
Either way he wants to avoid this. He claims that he doesn’t care what people
think, but in the end, he gives her what she wants, so that declaration is
rather weak. He is certainly not interested in having his reputation as a judge
damaged any further by this persistent woman.
So – how does all of this play into our faith? What could
this persistent widow and this shameless judge have to do with us today? Jesus
clearly places us into the position of the widow. We are to persist in prayer
as she persisted in her pleas to the judge. That’s fairly easy to grasp. But
how in the world is the God like the judge? There is where the struggle to
understand comes along. God is not shameful or unresponsive. What He is though,
is true to Himself.
God
will be true to himself and his Word: the time of vindication for his faithful
saints will come. Even though vindication is delayed, it will come because God
is merciful and long-suffering. If the human judge in the parable, whose
reputation is that of shamelessness, finally succumbs to the widow’s
persistence and vindicates her, how much more will God, whose reputation is one
of mercy and compassion, vindicate his elect. The judge finally gives
vindication because he is harassed and doesn’t want a black eye; God will
eventually give vindication because he has promised salvation to the elect, who
cry to him day and night.
Just,
A. A., Jr. (1997). Luke 9:51–24:53
(p. 674). St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House.
Just as the judge was true to his need for a good reputation
as a judge, so too God is true to His reputation as a merciful and compassionate
God. Jesus claims that justice will be accomplished “speedily”. Even as He
speaks these words, He is on the way to Jerusalem to suffer and die for us. In
the moment of His death and subsequent resurrection our redemption is complete.
This parable is told within months (possibly weeks) of this history changing
event. God will prove to be true to Himself in fulfilling His promise to redeem
us.
While God is not unfaithful to us or unwilling to show
compassion and mercy, He is true to Himself and all of the promises He has
made. We can rely on that fact and as such we too participate in the Kingdom by
faithfully praying for the arrival of that Kingdom and submission to all that
Jesus has done for us. Jesus directs our attention to maintaining our prayer
lives and our relationship with Him. It’s a strong message and an important
reminder.
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