Friday, October 14, 2016

A Vote and a Prayer Luke 18:1-8

It is difficult for me to read this text this week without thinking about the current election process. Don’t jump too far ahead of me here. I admit that as I read the text for the first time last Sunday that I was listening to the presidential debate. I also admit that, when I first read the text, I had just heard the reports of Mr. Trump’s inappropriate and offensive language. But, the more I thought about it, the more I became convinced that this story speaks about our whole electoral process this year and that this story’s illustration of the need to pray always and not to lose heart is more important than ever.
Let’s begin by considering four perspectives of this story and the characters in it. First, in the context of the Gospel of Luke, Jesus is on his way to Jerusalem where prophets are killed and where we know that he will be crucified. Yet, at the time of Luke reporting Jesus’ words, Jesus has not only died on the cross, he is risen from the dead. So although these words were spoken before the crucifixion, the people who are hearing these words from that time until the present already know the ultimate outcome of the story. This means that they and we always hear the story with the knowledge of the resurrection.
Second, when we hear the title of judge, we are likely to think of robes and big desks, of plaintiffs and defendants, of bailiffs, juries, and reporters everywhere (can anyone say CNN?). But during the time of the Gospel of Luke, a judge was anyone who had the power to decide your future. A judge could be anyone who had the power to withhold the means of living from you.
Third, we all know what a widow is. Some of you may be widows or widowers because you have lost a spouse. But, especially in biblical writings, the widow can be an image of any person, group of people, or even a nation who has no one to speak for her/them asking that they be given what is rightfully theirs.
Within the context of the judge and the widow we are told what injustice or unrighteousness looks like. The judge’s injustice or unrighteousness begins with not fearing God and not respecting people. The judge is above it all and is only concerned with his pleasures and how he looks to the world around him.
The widow feels the bite of the judge’s arrogant self-righteousness and comes to the judge seeking vindication. Indeed, she addresses the case against her adversary again and again. Like a mosquito in the night that continues to whine around your ear evading the impatient and exasperating slap, this widow continues to come praying (begging) for what is rightfully hers. Note that it is not the presence of the widow that is so annoying; it is her continuing prayer for justice that concerns the judge.
Lastly, there is the character of the inner voice which first appeared in ch. 12 in the story of the rich man and the abundant harvest. Later we heard the words of the inner voice in the lazy steward, the prodigal son, the unrighteous manager, and now in the unjust judge.
The character of the inner voice has changed through the stories. In the first, the inner voice is greedy and wants to build bigger barns. In the second, it encourages the servant to abuse his power so others suffer with beatings. The inner voice of the prodigal son convinces him that it is better to ask for mercy than to live outside a loving relationship. The unrighteous manager discovers he can experience welcome in the community around him by relieving the debts of the people when he loses his job.
Now the inner voice instructs the unjust judge to be just even if it is only for appearance’s sake. The widow’s constant praying for justice is making the judge look bad. Politically, she is giving him a black eye.
In each of these stories, the inner voice points us in the direction of what it might mean to live in a realized kingdom of God’s justice even though the characters are not fully changed. Each story speaks of outcomes based on self-interest while the hope is for self-giving for the sake of the world. We will hear from this inner voice one more time before the end of our liturgical year for our own instruction. We will see the result of the inner voice teachings on the cross when a bandit prays to be remembered in Christ’s resurrection world.
Jerusalem, judge, widow, inner voice—let us think about this story in light of what is going on today. Clearly we have candidates who may have some fear of God, but that is questionable at times, and clearly there seems to be little respect for the people. Our candidate judges are much more concerned with trying to sanitize their pasts, explain their miscreant ways, and point fingers at one another claiming that the other is unfit or, could we say, unjust?
Little time is being spent on some of the most pressing concerns of the day. Will we have jobs that pay us enough to live on? Is medical care available to all when they need it? Can we find a way to live with one another without killing each other? Does everything have to be based on winning, or is there a way for us as a nation to recognize God’s image in one another? Can we see, yes see, in a way that recognizes the value of all of God’s people, finding ways of peace, rather than constantly maneuvering for more power? Is there room in our lives to recognize that this world is God’s good creation and that we need to stop polluting and destroying it? Can we perfect the programming of the driverless car so that I can go where I want when I want? (Oops, that last one was my bad.) Is there yet time to find ways of distributing the wealth and abundance of this world in a way that does not create greater chasms between the rich man and the Lazaruses of the world?
The answers to all of these questions will only come through persistent, constant praying. I am convinced that today we are the widow in this story, and justice will only be given if we continue to pray against the powers of injustice. -
Our candidates claim that they want to talk about the issues of the day, yet when the opportunity for discussing their programs comes, each one points to the inadequacies of the other candidate, claiming that the other person’s policies will destroy our economy or make a complete disaster of our world without getting around to what they propose. It is good and worthwhile to know what each of them has done in the past, but to live in the past is to die.
I am much more interested in what they want to do in the future. I would really like to know what their dream for the United States is. Because they seem to be unable to lay out their proposals, I wonder whether these candidates have a sustainable dream that extends beyond November 8.
It is going to be up to us, the electorate, the widows, to actively pray for justice. We must raise our voices now, and keep raising them, in our local governments, in our state legislatures, and in the halls of congress. Created in God’s image, we know what it means to be just. We know what it means to be righteous before the Lord. We know that justice begins with fearing, that is having a passionate reverence for, God and respecting God’s people. We must see each other as equals and recognize the needs of all of God’s people as our own needs. We must acknowledge that we are broken and incomplete without their presence in our lives.
As we pray for justice, we ask for ways to bring clean water to the people of Flint, Michigan; we ask for meaningful employment that pays enough to support a family of coal miners and steel workers in Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia; we ask for fair prices for milk from our cows and the produce from our fields; we ask that those who are without hope in Chicago may find ways of living in peace with one another instead of shooting each other. Praying for justice means that we need to raise our voices in prayer again and again, begging for justice and an end to racism, sexism, able-ism, and classism whenever they appear.
When we call for justice, we aren’t asking just for me, just for you, but for each person in the earth—for refugees who are fleeing from war torn countries like Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen, and Columbia for their lives; for immigrants trying for a better life; for people living with the mess we have made of our air and our waters everywhere.
We need to pray loudly and often without losing heart. We need to remember that God’s justice is done quickly in ways that we do not understand—opening the sea for God’s people to safely pass when fleeing oppressive Egypt, giving laws to create order in the chaotic wilderness-times of our lives, raising up foreign leaders like Cyrus to restore the city of peace (Jerusalem), and making us right with God through the cross and empty tomb.
When the Pharisees asked Jesus when the kingdom of God was coming, he told them that the kingdom of God is not coming, it is here. It is among you. He says that, if justice will be known, we need to do something about it. We must pray, understanding that prayer is not only cries to God for help in times of trouble, but actions that raise people up from the toxic places of open despair and hopeless quiet desperation, that is, the place where they have lost heart. In prayer, we can lift ourselves and those who are trapped in those spiritless places of lost heart into communal lives of ministry, walking together shoulder-to-shoulder and heart-to-heart, trusting in God’s will being done on earth as in heaven.
So how do we begin praying? Prayer begins with listening. Listen to God’s calling, that is heed or fear God. Listen to the people around you, that is respect them and recognize the value of their needs. Then, having listened, we too can speak, implore, and beg. We can join with those who are already speaking and acting in faith, trusting in God’s continued active presence in history.
This year, your prayer may be in the vote you cast on November 8. It can be a statement of trust that God continues to work in history through good leaders and bad. Without losing heart, our prayer this year may be that we won’t have to overwork God’s labor of grace and forgiveness. So I urge you to listen to God’s calling to honor the widow, the orphan, the stranger, and the poor; listen to your heart and the people around you, and then, prayerfully vote for our future and the future welfare of God’s people in a way that will be faithful when the Son of man comes.
The good news is that whether or not the son of man finds faith on earth, we know that he is coming. Let us prepare him room and make straight his way.

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