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Sermon, Year C, Proper 24, "The Tenacious Persistence of a Widow"

 

C Proper 24 29 Ord Col Paul 2025

Luke 18:1-8

October 19, 2025

          In the stories Jesus would tell, he would use Jewish archetypes, word symbols, that had a history, to share his meaning and message.  For example, one of the archetypes he uses is the term historically translated as the “Son of Man.”  Jesus often uses the term with vague references to himself or to some figure in the future who will come to judge the righteous and the unrighteous.  The literal meaning of the term goes all the way back to the first creation story when humankind is created out of the “fertile soil” or the earth.  The prophet Daniel then picks up on this term to talk about the mythological figure who shall oppose the cruel and the violent empires of the world, pictured as grotesque beasts or monsters.  Daniel says that this figure is literally the Human One or the Earth Child who comes to judge these monstrous, violent, and cruel imperial powers.

           Our Scripture verse ends today with Jesus asking, “When that Human One or Earth Child comes, will they find faith on earth?”  In other words, there is God’s way and the way of the imperial, violent, and cruel world, will the Human One find anyone loyal to God’s way when they come to judge the righteous and the unrighteous? 

           Jesus . . . he could get so judgmental!  Would Jesus really belong to a UCC Church with that judgmental stuff?

           That summation was the typical way a Jewish prophet would say that there is a story deeper, a way in the world more everlasting than the way of the pharaohs, kings, queens, Caesars, and city officials.  Their monstrous ways do not have the last word. 

           The other archetype Jesus uses in our Scripture passage for today is the widow.  Throughout Scripture, the widow is part of the holy trinity for whom God’s Heart is especially devoted.  The widow, the orphan, and the immigrant are seen throughout Hebrew Scripture as without resource and advocate, people who are extremely vulnerable—so God is a stand-in as a way to say, “You mess with them, you mess with me.” 

In Hebrew, the word for widow connotes one who is silent or unable to speak, without a male for status in society.[1]  Throughout the Gospel of Luke, widows figure prominently, brought up in five different stories in the gospel, as those who seek a different kind of economics and politics, those who seek liberation and justice.  As people dear to the Heart of God, widows are the megaphone to express the deepest desires of God. 

Throughout Hebrew Scripture are those warnings from God, admonitions to demand that the people of God act with the Heart of God.  To name just a few Scripture passages, in Exodus, in the Psalms, in Isaiah, and twice in the Deuteronomy, “The Living God is not partial and takes no bribe. . . . Cursed be anyone who deprives the alien, the orphan, and the widow of justice.”[2] You mess with them, you mess with me.

And here she is, this widow in Jesus’s story seeking justice before a judge who fears God nor public opinion.  The story suggests that the only way this judge would rule for anyone is by a bribe.  This judge has “abandoned all pretense of impartiality and has become openly what he has been covertly, a judge of injustice.[3]   As a result, this widow is trapped in a city, a world, where justice goes only to the highest bidder.  And . . . well . . . she is a widow, probably trying to get the maintenance owed to her by her husband’s estate, the inheritance that might help her survive.  What she might have as a bribe is tied up in court.  And . . . and she is a widow. 

What is she to do?  Jesus uses this story as a way of saying to those who follow him, people who might identify with the widow and her vulnerability, what they are to do when their basic economic and political needs are threatened by a system skewed toward the wealthy and powerful, unable to deliver justice because the system does not seek justice. 

What this widow does is she throws convention out the window.  Women, widows in particular, are to be private and silent?  Pffffft.  She breaks the rules and approaches the judge publicly and directly.  She does not prevail upon the judge by denouncing him but by telling him to do his DARN job!  Do your job![4]  

This widow is persistent and tenacious in her pursuit of justice.  She “forces the judge to reevaluate the cost-benefit ration of her case . . . cut his losses and move on”[5] such that injustice is not inevitable.

She makes the judge’s life impossible.  And he delivers justice to her not because he has become righteous or makes a righteous choice but because, “she will keep bothering me,” literally, “makes trouble,” or “makes my life difficult.”  In some translations, the Greek is translated that she will come in and give him a black eye, a shiner, shame him in her tenacious persistence. 

The judge is moved because this widow will not believe what the wider culture tells her—that her poor position means that she does not deserve justice.  She believes she deserves justice. 

In wider cultural understandings, we often approach Scriptural stories and ask ourselves, “Who is the most powerful person, the one who orders this or that that we might say, ‘Ah, this must be the person who is the metaphor for God!”  We equate earthly power with the Divine. 

But Jesus makes it clear with the amoral references to this judge that God is not found at the judge’s seat but in the widow’s seeking.  God activity is the widow seeking justice. 

In this passage and throughout the Gospel of Luke, Jesus is trying to persuade his followers, “Rich people and their official agents are actually afraid of you exercising your power!”  So step up.  Jesus effectively says in our Scripture passage for today, in Luke 18, verse 6, “Pay attention to the unarticulated anxieties and fears of the powerful—you can outlast them.”[6]  You can outlast them. 

There is a deeper, a wider story which reminds us of those vulnerable women who knew they deserved justice:  Mary of Nazareth, Sarah, Miriam, Rahab, Esther, and even Hagar. 

In more recent history, widows or vulnerable women have shown us the face of God, seeking justice. 

In 1976, a military group took over the rule of Argentina by force.  Soon men in unmarked cars began arriving in the night at homes, restaurants, and workplaces to take away people in the struggle for Argentinian peace.  Before long there were thousands of people among the ranks of the “disappeared,”—sons and daughters, friends and relatives. 

Lines began to form in front of government offices.  Mothers of the missing came day after day, begging for information about their loved ones.  When they were turned away, they got together and drew up a petition, listing the names of their disappeared children and demanding that they be returned.  When the government refused their petition, they began a silent, illegal protest.

Every Thursday they marched in a circle in front of the government offices that ring Buenos Aires’ Plaza de Mayo.  Each mother wore a white handkerchief embroidered with the names of her missing children.  Many carried pictures.  As the number of disappearances grew, so did the group of silent, walking women.  Despite beatings and arrests, the mothers persisted.  Their vigil went on for years, challenging the dictatorship, drawing international attention to the cruelty and injustice, recovering some of the stolen children, 400 to date, demanding justice that resulted in the prosecution and conviction of many military officials, and, finally, developing a legacy of activism in Argentina. 

In 1952 in South Africa, with apartheid still firmly in place, 20,000 women converged on the prime minister’s office in Pretoria, demanding justice.   In the following decades, mothers marched, compiled affidavits of torture and murder, and helped children into safe exile.  They did this all under the rallying cry, “You have struck the women, you have struck the rock.”  That rock was one more immovable object in the work to bring down apartheid. 

In El Salvador, mothers and widows fasted at the tomb of the late Archbishop Oscar Romero and occupied the cathedral in San Salvador, demanding an end to repression.  Their actions kept the number one superpower from committing to all-out war in El Salvador and to the eventual sainthood of Archbishop Romero. 

All these women displayed the tenacity, the persistence of the widow in today’s gospel parable.  They reflected the Heart of God.  They confronted the “unjust judges” of their time—whether they come in the guise of prime ministers, police, mayors, or military officers.  These women demanded to be heard, believed they deserved justice.  And today, through our holy Scriptures, they now invite us to join them in taking a stand for justice—not just for a day, a week, or a year, but to persist in knowing that the most vulnerable are dear to God’s Heart. 

Pay attention!  The unarticulated anxieties and fears of the powerful are fully on display in our age.  And God is on the move to say that there is a story wider and more everlasting.  Wear . . . them . . .out.  So that the orphans, the immigrants, and the widows, the people who are dear to God’s Heart might find an ally in you, in us.

Did you think, as people of faith, you were not supposed to be involved with the injustice of our day, private and silent?  Pfffft.  Today our scripture calls us to the deep and everlasting story.  Praise be to God!  Amen.



[1] Ched Myers, Healing Affluenza and Resisting Plutocracy (Minneapolis:  Fortress Press, 2025), p. 173.

[2] Deuteronomy 10:17; 27:19.

[3] Myers, Healing Affluenza, p. 173, p. 175, quoting William A. Herzog II, Parables as Subversive Speech: Jesus as Pedagogue of the Oppressed (Louisville, KY:  Westminster John Knox Press, 1994), p. 225.

 

[4] Myers, Healing Affluenza, p. 175. 

[5] Ibid, quoting Herzog, Subversive, p.  230. 

[6] Myers, Healing Affluence, p. 175.

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Sermon, Year C, Proper 24, "The Tenacious Persistence of a Widow"

  C Proper 24 29 Ord Col Paul 2025 Luke 18:1-8 October 19, 2025           In the stories Jesus would tell, he would use Jewish archety...