Wednesday, December 11, 2019

"Who's the Unjust Judge?" (Nineteenth Sunday after Pentecost)


Luke 18:1-8

              I looked around and couldn’t find her. “Where’s Momma?” I asked to my sister as we were all sitting around eating macaroni-and-cheese, fried chicken, butter beans and other random spoonsful of other casseroles on cheap Styrofoam plates. “I don’t know; she probably went outside to smoke.” She couldn’t smoke inside here.
My aunt and her husband had just bought a brand-new double-wide trailer and they had invited us all over to show it off, to have a sort of house-warming party, so all of us gathered at her new house, bringing covered dishes and cake plates for dinner. My aunt showed us around the trailer: the open kitchen with its new, matching appliances including a dishwasher and a refrigerator with ice and water in the door, the large living room, with (what my uncle was sure to point out to us) actual 2”x4” stud walls and a fireplace with gas logs, the dining room, the three, big bedrooms, and the master bedroom with a jacuzzi tub. They talked about how nice the central heat pump was and their plans to build a big front porch and a back deck that would surround a pool. It all seemed so nice, so new. It even smelled new. It was the nicest, newest thing I can remember anyone in our family having like that.
So, after we had all gotten the gran tour, we were sitting around eating, when I noticed I hadn’t seen my mom. When my sister said she was probably outside, I got up from my seat, walked out the back door, and sure enough, there was Momma, looking out into the yard, arms crossed, a lit cigarette in her mouth, and tears in her eyes. I asked her what was wrong; she looked at me and said, “We’ll never have anything like this.” We had lived in the same rental house on North Hill Street in Enterprise for seven years. It was an inexpensive, 3-bedroom, 1.5 bath house with old hardwood floors and cable we never paid for because the cable company either forgot to cut it off from the previous tenant or my stepdad figure out how to “borrow” cable from the neighbors. You can still drive by where the house sat. The lot is just an overgrown patch of Catawba trees and kudzu now; the house was taken by the tornado that hit the high school back in 2007, and the owners never bothered to rebuild. I suppose Momma thought we would live there for the foreseeable future, never having a place that was actually ours.
I was fourteen-years-old, could count the number of times I had been to church—the number of times I had actually prayed—on both hands with fingers left over, but I remember that night, as we drove back to Hill Street in our blistered Ford Taurus station wagon, watching the moon follow us home, and praying, “God, if you’re there, could you find a way to get Momma a house?” Well, as it turned out, a few months later my mom came home from work at the nursing home and told us that we were going to be moving to our own trailer, on our own land, across town. A retiring nurse had decided to help Momma finance the purchase on the nurse’s home she was leaving. My mom and stepdad still live on that land, just in a newer trailer.
I bet you’ve heard other stories like that, right? Maybe you’ve got your own story about praying for something, something you know is just out of your reach, something you know you just couldn’t get on your own, so you turned to God, praying as earnest as you knew how, maybe even bargaining with God? I know I’ve been there: “God if you’ll do this, I promise I’ll go to church every Sunday, sing in the choir, give my tithe…most of the time, when I can, you know, when I don’t have to save up for...” I’m willing to bet most, if not all, of us have prayed that sort of prayer before. Why do we do that? Why do we treat prayer as a last resort? Why do we only turn to prayer when it’s time for some sort of intervention that we can’t provide or afford ourselves? Why do we have this tendency to retreat to prayer in those tense moments of life, those times when literally all we can do is pray? Is prayer more than that? Is it more than the recitation of a list of names, the offering of thanks for supper, the bedside courtesy? Is prayer to be kept behind glass, only to be broken in case of an emergency, or is it more like a pair of boots, well-worn from miles of trails and pavement?
I suppose with parables like the one in front of us this morning, we may get the idea that prayer is this incessant nagging, this constant petitioning to God for those things that are just out of our reach, those things that we so desperately need yet are powerless to bring about. But to follow that logic, we have to assume that if we constantly pray, that if we spend all our time on our knees, begging and pleading with God, that God will give us all that we ask for. After all, “will not God grant justice to his chosen ones who cry to him day and night?” But you know…you know just as well as I do, that there are those times when you plead, when your eyes won’t stop flowing with tears, when you’ve begged, bargained, and shouted at heaven for God to grant you that one thing—that one thing, only to hear nothing back, to have the cancer spread, to not get the job, to have your heart broken and your soul torn. So, is this a parable about those desperate times in our lives when we can’t do it ourselves, to take our concerns to God, banging on the proverbial front door of heaven until God answers? Maybe.
Or maybe there’s something to the nature of the widow’s request in this parable: “Grant me justice against my opponent.” This widow needs justice, to be set right, to be made whole, and who is there to help her? There are none of those oh-so-helpful billboard attorneys in ancient Judea, no social services for those down on their luck, no family to support her, no non-profits with a mission to advocate for the voiceless. She’s on her own. She could choose to simply accept her fate, to live with whatever injustice, whatever cruelty, whatever cruelty has been inflicted upon her, or she can choose the other alternative, the harder thing, to fight for herself, to shout until her voice is heard, to refuse to carry on as if her life doesn’t matter. Her voice does matter. Her story does matter. Maybe there’s something in this parable for those of us who have less to ask and more to give. Maybe there’s something in here, in Jesus’ words, about praying for opportunities to hear the voices of those who are pleading, begging, screaming for their voices to be heard, for their prayers to be answered by those of us with the resources, power, and privilege to help bring about justice. I mean, if an unjust judge can hear the persistent leading of a first-century widow, a woman void of value in his day, and grant her justice, how much more should those of us living in the name of Christ today hear the prayers and pleading of those on the margins, those in the shadows, those overlooked, ignored, displaced, and forgotten and do everything we can to bring them the justice they deserve? Are we better than the unjust judge?
Of course, Luke introduces this parable from Jesus with these words: “Then Jesus told them a parable about their need to pray always and not to lose heart.” Isn’t that interesting? Our “need to pray always and not to lose heart…” Should we be praying this way always? That seems a bit much right? Like, do we really need to always pray like a widow begging for justice, like someone who’s on their last leg, with no other recourse? I mean, we’ve got resources. We’ve got talents, abilities, money. We don’t really need to pray always right? Do we? What I mean is, do we really have all that we think we do? Are we really as self-sufficient as we think we are?
I used to think I was pretty independent, able to get around, make it through the world all by myself, not really needing much. I thought that until I found myself on the Dutch side of the Schiphol airport in Amsterdam. I had directions for how to get to the Air BnB where I was going to stay during my time at the International Baptist Theological Studies Centre, but I had no idea what the real difference between the train, metro, or tram was. When I got off the plane, I stumbled around until someone in the terminal directed me towards customs; in the main airport, a kind airport employee explained how to get a chipcard to use the public transportation system. Of course, when I went to board the train a stranger in (of all things) an Auburn golf shirt asked if I was lost. I told him I was going to Amsterdam; he smiled and said this train was going to Germany, so I’d have to go back up and down the other way. When I got off the train, I mistook the tram for the metro and wound up getting off on the completely wrong end of the street where I was supposed to be. If it wasn’t for a friendly, Muslim shop owner who let me use his phone to look up directions and the explain them to me, I might still be wandering up and down Postjeweg, the street my room and school were on. There were countless times on that trip where I learned that I am really not as self-sufficient as I’d like to believe, times when I was shown that asking for help just to get down the street is an act of prayer, an act of relying on something outside of myself.
Maybe that’s what prayer is, really. The very act of prayer is an act of confessing our own real helplessness, our own real need for something outside of ourselves, prayer is an act of confessing our need, our hope in God—and not just when the going gets tough, not just when we’ve run out of options, but always. Prayer is the constant reminder that we are not in this life alone, because we are incapable of being in it alone, that the cry for justice is one that comes persistently because we—all of us—have to hear it, to join it as it rises to meet God’s ears. Prayer is the persistent presence of our relationship with God, one that does not let us tune out God until we need God.
What would happen to each of us if we truly lived each day praying as the widow in Jesus’ parable, never letting up, always trusting that there’s something greater than our smallness, something outside of our individual weakness? What would happen to Christ’s Church if we truly understood prayer as the persistent presence of God in and around us? What would the world look like if we—Christ’s Church—heard the determined cries of those seeking justice and sought to be Christ’s Body, acting to bring justice where we have the privilege and the power? What would we look like if we joined in their suffering of injustice, if we joined our voices with theirs to those unjust judges in this world? What would it look like if we prayed, trusting God to be more than we are individually, confessing by our actions that we are, in the end, helpless, hopeless, apart from God? Amen.


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