I said at the beginning of the service that the two parables in the gospel reading may seem to be separate but they are actually linked. It’s pretty obvious, as the second parable begins with the words, “[Jesus] also told this parable to some who trusted in themselves that they were righteous and regarded others with contempt.” Even so, how do the Parable of the Widow and the Unjust Judge, and the Parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector link? To get right to it, they’re both about prayer. The combined message is to pray with both persistence and humility. I suppose I could end the sermon right there, but it’s worth seeing how and why they link.
Let’s remember that even the first of these two parables doesn’t come out of nowhere. Last week we left off with Luke 17. People were asking Jesus about the coming of the kingdom of God. That ended with us the readers realizing that the disciples of Jesus had no greater faith or understanding than Jesus’ opponents. We keep that in mind as we go forward.
The first parable is about the need to pray always and not lose heart. Perhaps the easiest way to understand what this parable is teaching is to understand what it is not. It is not about praying to God like a teenager badgering his or her parents for something until, hopefully, eventually, they give in out of exasperation. Prayer is not about pestering God; as if God is testing you to see if you really want it badly enough to ask for it over and over again.
Prayer is also not asking for things from God as if God were a genie in a lamp. The genie then comes out and grants wishes. Many people basically have that as their prayer life. As long as everything is going okay in life, or perhaps as long as everything in life is going on in a way that they feel they can control, they’re quite content to trust in themselves. Only when something goes out of control do they turn to God in prayer.
I’ve used the example before of the time that the pastor of the Lutheran church in Verona asked me to visit a parishioner who was in her late 20s and had been sent to Strong Hospital with several life-threatening conditions. When I first arrived she was in surgery. It didn’t look good. I talked with her husband and friends in the surgical waiting room. If she survived the first surgery there would be more ahead. None of it would be easy and she’d never live a truly good life no matter what. The family and friends were distraught; begging me to pray for them and for God to give a miracle. It was a tough situation. I stayed with them for quite a while and indeed prayed with them. The surgery was going to take a long time and I eventually left. I checked back in with them several hours later and that particular surgery had been successful. They were happy. They told me they were now good and they didn’t need me. Even as I reminded them that this was the first of several surgeries, and the whole situation had no real chance of coming out good, they said they were fine.
But things weren’t fine. Her condition plummeted a few hours later as a series of other things went wrong. Now the family was distraught again and asked for me and for prayer. We went through a few of those cycles. Every time things looked good they said they didn’t need me. Every time things looked hopeless they asked God for a miracle. Though it was difficult, her condition really was beyond hope from the very beginning. All the hospital staff knew that. Mercifully she died within a couple days.
That is an example of how many people pray. They look to themselves for most things. When things are beyond their control they look to God. But that’s no way to pray. The way to pray is a persistent attitude of wrestling with issues with God, and in a relationship of faith. Prayer is not about getting stuff.
Another thing that the parable is not, is that the unjust judge in the parable does not represent God. The judge is just a foil against whom God is compared. Jesus says, ““Listen to what the unjust judge says. And will not God grant justice to his chosen ones who cry to him day and night? Will he delay long in them? I tell you, he will quickly grant justice to them.” (18:6b-7) In other words, God is truly with us, wants what is good for us, and on our side all along.
Justice in the parable is not identical to our notions of social justice today; although there are overlaps. Justice in the parable is much broader. Commentator Joel Green notes, “God’s people will be the objects of unjust actions within an unjust world.” (New International Commentary of the New Testament, Luke, Pg. 642) The entire orientation of society, and the whole human enterprise, is fundamentally unjust. Humans do not trust God as they should. Just like people who only turn to God when they need something they can’t get otherwise, we humans look to ourselves for fulfillment rather than absolutely trusting the God who created us and loves us.
Jesus says to pray to God persistently. This is not because we want stuff. It is because it’s the correct attitude to understand all things and to act accordingly. Much later in Luke’s gospel Jesus is in Gethsemane and about to be arrested. He begs three times in prayer that he not have to go through with the arrest, beating, and painful execution. But apparently the answer is no. That is the most faith-filled prayer ever made, and it led to Jesus having the strength to stay the course.
So, persistence in prayer then leads us to the second parable about humility in prayer. Jesus creates a story about a Pharisee and tax collector who go to the temple to pray. The Pharisee may seem arrogant to us, but let’s realize something of ourselves in him. Perhaps we don’t strut around with our noses stuck in the air thinking that we are somehow superior beings. And yet, that thinking can pervade our faith.
The Pharisee in the parable seems to do everything right. He has an honorable profession and conducts himself appropriately. He says in his prayer that he is not a thief, rogue, adulterer, or like the tax collector. He observes all religious duties and gives generously. Presumably he is thought of highly in society. He is disciplined, conscientious, and diligent. He’s the kind of guy you want to have as a next-door neighbor. We can picture him as having a good wife. His kids are well-behaved, well-rounded, and get good grades.
It’s hard to be that sort of person and not become a bit arrogant about it. After all, doing life “right” takes a lot of work and discipline. You can look at a person who is never consistent with a job, or has wasteful habits, or is addicted to something and see them as lazy, sloppy, and careless. You then conclude that they deserve the hardships and problems in their lives.
While I never want to preach anything other than being highly conscientious and responsible, when you achieve earthly success it is easy to slip into the thinking that God must be smiling down on you for your goodness. You think that God creates and sustains the lives of people like you. You think you deserve, and have every right to, the life you live. You think that if others just did what is right and lived with the priorities that you exhibit, their lives would be good too. You subtly think that others whose lives are full of problems are clearly living out the consequences of their flawed morality. God is then just giving them what they deserve; perhaps even as a means of goading them into righteousness.
The tax collector in the parable would be such a person. Tax collectors were generally despised for any number of reasons. He stands back and just asks God for mercy.
It is worth noting that throughout Luke’s gospel tax collectors are never actually called out for being especially sinful for their jobs. Both Jesus and John the Baptist just call on them to do their jobs ethically. So, the tax collector here is not necessarily sinful. The only real difference between the two men in the parable is that the Pharisee is exulted by society and the tax collector is looked down upon.
Notice in the parable the Jesus does not describe the tax collector as listing out before God all the things he does that are immoral or wrong. He simply comes before God with humility and says, “God, be merciful to me, a sinner.” Let’s not read all sorts of immoral conduct into this man that may or may not be there. Again, the only real difference between he and the Pharisee is that the Pharisee is focused on his self-made righteousness. That shows up in his prayer. He sees his faith in God as something that is his own good work. Whereas the tax collector (also clearly a man of faith or else he wouldn’t be praying in the temple), focuses on his need for God’s mercy. Though Jesus describes the tax collector as beating his breast as he asks for mercy, that does not mean that he is depressed or ashamed. He simply knows he comes to God with needs while also having nothing of value to give to God. He is truly humble. Jesus says this is the correct attitude for prayer.
So again, together the parables teach us persistence and humility in prayer. This is not a strategy to pray most effectively. It is the attitude that puts you in right relationship with God. Prayer is a core aspect of that relationship. Let me end with theses fitting words from Martin Luther: “When I look at myself I don’t see how I can be saved. When I look at Christ, I don’t see how I can be lost.”
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