"When God Wrestles with You"
Twenty-First Sunday after Pentecost
Ignatius of Antioch, Pastor and Martyr
October 17, 2010
Luke 18:1-8

Usually when Jesus tells a parable He just tells it. There might be
some explanation afterward but usually He just goes into a story and
then you can think about what it means. Here we alerted at the outset
of the purpose of this parable. Jesus tells us the story to make us
aware that as we live out our lives as Christians, God will be
wrestling with us.

I know, that’s not what the words say. But what is Jesus communicating
to us when Luke tells us that Jesus told a parable so that we
Christians would be persistent in our prayers and not lose heart?
Well, He’s communicating that being a Christian is not going to be
easy. There are many difficulties, as we know. Satan is constantly
battling us, the world is continually trying to sway us to its side,
and our own sinful flesh is persistent in its own selfish desires. But
there’s more. Jesus tells us as much in giving us this parable. God is
not going to be always seeming to be on our side. He will at times,
and perhaps oftentimes, seeming to be going against us.

Why did Luke say what he did about Jesus’ parable? “[Jesus] told them
a parable to the effect that they ought always to pray and not lose
heart.” Why would Jesus need to direct us to be persistent in prayer?
If it were a simple matter of us praying for what we need and God in
His love and grace simply gave those things to us, there’d be no need
for this parable. But we need to be persistent, is what He says. We
need to not lose heart. That’s because God is not our buddy. Sometimes
He comes from out of nowhere and wrestles with us. Jacob was just
trying to protect his family and out of nowhere God shows up and
wrestles with him.

God is not a vending machine where you punch in the number of what you
want and it’s delivered to you. God comes to you often at times
seeming to be against you. Wrestling with you. Challenging you, not
giving you what you want, or even what you think you need. What kind
of a God do we have where Jesus so matter-of-factly can compare Him to
a pagan judge? Does Jesus really want us to view God that way, that
He’s just like that judge in the parable who neither believes in God
nor has any respect for others? Evidently, yes, since that’s exactly
what He did in the parable. And what He said afterward, “Hear what the
unrighteous judge says.”

Recently, two sociologists from Baylor researched people’s conceptions
of God. They found that Americans have four different views about what
God is like. There is The Authoritative God, that God is involved in
history and meting out harsh punishment to those who reject Him. Some
believe in the Benevolent God, where He is engaged in our world and
loves us when we love and care for others. A third conception of God
is the Critical God, in which those who suffer in this world often
believe in a god who keeps an eye on this world but reserves justice
in the next. Finally, there is the Distant God. Here, God started the
universe but then left humanity alone.

There is some truth to all of these. God certainly is authoritative,
as well as benevolent, and even critical and distant. People have to
come to terms with God whether they believe in Him or not and so often
our view of Him is pigeon-holed according to our limited
understanding. While these four views of God accurately reflect how
many people view God, they do anything but accurately reflect who God
really is. These four views tell us what people think of God but not
much of what God tells us about Himself.

I wonder what those sociologists would do with the Old Testament
reading today where God wrestles with Jacob? How would they come to
terms with the Gospel reading today which compares God to a pagan and
forces His beloved children to wait for His perfect justice? But
actually, I really don’t wonder at all about what they think of it.
What I really wonder is what you and I do. We really believe in God.
Not some Authoritative Supreme Being who calls down rules and
regulations and zaps you if you don’t toe the line. Not some
Lovey-Dovey Grandfatherly type who loves to see people being kind
whether they believe in Him or not. Not some God who sits around
checking on the progress in the world but gives only good things in
the life to come. And not some God who got the ball rolling only to
leave us to our own devices.

There are plenty of religions and non-religions that believe in some
form of those kinds of gods. There are plenty Christians who fall into
the trap of pigeon-holing God in such a way. Maybe that’s why He
wrestles with us. He knows we too easily put Him in a box. He is far
greater than we could ever imagine Him. He’s not afraid to give Jacob
a challenge that is directly from Him, not just the difficulties in
everyday life. Jesus has a twinkle in His eye when He gets to talk
about God in terms of a judge that none of us would want to stand
before.

And Jesus is nothing if not persistent. He will keep coming at us with
the truth about God, even if it causes us to step back and wonder if
that’s the kind of God we want. We may want to retreat to the security
of the Authoritative God or the comfort of the Benevolent God or the
vindication of the Critical God or the easy way out of the Distant
God. God Himself will keep coming at you as He is, wrestling with you,
challenging your notions of Him, calling you on your sin, going head
on with you and your self-righteousness. He will not cater to your
needs. He won’t make you feel good just because that’s what you’d like
from Him. He will call upon you to call upon Him. He will call you to
a life of prayer. That’s a life of prayer. Persistent prayer. Prayer
that is not based on whether you think God has answered your prayer,
but on simply praying to the God who is your God and Father, your Lord
and Savior. He calls upon you to pray for what you need, not what you
want. You are invited, of course, to pray to Him for what you want, as
He has given you the green light for doing so, praying according to
His will.

But mostly we need to see what our real need is. As much as I might
not want for God to wrestle with me and bring me through struggles, I
am more haunted by Jesus’ words of conclusion to His parable:
“Nevertheless, when the Son of Man comes, will He find faith on
earth?” We know that the Christian Church will remain forever. God is
clear about that in His Word. So why the speculation of Jesus when He
returns in glory on the Last Day of whether or not He will find faith
on the earth? This is the wrestling of God with us. It is never easy.
You are a Christian, but that doesn’t mean you float easily through
life taking God’s grace for granted, what has been described of as
cheap grace. You are saved by grace, it’s a gift, it’s free, there’s
no strings attached, it’s by nothing you do—but it’s not cheap. It
comes at a cost. It’s not cheap grace, it’s the grace of God in which
He not only saves you but He engages with you. He even wrestles with
you.

Jacob wasn’t the only who wrestled with God. The woman in Jesus’
parable is a picture of each one of us Christians, or at least who we
are to be as Christians. One example is Ignatius. Today in the Church
Year we observe the Commemoration of Ignatius who was the bishop of
Antioch at the beginning of the second century. His life ended in
martyrdom, something that may seem distant and irrelevant to us
Christians today, or at least we Christians who are American. Nobody’s
banging down our door and dragging us off to the electric chair. But
1900 years ago, near the end of the reign of the Roman emperor Trajan,
Ignatius was arrested, taken in chains to Rome, and eventually thrown
to the wild beasts in the arena.

On the way to Rome, he wrote letters to the Christians at cities such
as Ephesus, Rome, and Smyrna. His letters were those of a pastor to
his people warning them of false teachings that would lead them
astray. In these letters he constantly drew people back to the true
doctrine of Christ and His salvation in His suffering, death, and
resurrection. How’s that for a God? Not distant or authoritative or
critical, but humble and serving. How was Ignatius able to write in
this way as he was led off to certain, and agonizing, death? Because
he was persistent. His prayer to His Heavenly Father was not that of
escape from murder at the hands of those who persecuted Christians.
His prayer was that of the woman in Jesus’ parable. He prayed for
God’s justice. In His time. In His way. We may not face imminent
martyrdom as Ignatius did and countless Christians down through the
ages have. But haven’t we all cried out to God as that woman did in
the parable? That is the way of life as a disciple of Christ. The
reason we need to be persistent is because God keeps wrestling with
us.

But if you say, Yes, but why does Jesus say that the whole reason for
giving us this parable is so that we may be confident that, in His own
words, “will not God give justice to His elect, who cry to Him day and
night? Will He delay long over them? I tell you, He will give justice
to them speedily.” Adults usually learn to be more patient than when
they were kids. When they want ice cream, they want it now. As we grow
older and gain in wisdom and perspective, we’re better able to see
that not everything we need comes to us immediately. So why does Jesus
say that God will not delay when we lift our prayers to Him? How is it
true that He says God will give us justice speedily?

It’s true because the more we’re in the Word of God, the more we pray,
the more our prayers will be conformed to His will and not ours. When
we’re praying in conformity with what He knows we need rather than
what we would like to see be the case then we will see that God’s
answer is always the best answer and His timing is always the perfect
timing. We often get so caught up in the here and now, in the day to
day, that we lose sight of our eternal existence. Do you live in such
a way that Jesus will return at any moment? I specifically worded it
as ‘will’ return at any moment, not ‘may’ return at any moment. The
truth is, most of us think that way. Yes, He may, but then we go on
about our day to day stuff giving it no more thought. That’s because
we don’t think He will return at any moment, just that He may.

What Jesus is getting at here is that He will. Will He find faith on
the earth? Will He find those who are wrestling with God and driven
further and further into His Word in order to receive a blessing? Will
He find those are persistently, faithfully praying to Him for justice,
what they truly need, instead of just those things that they’d like?
The world and your sinful flesh will persuade you to take your pick
from the list of four different gods the sociologists can tell you all
about. God Himself will simply show you who He is by directing your
gaze upon the cross where justice is meted out on His only-begotten
Son.

Salvation is accomplished. And if you see your end like Ignatius did,
not in the arena where his flesh was torn to bits, but in the eternal
glory of heaven, you will see exactly what that woman was praying
about and what we have the invitation and privilege to pray about
every day of our lives. Amen.

SDG

--
Pastor Paul L. Willweber
Prince of Peace Lutheran Church [LCMS]
6801 Easton Ct., San Diego, California 92120
619.583.1436
princeofpeacesd.net
three-taverns.net

It is the spirit and genius of Lutheranism to be liberal in everything
except where the marks of the Church are concerned.
[Henry Hamann, On Being a Christian]
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