Persistent Widow (Unjust Judge)
Text: Luke 18:1–8
Opening: Why
This Story Matters
Luke tells us why Jesus gave
this story: so people
“always pray and not lose
heart” (Luke 18:1). Life
brings delays, wrongs to be
righted, and burdens that do
not move at first touch.
Jesus answers that weak
place in us with a scene we
can remember when the night
stretches long: a widow
keeps coming, day after day,
and the judge finally acts.
The Lord wants His disciples
to keep asking, keep
approaching, and keep
expecting God to do what is
right.
The Setting
and the People
Jesus speaks of a judge who
“did not fear God nor regard
man.” He does not blush, he
does not care, he does not
serve for anything higher
than himself. The other
figure is a widow, among the
most vulnerable in Israel’s
law and prophets. She has no
leverage, no money, no
connections. She has one
tool—persistence. She keeps
coming with a simple plea:
“Avenge me of my adversary.”
The wording fits a lawful
request for justice. She
does not scheme, threaten,
or quit. Steady steps to the
right door become her way.
The Turning
Point
The judge grows weary of her
constant approach. His
thoughts are plain: “Though
I do not fear God nor regard
man, yet because this widow
troubles me I will avenge
her, lest by her continual
coming she weary me” (Luke
18:4–5). Jesus then draws
His lesson: “Hear what the
unjust judge said.” If
persistence can move a hard
man, steady prayer to the
righteous Judge will never
be wasted. God’s character
and covenant stand in a
different world than this
judge. He hears day and
night. He will bring
justice.
What Jesus
Emphasizes
Jesus speaks of “His own
elect who cry out day and
night to Him.” He assures
action—“He will avenge them
speedily”—and then asks a
searching question: “When
the Son of Man comes, will
He really find faith on the
earth?” The issue is
perseverance. The people of
God keep coming. They do not
trade prayer for cynicism.
They do not hand trials the
last word. They stay with
God’s appointed path until
He acts.
How Steady
Prayer Works
Steady prayer does not grow
louder; it grows longer. It
returns every morning and
every evening. It holds the
same request inside the will
of God and keeps walking in
obedience while the answer
ripens. It couples the
Lord’s promise with the
Lord’s timing. It gathers
other scriptures around the
need: “Continue steadfastly
in prayer” (Colossians 4:2),
“Pray without ceasing” (1
Thessalonians 5:17), “The
effective, fervent prayer of
a righteous man avails much”
(James 5:16–18). This is the
rhythm Jesus teaches: ask,
seek, knock—and keep doing
so (Luke 11:5–13; 18:1).
Obstacles
That Erode Perseverance
Weariness whispers that
nothing is happening. Delay
feels like denial.
Distraction trades prayer
time for lesser tasks.
Hidden resentment says, “Why
hasn’t God dealt with this?”
Jesus lifts our eyes. He
points to the character of
God, the certainty of
judgment, and the value of
faith that stays at the
door. Galatians 6:9 gives
the same spine: do not grow
weary in well-doing, for
harvest comes “in due
season.”
Justice,
Timing, and the Word
“Speedily”
“Speedily” means at the
right moment, without
hesitation when the time
arrives. Scripture often
pairs God’s patience toward
sinners with sudden action
at the appointed hour (2
Peter 3:8–9; Romans 2:4–6).
Revelation shows saints who
cry, “How long?” and are
told to rest a little while
until the full number of
witnesses is complete
(Revelation 6:9–11). The
picture from Jesus stands
firm: God hears day and
night, and He will settle
accounts. Faith lives inside
that assurance.
Practicing
Persistence With
Understanding
Steady prayer stays aligned
with God’s revealed will. We
ask according to His
purposes, obey His commands,
and keep our hands at the
tasks He has given. We do
not add human rules and call
them faith. We do not
subtract the Lord’s commands
and call it trust. We
approach Him as He directs,
and we live as He directs
(Matthew 7:21; Hebrews 5:9;
1 John 5:14–15). This is the
path that keeps prayer clear
and conscience steady.
Building a
Life That Does Not Lose
Heart
Choose set times and keep
them. Start with Scripture
so that petitions ride on
the Lord’s words. Keep a
short list of requests that
serve His kingdom and return
to them daily. Record
mercies and answers;
remembrance strengthens
endurance. Ask righteous
people to pray with you.
Keep doing good while you
wait (Luke 18:1; Colossians
4:2; James 5:16; Galatians
6:9–10).
Conclusion:
The Question Jesus Leaves
With Us
“When the Son of Man comes,
will He find faith on the
earth?” Faith stands at the
door and keeps knocking.
Faith holds the promise and
stays within the Lord’s
pattern. Faith takes up
tomorrow’s prayer with
yesterday’s patience. The
widow’s steady steps became
her story. Let them become
ours.
Exhaustive Sermon Outline
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Text & Aim
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Luke 18:1–8 — Jesus teaches steady prayer that does not lose heart.
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Characters & Setting
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Unjust judge: without fear of God or regard for people.
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Widow: vulnerable, lawful request, single tool—persistence.
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Plot Movement
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Repeated petitions; judge relents from fatigue; widow receives justice.
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Jesus’ Lesson
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“Hear what the unjust judge said.”
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A fortiori application: steady prayer to the righteous Judge is never wasted.
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God hears His people day and night; He will act “speedily.”
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Search question: Will He find faith when He comes?
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Doctrinal Bearings
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Prayer joined to obedience (Matthew 7:21; Hebrews 5:9).
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Pray continually (1 Thessalonians 5:17; Colossians 4:2).
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Effectual prayer of the righteous (James 5:16–18).
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God’s timing and patience (2 Peter 3:8–9; Revelation 6:9–11).
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Obstacles to Persistence
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Weariness, delay, distraction, resentment; cures found in promise, character, judgment certainty.
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Practices of Persistence
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Fixed times; Scripture-shaped petitions; concise list of kingdom-serving requests; written remembrance; shared prayer; active obedience while waiting.
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Applications
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Personal wrongs—seek lawful right, keep praying, keep honest.
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Church burdens—pray day and night for soundness, unity, open doors (Colossians 4:3).
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Evangelism—name souls daily; ask for courage and opportunity (Acts 4:29; Colossians 4:4).
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Trials—ask for endurance and wisdom (James 1:2–5).
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Appeal
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Take up the Lord’s purpose for this parable: pray always and do not lose heart.
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Renew obedience where it has slackened; align petitions with the Lord’s will and keep going.
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Call to
Action
Set two anchors today: a
daily time of prayer you
will guard, and one
righteous request you will
carry every day for the next
thirty days. Approach God as
He directs, obey what He has
spoken, and hold steady. The
Lord hears day and night,
and He will act at the right
time.
Scripture
Reference List (with brief
notes)
Luke 18:1–8 — Core
parable; purpose stated;
promise and question.
Matthew 7:21 —
Entrance tied to doing the
Father’s will; prayer joins
obedience.
Hebrews 5:9 —
Salvation described for
those who obey Christ.
1 Thessalonians 5:17
— Pray without ceasing;
steady rhythm.
Colossians 4:2–4 —
Continue steadfastly; be
watchful with thanksgiving;
pray for open doors.
James 5:16–18 — The
prayer of a righteous person
has great power; Elijah as
example.
Galatians 6:9–10 —
Do not grow weary; due
season will come.
2 Peter 3:8–9 — The
Lord’s timing and patience;
certainty of His promise.
Revelation 6:9–11 —
“How long?” prayed by the
slain; answer set on God’s
timetable.
Philippians 4:6–7 —
Bring everything by prayer
and supplication with
thanksgiving; God guards
hearts and minds.
Luke 11:5–13 —
Friend at midnight; ask,
seek, knock—ongoing.
Prepared by David Hersey of the church of Christ at Granby, MO