Wouldn’t you know, the one guy who could answer this question in a heartbeat isn’t here this morning. Never-the-less, I am going to ask it anyway.
What do Anton Chekov, Michael Crichton, Walker Percy, and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle have in common with Saint Luke who we commemorate today?
The answer. Before they began their writing careers, they were all medical doctors.
Yes, Michael Crichton the “author of techno-thrillers including Jurassic Park and The Andromeda Strain began publishing fiction while at Harvard Medical School.”
“After completing his medical degree at Columbia University,” Walker Percy contracted tuberculosis. And “during his convalescence, he decided to devote himself to writing.”
And here’s a fun fact to wow your friends at the next cocktail party you attend.
While studying medicine in Edinburgh, Doyle served as a clerk to Joseph Bell, a pioneer of forensic science famed for his ability to deduce a stranger’s occupation and recent activities by close observation. Does that ring a bell? Yes, Dr. Bell was the primary inspiration for Doyle’s fictional detective, Sherlock Holmes.1
And then there is Saint Luke, who perhaps the most famous and most quoted of all theses authors, whose thorough accounts of the life of Jesus and the early days of the church penned us the Gospel named after him but the second volume in his set, The Acts of the Apostles.
Luke was a literary detective who filled in some of the blanks in the life of Jesus that others left out. Reading his gospel, one can discover that the great Saint was not just a masterful storyteller, but an incredible story remembered.
I like to think of him hearing the stories surrounding Jesus' birth and remembering them so that we might never forget them. I like to think of him listening in while friends recounted some of what some of what Jesus said, writing them down, and leaving us with unforgettable wisdom that we are mulling over to this day.
Like the somewhat strange parable that he remembers Jesus telling about a widow who faces down an unjust judge.
Scholars take great pains to remind us that we all too often “tend to search out the most powerful figure in the parable, the richest person, and associate their behavior and ideas with God. The mistake here would be to link the judge’s corruption and God’s character.”2
The judge is not God, and he certainly wouldn’t be considered to be an observant Jew at all as Dr. Richard Lischer reminds us in his book on parables.
His life is a photographic negative of the summary of the law in Luke ... love of God and love of neighbor. He has no regard for either, and he admits such. Although he occupies an exalted position in Jewish society, this judge’s inner attitude and outward actions represent violations of role. He lives in a world whose justice is so unlike God’s that the very symbol of God’s righteousness is completely perverted. The poor widow lives in the same ugly world, and all she wants is ‘justice.’”3
We know leaders like him only our leaders only pretend to be on the side of the people. Associating with only their ultra-rich friends they may say they have “the American people’s” best interests at heart while they are cutting aid to some of those very same people while indiscriminately chasing down others in the streets based on nothing more than where they live or the color of their skin.
It will not take a historian like Dr. Luke to look back at these days and conclude as did The Smithsonian Magazine about another time in our nation’s history about which we should be profoundly embarrassed.
Seventy-five years after the fact, the federal government’s incarceration of some 120,000 Americans of Japanese descent during that war is seen as a shameful aberration in the U.S. victory over militarism and totalitarian regimes. Now, with immigration-reform proposals targeting entire groups as suspect, it resonates as a painful historical lesson.4
It’s a painful lesson that everyone, when they give into paranoia, can loose their way. It is important to remember that anybody can be an “unjust judge” even the liberal president Franklin D. Roosevelt order the rounding up and ceasing property of people who looked because of their Asian decent were deemed to be threats to national security.
And it is also important to remember that no “person of Japanese ancestry living in the United States was ever convicted of any serious act of espionage or sabotage during the war.”5
Jesus reminds us that because “unjust judges” have always existed we will also need people like the woman who challenges them and challenges them boldly and without ceasing.
“According to the well-known phrase, ‘well behaved women seldom make history” this widow has decided to make history.’”6
She goes after the judge with a persistence and tenacity like no one else.
You can almost see her, can’t you?”
There she is when the judge opens up his front door to get the morning paper, “My rights are being violated. Protect me!”7 she says loud enough for the neighbors to hear. He slams the front door in her face and heads off via the back way to the coffee shop for a double shot espresso to fortify him for the day and there she is. "Grant me justice against my accuser."8
There doesn’t seem to be anywhere the judge can go where she is not. He thinks he’s as tough as she is, but he is not. In the J. B. Phillips paraphrase his exasperation is becoming evident when he says, “‘her continual visits will be the death of me!’”
Death might be a relief from his immediate fear because what we have before us as “wear me out” according to Dr. Thomas G. Long, has language that “is borrowed from the world of boxing ‘Though I have no fear of God and no respect for anyone, yet because this widow keeps punching me, I will grant her justice, so that she won’t give him a black eye.'”
While that may be an unappealing analogy in the sport of boxing while the crowd gathers and anticipates that one blow that will knock an opponent out – and to the disgust of many of us cause irreversible brain damage – it is often the continual pounding that does an adversary in.
That is what the woman has to teach us and with Debbi Thomas, I wonder if this parable isn’t about God at all. I wonder if it’s about us..."
What does it mean to “lose heart”? The words that come to my mind include weariness, resignation, numbness, and despair. When I lose heart, I lose my sense of focus and direction. My spiritual GPS goes haywire, the world turns a murky gray, and all roads lead to nowhere.
In sharp contrast, the widow in Jesus’ parable is the very picture of purposefulness and precision. She knows her need, she knows its urgency, and she knows exactly where to go and whom to ask in order to get her need met. If anything, the daily business of getting up, getting dressed, heading over to the judge’s house or workplace, banging on his door, and talking his ear off until he listens clarifies her own sense of who she is and what she’s about.
There is nothing vague or washed out about this bold, plucky woman. She lives in Technicolor, here, now, today. “Give me justice! I will not shut up until you do.”11
That’s the kind of faith Jesus is looking for, and it is especially the kind of faith we need now.
It’s the kind of faith that Lincoln had when in his first inaugural address looking at what might possibly happen said:
We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching ... to every living heart and hearth-stone, all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.”12
It is what Dr. King believed when he said, "The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice." an idea that was not his originally but dates back to a sermon given in 1863 proving that indeed that justice sometimes indeed a long time coming.13
Which is why in moments of upheaval when even the bravest among us wonder if the guardrails of life will hold it is time for us to not only keep praying but not give up.
To shout with one voice over and over again or tens of thousands of voices all at once that justice will prevail.
To hold on to the hope that the “unjust judges” of our day who “care nothing what God thinks, even less what people think”14 and put their faith only in themselves and the lesser gods they have created might have their day but in the end the everyday people who may believe themselves to be powerless may, like the widow that Saint Luke remembered Jesus telling us about, find themselves to be powerful forces for good and Christ’s plan for the world.
So, let’s keep praying and working for peace that in the end Jesus may find that better angels of our nature have prevailed.
________________
1. “Joseph Bell” The Arthur Conon Doyle Encyclopedia, accessed March 14, 2026, https://www.arthur-conan-doyle.com/index.php/Joseph_Bell.
2. Eric Barreto, “Commentary on Luke 18:1-8,” Working Preacher , August 7, 2025, https://www.workingpreacher.org/commentaries/revised-common-lectionary/ordinary-29-3/commentary-on-luke-181-8-6.
3. Richard Lischer, Reading the Parables (Louisville, , KY: Westminster| John Knox Press, 2014), 114-115.
4. T. A. Frail, “The Injustice of Japanese-American Internment Camps Resonates Strongly to This Day,” The Smithsonian Magazine, January 2017, https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/injustice-japanese-americans-internment-camps-resonates-strongly-180961422/.
5. Ferrell F. Lord, “A Brief History of Japanese American Relocation during World War II (U.S. National Park Service),” National Parks Service, accessed October 18, 2025, https://www.nps.gov/articles/historyinternment.htm.
6. Thomas G. Long, Proclaiming the Parables: Preaching and Teaching the Kingdom of God (Louisville, , KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2024), 351.
7. St. Luke 18:1–4. (MESSAGE) [MESSAGE:Eugene H. Peterson, The Message (Colorado Springs, CO: NavPress, 2004)]
8. St. Luke 18:3b. (NRSVue) [NRSVue=The New Revised Standard Version Updated Edition]
9. Saint Luke 18:2–5 (PHILLIPS) [PHILLIPS=J. B. Phillips, The New Testament in Modern English (London, ENG: HarperCollins, 2000)]
10. Long, loc.cit.
11. Debie Thomas, “October 16, 29th Sunday in Ordinary Time,” The Christian Century, September 28, 2016, https://www.christiancentury.org/article/2016-09/october-16-29th-sunday-ordinary-time?
12. Abraham Lincoln, “Lincoln’s First Inaugural Address,” Abraham Lincoln Online, March 4, 1861, https://www.abrahamlincolnonline.org/lincoln/speeches/1inaug.htm.
13. Melissa Block, “Theodore Parker and the ‘Moral Universe,’” NPR, September 2, 2010, https://www.npr.org/2010/09/02/129609461/theodore-parker-and-the-moral-universe.
14. St. Luke 18:4–5. (MESSAGE)




