Case Closed

Jun 19, 2026    Pastor Sean Pinder

There is a case that has been open for longer than you expected.


You filed it. You believed it. You kept coming back to it — day after day, season after season — and the answer that should have come long ago has still not arrived. And somewhere in the waiting, a question formed that most people never say out loud.


Is anyone actually hearing this?


Luke 18 introduces a story about someone with no power, no influence, and no leverage — facing a system that had every reason to ignore her and no obligation to help. And what she did — and what eventually happened because of what she did — reveals something about the nature of persistence, the nature of the one she was petitioning, and the nature of the verdict she eventually received that most people miss entirely.


Here is what makes this passage different from anything else ever said on this subject — the one who ruled in her favor did not do it because she deserved it. He did not do it because he was just. He did not do it because he cared. He did it for one reason. And that one reason holds the key to understanding something about YOUR unanswered prayer that will permanently change the way you bring your case before God.


There is a specific moment in this passage — after the long wait, after the repeated refusals, after every reasonable person would have stopped — where something changed. Not on her end. On his. Something shifted in the posture of the one she had been petitioning. And the verdict that followed was not gradual, not partial, and not pending.


It was final.


And then Jesus said something about that verdict — one specific word — that most people have read past without understanding what it actually means about the timing of what they have been waiting for.


What is that word?


And what does it reveal about the case YOU have been presenting — and how close the verdict actually is?


The answer is not in this description.


Press play — because CASE CLOSED is not the end of your story. It is the moment YOUR story finally gets the verdict it was always going to receive.