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VIRTUAL PURIM
POSTED 20 MARCH, 2008
The Message of Esther
by J.K. McKee
editor@tnnonline.net
The Book of Esther is one of the
most important books in the Bible. While Esther
is commonly considered during the season of
Purim, the specific concepts it communicates
often go underappreciated. Esther is much, much
more than just cheering when the name “Mordecai”
is mentioned, or booing to “Haman,” or dressing
up and participating in a play. Esther gives us
a snapshot of the Diaspora Jewish community
following the fall of the Babylonian Empire, the
complexities of the Jews having to live under
Persian rule, the antiquity of anti-Semitism
preceding the time of Yeshua, the workings of
God behind the scenes through normal people, and
most especially how God uses women to accomplish
His tasks. Esther also tells us what happens
after God’s people are spared from certain doom,
and how they are to protect themselves.
The story of Esther begins during
the reign of the Persian King Ahasuerus or
Xerxes, who reigned between 486-465 B.C.E. While
Bible readers most often know this king for the
role he plays in the Book of Esther, history at
large knows Xerxes as the Persian king who
failed to conquer Greece.[1]
The account of Esther opens up when Xerxes
intends to display “the vast wealth of his
kingdom and the splendor and glory of his
majesty” for “a full 180 days” (Esther 1:4). In
the midst of a great banquet he holds after the
time of celebration (Esther 1:5-8), the
intoxicated king intends to display his wife
Vashti to those gathered. Nothing is stated in
the Biblical text regarding why he asks of
this—only saying that Xerxes wanted to “display
her beauty” (Esther 1:11)—but one can only
imagine a woman walking into a crowd of drunken
men and what they were thinking. Vashti, as one
can only expect, refuses the request of the king
who “became furious and burned with anger”
(Esther 1:12).
King Xerxes consults with his
closest advisors, wanting to know what is to be
done with his wife (Esther 1:14-15). They tell
him that if something is not done, wives all
over Persia and Media will imitate Queen Vashti,
and there will be gross disrespect of husbands
and men in general (Esther 1:17-18). They rule
that Queen Vashti not be allowed into his
presence again, and specifically that “the king
give her royal position to someone else who is
better than she” (Esther 1:19). So significant
was this, that “He sent dispatches to all parts
of the kingdom, to each province in his own
script and to each people in its own language,
proclaiming in each people’s tongue that every
man should be ruler over his own household”
(Esther 1:22).
After this declaration and with
his own anger subsided, King Xerxes is advised,
“Let a search be made for beautiful young
virgins for the king” (Esther 2:2), and
commissioners are sent to the provinces of the
Persian Empire to search for a new queen. In the
capital city of Susa, a Jewess named Hadassah,
“also known as Esther, was lovely in form and
features” (Esther 2:7), had been taken by her
older cousin Mordecai as a daughter. The search
commences, and she was found to have all the
right qualities and won the favor of the head of
the king’s harem. Leaving, Mordecai tells her
not to reveal her Jewish heritage (Esther 2:10).
We are told that Esther “had to complete twelve
months of beauty treatments prescribed for the
women…And this is how she would go to the king”
(Esther 2:12, 13). Esther was the one woman who
“the king was attracted to…more than any of the
other virgins” (Esther 2:17), being made queen.
As these events occur at the
palace, Mordecai was sitting outside at the gate
(Esther 2:19). Minding his own business, perhaps
wondering what is going on inside, he overhears
a conversation between two of the king’s
officers. These two men, Bigthgana and Teresh,
“became angry and conspired to assassinate King
Xerxes” (Esther 2:21). Mordecai relays the news
to Esther, who reports it to the king on his
behalf (Esther 2:22). As a result, the two were
executed and their bodies publicly displayed or
“hanged” (Esther 2:23).
Following this we are introduced to Haman, one
of the Persian nobles, and a man whom the author
of Esther considers to be an Agagite.[2]
King Xerxes honors Haman, yet “Mordecai would
not kneel down or pay him honor” (Esther 3:2).
Mordecai enraged Haman, who was promptly told
that “he was a Jew” (Esther 3:4). “When Haman
saw that Mordecai would not kneel down or pay
him honor, he was enraged” (Esther 3:5), and
rather than wanting to just do damage to
Mordecai or bring him harm, “Instead Haman
looked for a way to destroy all Mordecai’s
people, the Jews, throughout the whole kingdom
of Xerxes” (Esther 3:6). The scheming Haman then
goes before his king, and speaks the insidious
words,
“There is a certain people
dispersed and scattered among the peoples in all
the provinces of your kingdom whose customs are
different from those of other people who do not
obey the king’s laws; it is not in the king’s
best interest to tolerate them. If it pleases
the king, let a decree be issued to destroy
them, and I will put ten thousand talents of
silver into the royal treasury for the men who
carry out this business” (Esther 3:8-9).
King Xerxes promptly gives Haman
his signet ring in approval (Esther 3:10).
Ironically enough, it was not the style of the
Persians to exterminate people, as the Persians
were widely known for their tolerant attitudes
unlike the Assyrians or Babylonians who had
preceded them. Haman receiving Xerxes’ immediate
approval is a testament to his ability to
connive and manipulate with lies, some of the
distinct qualities of (state) anti-Semitism seen
throughout later history. We are told,
“Dispatches were sent by couriers to all the
king’s provinces with the order to destroy, kill
and annihilate all the Jews—young and old, women
and little children…A copy of the text of the
edict was to be issued as law in every province
and made known to the people of every
nationality so that they would be ready for that
day” (Esther 3:13-14).
Upon hearing about this genocidal
plot against his people, Mordecai “tore his
clothes, put on sackcloth and ashes, and went
out into the city, wailing loudly and bitterly”
(Esther 4:1). It is also recorded, “In every
province to which the edict and order of the
king came, there was great mourning among the
Jews, with fasting, weeping and wailing” (Esther
4:3). Esther herself “was in great distress”
(Esther 4:4). Mordecai relays what has happened
to Esther via her servant, and how Haman was at
the center of the plot to kill all the Jews in
Persia. Mordecai “urge[d] her to go into the
king’s presence to beg for mercy and plead with
him for her people” (Esther 4:8).
Just going before the king of
Persia was not an easy thing to do, even for his
queen. Esther relays the message to Mordecai,
“All the king’s officials and the people of the
royal provinces know that for any man or woman
who approaches the king in the inner court
without being summoned the king has but one law:
that he be put to death. The only exception to
this is for the king to extend the gold scepter
to him and spare his life” (Esther 4:11). Esther
knows the gravity of going before King Xerxes.
Yet, Mordecai is sure that she is told: “if you
remain silent at this time, relief and
deliverance for the Jews will arise from another
place, but you and your father’s family will
perish. And who knows but that you have come
to royal position for such a time as this?”
(Esther 4:14, emphasis mine). Mordecai is
confident that the Jewish people will not be
exterminated, but if Esther fails to act there
will be a price to pay as her family will die.
Esther asks Mordecai for the Jews in Susa to
fast for her, as she contemplates what is to be
done.
After three days, Esther
“stood…in front of the king’s hall. The king was
sitting on his royal throne…When he saw Queen
Esther standing in the court, he was pleased
with her and held out to her the gold scepter”
(Esther 5:1-2). Esther was indeed in the right
place at the right time, and King Xerxes is so
happy to see her, that he says, “What is your
request? Even up to half the kingdom, it will be
given you” (Esther 5:3). Rather than telling the
king right then and there the problem her people
were facing, she asks if she can hold a banquet
for the king and Haman (Esther 5:5), and it is
granted.
During this banquet, both King Xerxes and Haman
are found drinking wine. The king once again
asks Esther what her request is, and she asks
them if they can have another banquet the
following day (Esther 5:7). As he leaves,
“Haman…went out in high spirits. But when he saw
Mordecai at the king’s gate and observed that he
neither rose nor showed fear in his presence, he
was filled with rage. Nevertheless, Haman
restrained himself and went home” (Esther
5:9-10). When he arrived home, Haman
“boasted…about his vast wealth” and specifically
“all the ways the king had honored him and how
he had elevated him above the other nobles and
officials” (Esther 5:11). Even more interesting,
Haman specifically says, “I’m the only person
Queen Esther invited to accompany the king to
the banquet she gave” (Esther 5:12). Yet this is
followed by the perturbed remark, “all this
gives me no satisfaction as long as I see that
Jew Mordecai sitting at the king’s gate” (Esther
5:13). Haman’s wife asks that they build a
structure[3]
up to seventy-five cubits high on which to
display Mordecai’s corpse. We are told: “This
suggestion delighted Haman” (Esther 5:14,
emphasis mine).
While Haman continues in his
schemes to destroy the Jews, King Xerxes could
not sleep. As a sure remedy, “he ordered the
book of the chronicles, the record of his reign,
to be brought in and read to him. It was found
recorded there that Mordecai had exposed
Bithgana and Teresh…who had conspired to
assassinate him” (Esther 6:1-2). The king asks
what kind of honor had been bestowed upon
Mordecai for his act of preservation, and is
told that nothing had yet been done (Esther
6:3-4). While this is happening, “Haman is
standing in the court” (Esther 6:5), and upon
entering the king asks him, “What should be done
for the man the king delights to honor?” (Esther
6:6a). And as it is said, “Haman thought to
himself, ‘Who is there that the king would
rather honor than me?’” (Esther 6:6b). Haman was
so self-consumed that it was only natural that
any reward dispensed by the leader of the
Persian Empire could go to him. Haman
tells the king,
“For the man the king delights to
honor, have them bring a royal robe the king has
worn and a horse the king has ridden, one with a
royal crest placed on its head. Then let the
robe and horse be entrusted to one of the king’s
most noble princes. Let them robe the man the
king delights to honor, and lead him on the
horse through the city streets, proclaiming
before him, ‘This is what is done for the man
the king delights to honor!’” (Esther 6:7-9).
Perhaps thinking that he will be
paraded around the city in the Fifth Century
B.C.E equivalent of a ticker-tape parade, King
Xerxes tells Haman, “Get the robe and the horse
and do just as you have suggested for Mordecai
the Jew, who sits at the king’s gate. Do not
neglect anything you have recommended” (Esther
6:10). In a twist of complete irony, rather than
having this honor done to himself, Haman
must parade the man he hates with a
passion—Mordecai—around the city on horseback.
He has to proclaim to the city: “This is what is
done for the man the king delights to honor!”
(Esther 6:11). Humiliated, Haman rushes home and
reports what has taken place (Esther 6:12).
Haman’s wife gives him some sound advice: “you
cannot stand against [Mordecai]—you will surely
come to ruin!” (Esther 6:13), and following this
Haman is prepared to go to Esther’s second
banquet.
As King Xerxes “and Haman went to
dine with Queen Esther…the king again asked,
‘Queen Esther, what is your petition? It will be
given you?’” (Esther 7:1). With her husband and
Haman right there, and with Haman likely unsure
of what is going on having had some wine, Esther
is direct with her response:
“If I have found favor with you,
O king, and if it pleases your majesty, grant me
my life—this is my petition. And spare my
people—this is my request. For I and my people
have been sold for destruction and slaughter and
annihilation. If we had merely been sold as male
and female slaves, I would have kept quiet,
because no such distress would justify
disturbing the king” (Esther 7:3-4).
The king is naturally astonished,
asking Esther, “Who is he? Where is the man who
has dared to do such a thing?” (Esther 7:5).
Esther’s answer is to the point: “The adversary
and enemy is this vile Haman” (Esther 7:6).
Haman probably did not know what
to do, and we can only imagine the kinds of
bodily reactions he had when signaled out as the
culprit against Esther and her people. Did he
vomit? Did his stomach churn? Did he lose his
voice or get a sudden headache? One thing is
certain, as King Xerxes ran out of the banquet
furious, “Haman, realizing that the king had
already decided his fate, stayed behind to beg
Queen Esther for his life” (Esther 7:7b).
Returning to address Haman, the king sees him in
a prostrated position before Esther. All he has
to say is, “Will he even molest the queen while
she is with me in the house?” (Esther 7:8b).
Upon saying this, one of the king’s eunuchs
informs him that a structure seventy-five cubits
high has been built on which Mordecai’s corpse
was supposed to be displayed (Esther 7:9). The
king’s words are direct: “Hang him on it!”
(Esther 7:10). And so “the king’s fury subsided”
(Esther 7:10).
This is normally where the common
Purim play ends the story—with the death
of Haman. Yet the Book of Esther still has three
more chapters, each of which tells us more about
what happened. After Esther has just pleaded for
her life, Mordecai is brought in before King
Xerxes, is formally introduced, and is given
Haman’s estate (Esther 8:1-2). Esther, having
been saved, pleads for the lives of all the Jews
throughout the Persian Empire (Esther 8:3-5),
telling him “For how can I bear to see disaster
fall on my people? How can I bear to see the
destruction of my family?” (Esther 8:6). Having
just called for the death of Haman, the king is
moved to make another ruling:
“Now write another decree in the
king’s name in behalf of the Jews as seems best
to you, and seal it with the king’s signet
ring—for no document written in the king’s name
and sealed with his ring can be revoked” (Esther
8:8).
A new ruling in favor of the Jews was sent
throughout the empire—“Mordecai’s orders to the
Jews, and to the satraps, governors and nobles
of the 127 provinces stretching from India to
Cush[4]”
(Esther 8:9). Mordecai’s ruling was sent in the
languages of all, with the direct approval and
signet stamp of King Xerxes (Esther 8:9b-10).
The Jews were given permission to defend
themselves against any aggression, and a set
date was given “so that the Jews would be ready
on that day to avenge themselves on their
enemies” (Esther 8:13). Far be it from the
Jewish people in the empire being the victims;
they are now authorized to go and root out
potential foes. As a consequence, the text tells
us “many people of other nationalities became
Jews because fear of the Jews had seized them”
(Esther 8:17). Somehow, these people realized
that the Jewish people were going to take the
decree seriously, and whether or not they
“converted,” they certainly did their best to
blend in.
This edict was to be carried out on the 13th of
Adar, and although “the enemies of the
Jews…hoped to overpower them…the tables were
turned and the Jews got the upper hand over
those who hated them” (Esther 9:1). “The Jews
assembled in their cities in all the provinces
of King Xerxes to attack those seeking their
destruction. No one could stand against them,
because the people of all the other
nationalities were afraid of them” (Esther 9:2).
In the day of the Jews’ vengeance, the
administrators of Persia actually helped them
because Mordecai had replaced Haman in Xerxes’
government (Esther 9:3-4)! “The Jews struck down
all their enemies with the sword, killing and
destroying them, and they did what they pleased
to those who hated them” (Esther 9:5), and we
are specifically told that the ten sons of Haman
met their death (Esther 9:6) and whose corpses
were displayed (Esther 9:13-14). A great number
of the Jews’ enemies were killed during this
day.[5]
On the day following, the 14th of Adar, the
Jewish people throughout the Persian Empire
“rested and made it a day of feasting and joy”
(Esther 9:17). The Jews had been saved from
complete obliteration, and their enemies had
been routed out. The people could now live in
peace, wherever they were located, and could
remember how Queen Esther was placed by God in
the Persian court. This festival was to be “a
day for giving presents to each other” (Esther
9:19), and was recorded for posterity by
Mordecai (Esther 9:20). It was to be celebrated
“annually…as the time when the Jews got relief
from their enemies” (Esther 9:22). It was called
Purim, as Haman had “cast the pur
(that is, the lot) for their ruin and
destruction” (Esther 9:23). However, the Jews
throughout the empire had been delivered, and
were specifically admonished to remember this
time of deliverance “every year…at the time
appointed” (Esther 9:27).[6]
As it was decreed:
“These days should be remembered
and observed in every generation by every
family, and in every province and in every city.
And these days of Purim should never cease to be
celebrated by the Jews, nor should the memory of
them die out among their descendants” (Esther
9:28).
The Biblical text is very clear
on the need to celebrate Purim
b’kol dor v’dor or “in all generation and
generation” (my translation). “Esther’s decree
confirmed these regulations about Purim, and it
was written down in the records” (Esther 9:32).
Mordecai is attested to have been
alongside King Xerxes (Ahasuerus) in “all his
acts of power and might,” and that he is listed
“in the book of the annals of the kings of Media
and Persia” (Esther 10:2). He, as Jew who was
once designated for execution, “was second in
rank to King Xerxes, preeminent among the Jews,
and held in high esteem by his many fellow Jews,
because he worked for the good of his people and
spoke up for the welfare of all the Jews”
(Esther 10:3).
The narrative of Esther when
taken as a whole has much more to teach us than
the common Purim play does it justice.
Far be it from Esther being some kind of ironic
comedy, the Book of Esther adroitly displays
themes common to the human condition such as:
love, oppression, goodness, evil, and justice
for those who would harm others. While there is
no direct mention of God in the account, one can
certainly see how the Lord works through the
various characters with the Jewish people in the
end being saved from certain extinction. As
Mordecai clearly told Esther, “perhaps you have
attained to royal position for just such a
crisis” (Esther 4:14, NJPS). You may have used
this sort of expression before and did not know
where it came from. Better yet, perhaps you have
been in the right place at the right time, and
have been able to be used by God for some kind
of important service.
Looking at the place of Esther in
the whole of Scripture, it is obvious that there
are connections between the figure of Haman and
the coming antimessiah/antichrist. Haman was a
man filled with self-love and self-worship. He
could only think about himself. While the text
does not say so explicitly, were the would-be
assassins of King Xerxes in Haman’s close
confidence? Did Haman as a noble of Persia
possibly ever see himself as deposing the king
and being installed as a monarch himself? Haman
was undoubtedly a man consumed with ambition,
and whose negative traits have lived on
throughout history.
Anti-Semitism in the world
pre-dated the arrival of Yeshua the Messiah by
many centuries. The Book of Esther only gives us
a small snapshot of the attitudes that other
people have had toward the Jews. Haman
manipulated King Xerxes to get him to sign the
Jews’ death warrant. But in the end as the Jews
are saved, they stand up for themselves and are
authorized by the government to take care of
their enemies. The Jews do not play the role of
the victim, instead taking preemptive action and
targeting those who would do them harm. What
might this teach us about not only when Jews
stand up for themselves today—here on the other
side of the Holocaust—but when we as Believers
might be tempted to be a little too pacifistic?
What might this teach us about our spirituality
as Messianics, when we might be tempted to
victimize ourselves because we have been treated
badly? What kind of specific actions can we take
to defend ourselves?
Perhaps the most overlooked theme
is the role that Esther plays not only as the
person able to save her people, but as a woman.
Throughout the history of the Bible, it is not
as though God will use women; God uses
women. Esther is one of many significant
heroines in the Scriptures who are used by the
Lord in a mighty way. Yet, far from Esther being
a radical feminist, she works within the rules
laid out by the Persian establishment, winning
the favor of the king. Esther uses her God-given
intellect to lay a clever trap for Haman. And,
at the end Esther is able to introduce King
Xerxes to Mordecai who is then placed in a
position second only to his own. The Book of
Esther should teach every Messianic male to
respect women and highly value the role that
they play, as Esther was directly responsible
not only for the salvation of the Jewish
people—but for eliminating a direct threat to
her husband in Haman. Without Esther, the Jewish
people would have been annihilated and there
would have been no Messiah Yeshua born to save
the world!
As you can see, the Book of
Esther teaches us much, much more than what is
captured in the Purim play. While it is
good to have a laugh, and indeed God gave us as
human beings a sense of humor, Esther is still a
very serious story. Esther is a life and death
account about how easy it was for the Persian
king to be manipulated into thinking that the
Jews must be eliminated. Esther teaches us about
a very old problem in anti-Semitism that
continues to this very day. Yet, it also shows
how God orchestrates things behind the scenes,
and uses willing vessels to accomplish His
salvation history. Like Esther and Mordecai,
each one of us can be used by Him for
circumstances that require a voice of reason, a
temperament of compassion, or a fiery protester
who will stand firm for what is right. What
message does the Book of Esther teach you? Is it
something that will last far behind the holiday
of Purim?
If you have been blessed
by Outreach Israel Ministries and TNN Online this year,
please consider helping us with a Special Holiday Offering.
NOTES
[1]
Duane A. Garrett, ed., et. al.,
NIV Archaeological Study
Bible
(Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2005), 716;
note on Esther 1:1.
[2]
Agag was the deposed king
of the Amalakites, whom King Saul let
live (1 Samuel 15).
[3]
In v. 14 Zeresh says
“Have a gallows built,” yet the Hebrew
source text reads ya’asu etz or
“Let them prepare a tree” (YLT), or
“wood.”
[4]
Or, Ethiopia.
[5]
Esther 9:16 specifically
says that seventy-five thousand were
killed, but this could obviously be a
rounded number. Furthermore, it is not
improbable that being aided by the
Persian government, the Persians
themselves were responsible for
eliminating the Jews’ enemies and any
other criminal elements that plagued
them.
[6]
Heb. v’kizmanam b’kol
shanah v’shanah, “according to their
season, in every year and year” (YLT).
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