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  • The book of Esther. It's one of the more exciting and curious books in the Bible.

  • The story is set over 100 years after the Babylonian exile of the Israelites from their land.

  • And while some Jews did return to Jerusalem, remember Ezra and Nehemiah, many did not.

  • And so the book of Esther is about a Jewish community living in Susa,

  • the capital city of the ancient Persian Empire.

  • The main characters in the story are two Jews,

  • Mordecai and then his niece Esther.

  • And then there's the king of Persia who's something of a drunken pushover in this story.

  • And then there's the Persian official Haman, the cunning villain.

  • Now this is a curious book in the Bible mainly for the fact that God is never even mentioned, not once,

  • which might strike you as kind of odd. I mean isn't the Bible about God.

  • But this is a brilliant technique by the author, who's anonymous by the way.

  • It's an invitation to read this story looking for God's activity,

  • and there are signs of it everywhere.

  • The story is full of very odd quote "coincidences" and ironic reversals,

  • and it all forces you to see God's purpose at work but behind the scenes.

  • Let's just dive into the story.

  • The book opens with the king of Persia throwing two elaborate banquet feasts that last a total of 187 days.

  • And it's all for the grandiose purpose of displaying his greatness and splendor.

  • On the last day of the banquet feast, he's really drunk

  • and he demands that his wife Queen Vashti appear at the party to show off her beauty.

  • She refuses and so in a drunken rage the King deposes Vashti

  • and makes the silly decree that all Persian men should now be the masters of their own homes.

  • Then he holds a beauty pageant because he wants to to find a new queen. This is like a really bad soap opera.

  • But it's right here that we're introduced to Esther and Mordecai.

  • Esther hides her Jewish identity and enters the beauty pageant - and wins!

  • And the king is so obsessed with Esther that he elevates her to become the new queen of Persia.

  • Now after this, and even more serendipitous,

  • is the fact that Mordecai just happens to overhear two Royal Guards plotting to murder the king.

  • And so he informs Esther, who in turn informs the king and Mordecai gets credit for saving the king's life.

  • Now right here, from the beginning, God's not mentioned anywhere,

  • but this all seems providentially ordered.

  • What is it that God's up to? You have to keep reading.

  • We're next introduced to Haman who's not actually a Persian, he's called an Agagite.

  • He's a descendant of the ancient Canaanites (remember 1st Samuel chapter 15).

  • The king elevates Haman to the highest position in the kingdom

  • and he demands that everybody kneel before Haman.

  • Well when Mordecai sees Haman, he refuses to kneel,

  • which of course fills Haman with rage, and when he finds out that Mordecai's

  • And when he finds out that Mordecai's Jewish, Haman successfully persuades the king

  • to enact this crazy decree to destroy all of the Jewish people.

  • And to decide the date of the Jews' annihilation, Haman rolls the dice.

  • A die is called "Pur" in Hebrew. Tuck that away for later.

  • Eleven months later, on the thirteenth of Adar, all the Jews will die.

  • Haman and the king then have a drinking banquet to celebrate their really horrible decision.

  • So the focus now turns to Mordecai and Esther who are the only hope for the Jewish people.

  • They make a plan that Esther's going to reveal her Jewish identity to the king

  • and ask him to reverse the decree.

  • But approaching the king without a royal request is, according to Persian law, an act worthy of death.

  • So in a key statement, Mordecai, he's confident that even if Esther remains silent

  • that deliverance for the Jews will arrive from another place.

  • And then Mordecai wonders aloud, he says "who knows "maybe you become queen for this very moment".

  • Esther responds with bravery and she purposes to go to the king with her amazing words

  • "If I perish, I perish."

  • Then in what unfolds we watch the ironic reversal of all of Haman's evil plans.

  • So Esther hosts the king and Haman at a first banquet

  • and she says she wants to make a special request of both of them

  • at an exclusive banquet the following day.

  • So Haman leaves the banquet totally drunk and he sees Mordecai in the street.

  • He fumes with anger.

  • And he orders that a tall stake be built so that Mordecai can be impaled upon it in the morning.

  • It seems like things can't get any worse for the Jews and for Mordecai.

  • But all of a sudden the story pivots.

  • It just so happens that night the king, he can't sleep.

  • And he has the royal chronicles read to him for good bedtime reading.

  • And he just happens to hear about how Mordecai had saved the king's life.

  • He had totally forgotten.

  • So in the morning, Haman enters to request Mordecai's execution

  • and the king in that moment orders Haman to honor Mordecai publicly for saving his life.

  • So now Haman has to lead Mordecai around the city on a royal horse telling everyone to praise him.

  • Now this moment in the story, it's a pivot for the whole book.

  • It's Haman's downfall and Mordecai's rise to power.

  • Watch how this works.

  • The day after is Esther's 2nd banquet.

  • So the king and Haman arrive.

  • And Esther informs the king that first of all she's Jewish

  • And second that Haman has enacted a decree to murder her,

  • and to murder Mordecai, who saved his life, and to murder all of the Jews.

  • Now the king's had a lot to drink, so when he hears this news he goes into yet one more drunken rage.

  • And he orders that Haman be impaled on the very stake he made for Mordecai.

  • It's ironic and a grizzly way for Haman to go.

  • Haman's execution however, doesn't solve the problem of the decree to kill all of the Jews.

  • So the focus now turns to Esther and Mordecai as they make a plan to reverse the decree.

  • They discover that the King can't revoke a decree that he's already made.

  • So instead the king commissions Mordecai to issue a counter decree.

  • On the appointed day that all of the Jews were supposed to be killed, the 13th of Adar,

  • now the Jews are ordered to defend themselves and to destroy any who plotted to kill them.

  • Then Mordecai, Esther, and Jews everywhere hold banquets and feasts to celebrate this new decree.

  • And Mordecai is elevated to a seat beside the king.

  • Eventually the decree day comes. And the Jews triumph over their enemies.

  • First, they destroy Haman's family and then any other Persian officials who had joined in Haman's plot.

  • And then on a second day, they get permission to destroy any who plotted against them

  • throughout the entire kingdom.

  • This results in joy and celebration as the Jews are rescued from annihilation.

  • The story then tells about how Esther and Mordecai established by decree

  • this annual two-day feast of Purim to commemorate their deliverance from destruction.

  • And the name of the feast comes from Haman's dice, remember "pur-im".

  • The book concludes with a short epilogue as Mordecai is elevated to second in command in the kingdom.

  • And we are told now with his royal greatness and splendor, as the Jews thrive in exile.

  • Now step back.

  • Notice how this whole story has been designed.

  • The story was full of moments of ironic reversal.

  • But we can now see the whole story is structured as ironic reversal.

  • Right down to the details.

  • So the King's splendor and feasts and decrees

  • are mirrored by Mordecai's splendor and feasts and decrees at the end.

  • Esther and Mordecai, they first save the king

  • but now in the end they save all of the Jews.

  • Then you have Haman's elevation and edicts and banquet

  • that gets reversed by Mordecai's elevation and edict and banquet.

  • And then at the center, you have Esther and Mordecai's planning scenes and then Esther's two banquets

  • that act as a frame around the greatest moment of reversal in the whole story:

  • Haman's humiliation and Mordecai's exaltation. Beautiful.

  • Another fascinating feature of this book, is the moral ambiguity of the characters.

  • There's a lot of drinking and anger and sex and murder, of which Mordecai and Esther are a part.

  • Not to mention their violation of many commands in the Torah, like marrying Gentiles or eating impure foods.

  • And so the story's not putting Mordecai and Esther forward as moral example,

  • as if it endorses all of their behavior.

  • But they are put forward as models of trust and hope when things get really bad.

  • And so the book of Esther comes back to that question with which we begin:

  • Why God is not mentioned?

  • The message of this books seems to be that

  • when God seems absent, when His people are in exile, when they're unfaithful to the Torah

  • does this mean that God is done with Israel? Has God abandoned His promises?

  • And the book of Esther says, no.

  • It invites us to see that God can and does work in the real mess and moral ambiguity of human history.

  • and He uses the faithfulness of even morally compromised people to accomplish His purposes.

  • And so the book of Esther asks us to be willing

  • to trust God's providence even when we can't see it working.

  • And to hope that no matter how bad things get, God is committed to redeeming His world.

  • And that's what the book of Esther is all about.

The book of Esther. It's one of the more exciting and curious books in the Bible.

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聖句を読む。エステル (Read Scripture: Esther)

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    sophia に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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