Monday, June 29, 2020

Esther 2 - - Esther, Mordecai, Haman



In today's post, we will look at some other key players in the Esther story.  Let's start with the heroine.

Esther
Her name is a derivative of a Babylonian word (Ishtahar) which means “beautiful as the moon”. Hebrew is “astir”, meaning “hidden or covering or concealed”.  She is also called Hadassah, which means “Myrtle tree”, a tree which features prominently in the Jewish Feast of Sukkot (Tabernacles).  Myrtle was also used in Jewish marriage ceremonies, where the branches and leaves were worn as a garland crown.  Myrtle trees are plentiful around Jerusalem, and are often believed to represent Jerusalem, in the scriptures.  (See Zechariah 1:8-11.)
Esther comes on the scene in the seventh year of Ahasuerus' reign, about four years after Vashti has been deposed/divorced.  Esther is the ward of her first cousin, Mordecai, a high-ranking official in the Persian Empire.  Both are of the tribe of Benjamin, although both conceal their Jewish heritage through most of the story.
Esther represents the bride of Messiah, believers of all tribes and nations.  Not only that, she represents a surrendered and obedient Bride, one willing to risk her very life to accomplish the will of God.

Mordecai
Mordecai represents the True Messiah, the Second Adam, who has triumphed over His ancient enemy, Satan, and will rule and reign over Heaven and Earth forever and ever.  Mordecai's ancestors were among those who were taken captive by Nebuchadnezzar several decades earlier (Esther 2:6).  While many Jews returned in three waves to Jerusalem after King Cyrus the Great, through his appointed regent, Darius the Mede, gave them permission to go1 - - - the family of Mordecai did not return.  He became a high-ranking official in the Persian government of his day.  This is reflected by the note in Esther 2:19, that he sat at the king's gate.  This is where the high-ranking officials of the realm congregated. (See Nehemiah 11:1.)
Many Jews did not return to Jerusalem, in any of the commonly acknowledged 3 waves of return, over a 110-year period.  Even in Jesus' day, the region of Babylon remained heavily populated by Jews.  Babylon was referred to as "the East", even though the area is more to the northeast of Jerusalem.  Hence, the "wise men" or Magi, who came to bring the infant Jesus gifts, were likely Babylonian Jews, whose ancestors, like Mordecai, never left the region.  (I digress...)

It is important to look at Mordecai's family history.  We are told in Esther 2:5 that he descended from Kish, a Benjamite.
Mordecai was a humble, righteous man, who did his duty to Esther and to the king without seeking recognition or reward.  He was also discerning.  He recognized early on the danger all the Jews of the Persian empire faced if Haman were not stopped; he also recognized Esther's divinely-appointed, pivotal role in preventing their annihilation.

Haman
Although like Mordecai in that both were high-ranking governmental officials, the similarities between these two men ended there.  Introduced in Esther 3, Haman was a deceiver, a vain and arrogant man, always seeking his own promotion, regardless of the harm he caused others.  His desire for advancement was so extreme, it blinded him to the most basic truths and rules of conduct.  He is the villain of the Esther story, providing the conflict to the story's plot.  While he presents himself as a loyal servant to the King, he is merely using the king for his own evil purposes.  Haman represents in this story of God's redemption the False Messiah, the concealed False Messiah.  False Messiah is the Jewish term for the Antichrist.

Let's dig a little deeper into this business of Who's Yo Daddy?, and why it matters to this story.

Take a look with me back at 1 Samuel 9:1-2.  Who was Kish's son?  That's right, Saul, the first king of Israel.  By all appearances, Saul would have made a fine king.  Unfortunately, he turned to disobedience, and his disobedience to God figures into the Esther story.  Now, let's look at 1 Samuel 15:1-11.  Of particular interest is verse 9.

9Saul and his troops spared Agag, along with the best of the sheep and cattle, the fat calvesb and lambs, and the best of everything else. They were unwilling to destroy them ...

Do you see it?  Saul is a picture of Adam, the first man and ruler of Gan Eden (the Garden of Eden).  Adam and Saul failed to uphold righteousness.  God had commanded Saul to destroy utterly all of the Amalekites, including Agag, their king.  When Haman is called an Agagite in Esther 3:1, it means he was a descendant of Agag, who is a picture of Satan.
Once again, history repeats.  In the Esther story, we have an Agagite trying to destroy the Jews.
HAD SAUL DONE AS GOD COMMANDED HIM, THERE WOULD HAVE BEEN NO AGAGITES, meaning, no Haman, no crisis, no pending extermination of the Jewish people, hundreds of years after Saul, in the 5th century B.C.

When we consciously disobey God, thinking we know better than He (or for whatever god-forsaken justification) we rarely can foresee the long-range consequences of our disobedience.  Thankfully, He allowed descendants of Kish to redeem that family name through their submissive obedience, because both Mordecai and Esther surrendered to His leading at this critical point in Jewish history.

As Mordecai pointed out to Esther (Esther 4:13-14), if she had said, "No!", God would have raised up someone else to deliver His chosen people.  Both Mordecai and Esther were devout Jews, who were well aware of the covenants which God had made with Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and David. They knew He would keep His word, which declared He would not allow His chosen ones to be utterly destroyed.  The question was, "Would Esther and Mordecai fulfill the purpose to which God had called them, in this cosmic battle?"  Would they embrace the task, risking their very lives for Him? Or, would they decline, and miss the blessing God had for them, even if that blessing was in the form of death?

Here is something that Christian martyrs have understood for two milennia, whether you are talking about first century Christian martyrs or those ruthlessly killed by Muslims in Nigeria over the past two years. 2 Yes, this genocide is still going on.  If Christians are living in the center of God's will, fulfilling His purpose for them, then death is not a punishment.  They understand that following hard after Jesus Christ, their Savior, is better than physical life and that, in the end, physical death is ... irrelevant.

Esther knew this truth too.  Not only did she know it, she acted on it.  Ultimately, her acts of submission and obedience caused glad tidings of freedom and salvation to be broadcast far and wide across the Persian Empire (Esther 8:9-14).

Sources:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Return_to_Zion

2  https://www.christianpost.com/news/fifty-christians-burned-alive-in-pastors-home-in-nigeria-78303/

4 comments:

  1. Wonderful exposition and explanation here. Isn't it funny how history does indeed seem to repeat itself through the centuries. Who might represent Mordecai and Haman today?

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    1. Hi J.D., thanks for stopping by! That is a great question, but no matter who I postulated in an answer, controversy would ensue! :)

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  2. THank, Gena! Love the history and comparisons you bring out in your explanations. Great job!

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  3. Hi Stephanie, thanks for stopping by and sharing this series! Much appreciated!

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