Wednesday, October 30, 2013

A Time Like This

Introduction

            I had the opportunity recently to share the Gospel message with one of my customers. She is a single mom of two who was raised in a Jewish home and was hoping to pass along her Jewish heritage to her children. The opportunity presented itself when she started asking questions to learn more about me personally. I told her, among a number of things, that I was a pastor. She was shocked and said, “Really? You’re so nice though.” Ouch! I was a bit speechless but before I could respond, she followed up with, “Well, we’re Jewish.” As such, she had a Jewish perspective of God’s involvement in the life and times of the Jewish people. That gave me the chance to provide her with the perspective that the Old Testament was the introduction to the New Testament and that God’s trajectory from the very beginning was to become incarnate in the person of Jesus Christ and become the once-for-all atonement for humanity’s sin and the means for reconciliation with God. I don’t know if she was convinced by my argument but I was able to give her a perspective of the Old Testament that she hadn’t considered before. As I was driving home, I got to thinking about how she became a customer. I was referred to her by another long-time customer who had been dating her at the time. They are no longer dating but she has since become a great customer. It made me think about all the events that had to occur for us to meet and for me to be in a position to be able to share Christ with her. I am always amazed how God arranges events in such a way so that those who will share the message of Christ, cross paths with those who might be ready or might need to hear that message. It made me feel like God placed me in that position for A Time Like This.

            Having said that, I want to take a moment to acknowledge and thank all of you who took seriously what I had to say over the last few weeks about sharing Christ with someone. I can only assume that some of you did that personally and I praise God for your faithfulness, especially if you haven’t done that before because it is way outside your comfort zone. However, I want to also thank those of you who shared my website with someone. I know that none of you expect special thanks or recognition but I don’t want to take your efforts for granted. Just so you know that as a result of your efforts to share the website with family and/or friends, the site was accessed in five new countries just this past week! That brings the count to people in 75 countries that have accessed the website and received the salvation message of Jesus Christ since this ministry began two years ago! First and foremost, this is because of God’s guidance, providence, and grace but it is also because you have had the courage to share the website. Think about this: You may have been responsible for someone you have never met and may never meet in this life learning about Christ for the first time. It is truly an amazingly wonderful blessing to be in this ministry of Christ with you and I praise God for you. I want to encourage you to continue to share the message of Christ personally at every opportunity and continue to share this website at every opportunity and always remember that perhaps it is for A Time Like This that God has brought you to this site and given you the ability to share its message.

            The Bible is replete with countless stories of God’s divine providence in people’s lives; people in the right place at the right time to advance God’s story of redemptions and salvation. The Old Testament especially is littered with one story after another illustrating God’s providence that works in circuitous ways in the lives of all people to fulfill his promise of provision, protection and salvation for Israel and eventually for all humanity through Christ in the New Testament. We’re going to look at just such a story that involves a Persian king, a Jewish girl that would be Queen, an arrogant, manipulative noble in the king’s court, and a Jewish leader holding the honored position of second in rank to the king and cousin to the Queen. We’ll see how the story places all the main characters in place at precisely the right time to once again demonstrate God’s providence to care for his chosen people.

Subject Text

Esther 4:1-14
            1When Mordecai learned of all that had been done, he tore his clothes, put on sackcloth and ashes, and went out into the city, wailing loudly and bitterly. 2But he went only as far as the king’s gate, because no one clothed in sackcloth was allowed to enter it. 3In every province to which the edict and order of the king came, there was great mourning among the Jews, with fasting, weeping and wailing. Many lay in sackcloth and ashes. 4When Esther’s maids and eunuchs came and told her about Mordecai, she was in great distress. She sent clothes for him to put on instead of his sackcloth, but he would not accept them. 5Then Esther summoned Hathach, one of the king’s eunuchs assigned to attend her, and ordered him to find out what was troubling Mordecai and why. 6So Hathach went out to Mordecai in the open square of the city in front of the king’s gate. 7Mordecai told him everything that had happened to him, including the exact amount of money Haman had promised to pay into the royal treasury for the destruction of the Jews. 8He also gave him a copy of the text of the edict for their annihilation, which had been published in Susa, to show to Esther and explain it to her, and he told him to urge her to go into the king’s presence to beg for mercy and plead with him for her people. 9Hathach went back and reported to Esther what Mordecai had said. 10Then she instructed him to say to Mordecai, 11All 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. But thirty days have passed since I was called to go to the king.” 12When Esther’s words were reported to Mordecai, 13he sent back this answer: “Do not think that because you are in the king’s house you alone of all the Jews will escape. 14For 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?15Then Esther sent this reply to Mordecai: 16Go, gather together all the Jews who are in Susa, and fast for me. Do not eat or drink for three days, night or day. I and my maids will fast as you do. When this is done, I will go to the king, even though it is against the law. And if I perish, I perish.”
Context

            Before we move on, we’re going to need a quick refresher of Israel’s history around the time of Esther’s story. Remember that Israel was conquered by the Babylonian king Nebuchadnezzar, the Israelites were taken into exile, and the temple in Jerusalem was burned to the ground in 586 BC. In 539 BC, Babylon was conquered by the Persian king Cyrus the Great. In 538 BC, Cyrus allowed the Jews to return to what little was left of Israel. I emphasize that Cyrus “allowed” the Jews to return because it is clear that not all the Jews elected to do so. After a succession of kings, Xerxes I became king of Persia in 485 BC and took Esther, a Jewess, as his queen in 479 BC. It is also clear that other Jews played prominent roles in the Persian government when we see Mordecai as second in rank only to Xerxes. The book of Esther reveals that there remained many Jews living within the Persian empire. As was the case with other Empires during that time period, the governmental structure consisted of a royal court, which included the king, of course, and nobles to govern one or more of the provinces within the empire. Like the king, the nobles were considered royalty. Trouble began for the Jews in our subject text when one of the king’s nobles, Haman, was elevated by Xerxes above the other nobles. As was the custom of the day, other officials were to bow to those of higher rank and royalty. However, Mordecai refused to bow to Haman. It wouldn’t have been unusual for Jews to do so out of respect, but Haman was a descendent from the line of Agag king of the Amalekites. The Amalekites were hated enemies of the Jews and long before the time of Esther God instructed the Jews to wipe out the Amalekites (Deut 25:17-19; Note God’s final words of v. 19: “Do not forget!”). There was no way Mordecai was going to bow to Haman. Consequently, Haman concocted a plan hang Mordecai and wipe out the Jews. He sought the permission of the king and all the time while a Jewess (Esther) was queen and second in rank (Mordecai) is also a Jew. However, to circumvent this not so minor detail, Haman told the king that there was a “certain people” that were disobedient to the king’s law but conveniently omitted the fact that it was the Jews he wanted to destroy. Trusting Haman, the king gave him permission with the king’s full authority to do what he saw fit with what Haman referred to as those “certain people.” As a result, Haman sent out a decree to all the other nobles and governors of all the provinces of Persia that the Jews were to be destroyed. This impending doom sets the stage for our subject text.


Text Analysis

            When Mordecai learned of Haman’s treachery in v. 1, he is naturally distraught. Mordecai, in his distress, rends his clothing, probably robes representing his position in the king’s administration, and dons attire and a posture consistent with the dire circumstances at hand. Sackcloth and ashes properly signified a person in grief and distress in that culture. Mordecai takes to the streets and doesn’t hide his grief as he wails bitterly for all to see and hear. Because of his position, Mordecai probably lived in the palace somewhere so he left the palace and traveled the streets mourning the news he’d received. Don’t misunderstand, Mordecai wasn’t just wandering the streets crying, the English translates the Hebrew with “wailing” but that might not get at the true sense of Mordecai’s grief and distress. The word used to describe the intensity of Mordecai’s “wailing” is elsewhere used to describe the scream of Potiphar’s wife alleging Joseph’s sin against her (Gen 39:14). It is the same word used to describe God’s voice as He spoke to Moses from the mountain (Deut 5:22). The word is used to describe the sound that brought down the walls of Jericho (Josh 6:5, 20). It is used to describe the announcement of the Ark of the Covenant reaching the camp of Israel (1 Sam 4:5-6). And the same word is used to describe the reaction of the Egyptians to the death of their firstborn (Ex 11:6; 12:30). In other words, Mordecai did not go unnoticed. Nevertheless, Mordecai did not enter the palace ground when he reached the “king’s gate” in v. 2 because his grief attire wouldn’t allow entrance. However, the expression of his profound grief, no doubt, accomplished one of its intended purposes—it heralded coming doom and grief for all to hear and the king’s gate offered the perfect forum for Mordecai’s announcement. The king’s gate was a meeting place; a place of commerce; a place to debate ideas; a place to settle disputes. It is likely that Mordecai was trying to get the attention of queen Esther in the hopes that he might be able to alert her in some way. Mordecai’s reaction to Haman’s plan of genocide was not isolated. When news of Haman’s decree reached the other provinces, many other Jews, according to v. 3, also dressed in sackcloth and ashes and wept and wailed at the news. “Mordecai was leading a community ritual that extended to every province. Jews everywhere were apparently informed of the threat quickly…While some speculate that Mordecai might have been trying to get the king’s attention, it is obvious to those in the story that he needs Esther’s. The one who is the cause of the problem is also the source of information, the gravity of which Esther needs to understand.”[1]

            Mordecai’s strategy worked as we learn in v. 4 because Esther’s personal servants brought news of Mordecai’s distress to Esther. As a result, Esther sends her servants to Mordecai with a change of clothes so he can enter the palace grounds and meet with her. However, Mordecai refuses the change of clothes. This seems odd if he was trying to get Esther’s attention. Now that he has her attention, he refuses a change of clothes so he can meet with her. Why? As much as donning sackcloth and putting ashes on his head represented his distress, refusing to take it off in order to enter the palace and meet with the queen sent a signal to Esther that the matter was extremely dire. As a consequence, Esther could not simply brush off Mordecai’s condition as a common distress, grief or loss experienced by many in their daily lives. Mordecai’s actions of tearing his clothing and wearing sackcloth were not uncommon during his day as part of the Jewish culture or the Persian culture for that matter. We see this act when a favored child dies, or as a result of a profound sin committed by the community at large, specifically within the Jewish culture, but also when there is a significant military defeat. Therefore, recognizing the seriousness of the matter, Esther sends one of her personal servants in v. 5 to find out why Mordecai is in such distress. “The knowledge that Mordecai and all the other Jews are mourning puts dread into Esther’s heart, for it is a sign that something terrible has happened…If Esther were to learn directly from Mordecai what had happened, he would have to enter the palace precinct…Mordecai refuses to remove his sackcloth for he has not finished making his point…if they are to communicate, it must be through an intermediary who has access to both places.”[2]

            Esther sends her servant, Hathach, to meet with Mordecai in the open square outside the king’s gate according to v. 6. Mordecai tells Hathach in v. 7 of Haman’s plan to exterminate the Jews in the Persian provinces. He goes so far as to tell Hathach that Haman has promised to deposit nearly 400 tons of silver in the royal treasury to pay those assigned to carry out the genocide. “Haman believes apparently that his king will be sufficiently lured by the size of the promised financial donation (‘58-68% of the annual revenue of the empire’) that he will sign his name to anything.”[3] To prove his claim in v. 8, Mordecai provides Hathach with a written copy of Haman’s official edict. However, information isn’t Mordecai’s purpose in meeting with Hathach. It’s not enough to know why Mordecai is distressed. Mordecai tells Hathach that he wants Esther to act on the information; to confront the king and intercede on behalf of the Jews.

            When we read the text we naively assume that Mordecai didn’t fully understand the ramifications of what he was asking Esther to do, but we would be mistaken. Remember that Mordecai was second in rank to the king. He didn’t retain that position without understanding royal protocol. Mordecai knew exactly what he was asking Esther to do. Nevertheless, when Hathach delivers Mordecai’s message in v. 9 to Esther, she sends him back to Mordecai in v. 10 with the message in v. 11 explaining that it is against the law to approach the king unless he summons you. Esther is the perfect representation of all of us when we find ourselves faced with having to do something we are convinced will be either painful or costly—we make excuses for why it “can’t” be done. According to royal protocol, people do not generally have access to the king unless they are summoned by the king or unless the king grants an audience by raising his scepter to whoever is seeking an audience with the king. Otherwise, approaching the king carries with it an immediate death sentence. “Haman had access to the king, but Esther did not. Apparently she does not expect to see the king anytime soon, since he has not summoned her for thirty days. She chooses not to request an audience, perhaps expecting to be ignored. Apparently five years into her marriage, the king’s desire for her had cooled. Or given her mission, perhaps she does not wish to arouse the suspicions of the court by requesting an audience. Whatever her fears, it seems likely that the ruthless King Xerxes will not extend the golden scepter if the queen’s death would be somehow expedient to his other interests.”[4] I suspect that Esther knows Mordecai is right but at this point her fear is still controlling her actions. So she rationalizes her reticence with the excuse of royal protocol.

            Irish statesman and philosopher Sir Edmund Burke once said, “All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.” And in the case of Esther, that “good women do nothing.” The Holocaust has left a stain on our recent history that testifies to this truth. I wonder how things might have been different if a few good men and/or women, especially from the church, had had the courage to stand up to Hitler’s evil. Instead, evil triumphed and more than six million Jews were exterminated. Anti-Semitism has haunted the Jews almost from the beginning. “Fully developed animosity toward Jews results in genocide. This diabolical scheme to exterminate Jews is probably much older than the time of Haman. In Moses’ day, Pharaoh attempted to annihilate (or drastically limit the population growth) of the Hebrew slaves. Edom’s centuries-long hostility toward Judah also probably reflects a kind of anti-Semitism. But the New Testament teaches that this is not merely anti-Jewish hostility, but hatred of the people of God (John 15:18). Its source is satanic: it represents the attempt to defeat God’s redemptive purpose. It afflicts all of God’s people, Christians as well as Jews, and in its final form it is anti-Messiah or anti-Christ (personified as ‘AntiChrist’).”[5]

            Mordecai is not satisfied in v. 12 with Esther’s response. And sends a reply in v. 13 to awaken Esther to a reality that she was choosing to ignore—The longer evil is allowed to reign without opposition, the stronger it becomes and the greater likelihood it will find its way to your own doorstep. In essence, Mordecai reminds Esther that she too is a Jew and that Haman’s edict made no exceptions and that his evil would eventually find its way to her doorstep. Mordecai finally reaches the key element in v. 14 of our subject text with a statement illustrating three profound theological concepts: 1) The endurance of God’s will; 2) God’s providence; and 3) Humanity’s opportunity to cooperate in God’s divine action. Let me show you how it plays out in v. 14: It is God’s will that His chosen people should be protected and survive. In order for that to occur, God would provide someone to be instrumental in their protection and salvation. God then provides the opportunity for someone to participate in his divine action of fulfilling his will by being the instrument by which God protects and saves his people. In essence, this is what Mordecai is saying to Esther: ‘God is going to use someone to save His people even if you don’t do anything. But just think, you might be the very person God will use at A Time Like This! Don’t miss this opportunity to be part of God’s plan of salvation!’ “Mordecai warns her to forsake the illusion that she can hide her identity from a devil like Haman. He also conveys to her a profound confidence in the workings of providence. He understands her remarkable elevation to the throne as provision for the Jews in crisis, but he also recognizes that she may refuse the role of savior of her people. In that case, relief and deliverance for the Jews will arise from another place, whether a heavenly or an earthly kingdom.”[6]

            There is a scene from a movie I watched with my girls when they were little. A would-be princess is attempting to run from the duty to take her place as the heir to the throne of the fictional country of Genovia. On only her fifteenth birthday, she is naturally frightened of the magnitude and responsibility associated with a position as the royal head of an entire country. Just as she is prepared to run from her calling, she finds a letter from her deceased father left for her to be opened on her fifteenth birthday. Here is that particular scene:



            Close your eyes and picture Esther in her royal wardrobe looking at herself in a full-length mirror as her servant conveys Mordecai’s message to her. She is looking at her reflection but what she sees is not a queen but a simple Jewish girl with a chance to make a difference; to save the lives of her people. You can almost hear the words as she considers her frightening circumstances: “Courage is not the absence of fear but rather the judgment that something else is more important than fear. The brave may not live forever but the cautious do not live at all.” Imagine God’s spirit filling her up as she takes a deep breath and turns to her servant in v. 15 with a message. Her message to Mordecai in v. 16 is that she and all those close to her will fast and pray and he is to urge all those in the city to do the same for three days. Thereafter, she will approach the king and leave the consequences of her actions in the hands of God.

Application

            Most of us probably won’t be faced with the same kind of decision that Esther had to make. Esther’s single act of courage defined her from that point until now. We may not be defined by a single act of courage but are instead defined by a combination of many decisions requiring courage over our entire lives. A student who has the opportunity to cheat but doesn’t, begins to be defined as someone with integrity. A man or woman who rejects sexual immorality begins to be defined as someone with principles. A person who takes the time to help someone when they could just as easily ignore that person, begins to be defined as a person of compassion. A person who forgives easily when holding a grudge is understandable, begins to be defined as a person of grace. It is all of these small elements when combined that will define who we are and they are all very important and require a certain degree of courage. There is, however, one single decision requiring tremendous courage that will serve to define us for all eternity. When we are presented with the Gospel message, we have the choice to accept that message or reject that message. Accepting that message, knowing that the future might bring suffering, persecution and maybe even death, will define a person as a child of God and a co-heir of the Kingdom of God along with Christ. Rejecting the message, and embracing “the good life” and all the things this world has to offer (money, sex, and power) will define a person as an enemy of God that will one day lead to being condemned to a life forever separated from God and his children.

            For the last few weeks I have been emphasizing sharing the message of Jesus Christ with anyone and everyone you can either directly or by sharing this website with them and allowing me to do it indirectly. I want to stay with that emphasis in the context of our lesson from Esther. In the same way that Esther was aware of Haman’s condemnation of the Jews, believers in Christ are well aware of the condemnation that awaits those who don’t know Christ or have rejected Christ to this point. You have the choice to either share The Gospel with those people or keep it to yourself. Now I am well aware that many of you reading this lesson are not here in America and do not enjoy the same safety and freedoms that we do. In fact, I recognize that some of you might be risking your lives by sharing the Gospel with others. So what I am asking is no small matter. Nevertheless, I want all of you to consider that even though God can use anyone to bring people to Christ, maybe, just maybe God has placed you in the lives of unbelievers because he hopes you will share God’s message of salvation with them. Maybe you will be the one that can communicate that message best to them. Maybe you are in a position to share this website far and wide so that many people all over the world will have the opportunity to learn about Christ for the first time. Maybe you’ve been wondering if there is more you can do to spread God’s message of salvation. Who knows, maybe God is calling you for A Time Like This.




[1] Leslie C. Allen and Timothy S. Laniak, Ezra, Nehemiah, Esther—New International Biblical Commentary, (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, 2003), p. 225.
[2] Adele Berlin, Esther—The JPS Bible Commentary, (Philadelphia, PA: The Jewish Publication Society, 2001), p. 46.
[3] Willem A. VanGemeren, New International Dictionary of Old Testament Theology & Exegesis, Vol. 1, (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House, 1997), p. 881.
[4] Karen H. Jobes, Esther—The NIV Application Commentary, (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1999), p. 132.
[5] William Sanford Lasor, David Allan Hubbard, Frederic William Bush, Old Testament Survey: The Message, Form, and Background of the Old Testament, (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1996), p. 541.
[6] Walter A. Elwell, Baker Commentary on the Bible, (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books, 1989), p. 330.

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