Jamieson-Fausset-Brown Bible Commentary
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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871)
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THE
BOOK OF ESTHER
Commentary by ROBERT JAMIESON
[1] [2]
[3] [4]
[5] [6]
[7] [8]
[9] [10]
CHAPTER 1
Es 1:1-22.
AHASUERUS
MAKES
ROYAL
FEASTS.
1. Ahasuerus--It is now generally agreed among learned men that the
Ahasuerus mentioned in this episode is the Xerxes who figures in
Grecian history.
3. made a feast unto all his princes and his servants--Banquets on so
grand a scale, and extending over so great a period, have been
frequently provided by the luxurious monarchs of Eastern countries,
both in ancient and modern times. The early portion of this festive
season, however, seems to have been dedicated to amusement,
particularly an exhibition of the magnificence and treasures of the
court, and it was closed by a special feast of seven days' continuance,
given within the gardens of the royal palace. The ancient palace of
Susa has been recently disinterred from an incumbent mass of earth and
ruins; and in that palace, which is, beyond all doubt, the actual
edifice referred to in this passage, there is a great hall of marble
pillars. "The position of the great colonnade corresponds with the
account here given. It stands on an elevation in the center of the
mound, the remainder of which we may well imagine to have been
occupied, after the Persian fashion, with a garden and fountains. Thus
the colonnade would represent the 'court of the garden of the king's
palace' with its 'pillars of marble.' I am even inclined to believe the
expression, 'Shushan the palace,' applies especially to this portion of
the existing ruins, in contradistinction to the citadel and the city of
Shushan" [LOFTUS, Chaldaea and Susiana].
6. Where were white, green, and blue hangings, &c.--The fashion, in
the houses of the great, on festive occasions, was to decorate the
chambers from the middle of the wall downward with damask or velvet
hangings of variegated colors suspended on hooks, or taken down at
pleasure.
the beds were of gold and silver--that is, the couches on which,
according to Oriental fashion, the guests reclined, and which were
either formed entirely of gold and silver or inlaid with ornaments of
those costly metals, stood on an elevated floor of parti-colored
marble.
7. they gave them drink in vessels of gold--There is reason to believe
from this account, as well as from
Es 5:6; 7:2, 7, 8,
where the drinking of wine occupies by far the most prominent place in
the description, that this was a banquet rather than a feast.
9. Also Vashti the queen made a feast for the women--The celebration
was double; for, as according to the Oriental fashion, the sexes do not
intermingle in society, the court ladies were entertained in a separate
apartment by the queen.
10-12. On the seventh day, when the heart of the king was merry with
wine--As the feast days advanced, the drinking was more freely indulged
in, so that the close was usually marked by great excesses of revelry.
he commanded . . . the seven chamberlains--These were the eunuchs who
had charge of the royal harem. The refusal of Vashti to obey an order
which required her to make an indecent exposure of herself before a
company of drunken revellers, was becoming both the modesty of her sex
and her rank as queen; for, according to Persian customs, the queen,
even more than the wives of other men, was secluded from the public
gaze. Had not the king's blood been heated with wine, or his reason
overpowered by force of offended pride, he would have perceived that his
own honor, as well as hers, was consulted by her dignified conduct.
13-19. Then the king said to the wise men--These were probably the
magi, without whose advice as to the proper time of doing a thing the
Persian kings never did take any step whatever; and the persons named in
Es 1:14
were the "seven counsellors" (compare
Ezr 7:14)
who formed the state ministry. The combined wisdom of all, it seems,
was enlisted to consult with the king what course should be taken after
so unprecedented an occurrence as Vashti's disobedience of the royal
summons. It is scarcely possible for us to imagine the astonishment
produced by such a refusal in a country and a court where the will of
the sovereign was absolute. The assembled grandees were petrified with
horror at the daring affront. Alarm for the consequences that might
ensue to each of them in his own household next seized on their minds;
and the sounds of bacchanalian revelry were hushed into deep and
anxious consultation what punishment to inflict on the refractory
queen. But a purpose was to be served by the flattery of the king and
the enslavement of all women. The counsellors were too intoxicated or
obsequious to oppose the courtly advice of Memucan was unanimously
resolved, with a wise regard to the public interests of the nation,
that the punishment of Vashti could be nothing short of degradation
from her royal dignity. The doom was accordingly pronounced and made
known in all parts of the empire.
CHAPTER 2
Es 2:1-20.
ESTHER
CHOSEN TO
BE
QUEEN.
1-3. After these things, when the wrath of king Ahasuerus was
appeased--On recovering from the violent excitement of his revelry
and rage, the king was pierced with poignant regret for the unmerited
treatment he had given to his beautiful and dignified queen. But,
according to the law, which made the word of a Persian king
irrevocable, she could not be restored. His counsellors, for their own
sake, were solicitous to remove his disquietude, and hastened to
recommend the adoption of all suitable means for gratifying their royal
master with another consort of equal or superior attractions to those
of his divorced queen. In the despotic countries of the East the custom
obtains that when an order is sent to a family for a young damsel to
repair to the royal palace, the parents, however unwilling, dare not
refuse the honor for their daughter; and although they know that when
she is once in the royal harem, they will never see her again, they are
obliged to yield a silent and passive compliance. On the occasion
referred to, a general search was commanded to be made for the greatest
beauties throughout the empire, in the hope that, from their ranks, the
disconsolate monarch might select one for the honor of succeeding to
the royal honors of Vashti. The damsels, on arrival at the palace, were
placed under the custody of "Hege, the king's chamberlain, keeper of
the women," that is, the chief eunuch, usually a repulsive old man, on
whom the court ladies are very dependent, and whose favor they are
always desirous to secure.
5. Now in Shushan the palace there was a certain Jew--Mordecai held
some office about the court. But his "sitting at the king's gate"
(Es 2:21)
does not necessarily imply that he was in the humble condition of a
porter; for, according to an institute of Cyrus, all state officers
were required to wait in the outer courts till they were summoned into
the presence chamber. He might, therefore, have been a person of some
official dignity. This man had an orphan cousin, born during the exile,
under his care, who being distinguished by great personal beauty, was
one of the young damsels taken into the royal harem on this occasion.
She had the good fortune at once to gain the good will of the chief
eunuch
[Es 2:9].
Her sweet and amiable appearance made her a favorite with all who
looked upon her
(Es 2:15,
last clause). Her Hebrew name
(Es 2:7)
was Hadassah, that is, "myrtle," which, on her introduction into the
royal harem, was changed to Esther, that is, the star Venus, indicating
beauty and good fortune [GESENIUS].
11. Mordecai walked every day before the court of the women's
house--The harem is an inviolable sanctuary, and what is transacted
within its walls is as much a secret to those without as if they were
thousands of miles away. But hints were given him through the eunuchs.
12. Now when every maid's turn was come to go in to king Ahasuerus--A
whole year was spent in preparation for the intended honor. Considering
that this took place in a palace, the long period prescribed, together
with the profusion of costly and fragrant cosmetics employed, was
probably required by state etiquette.
17. the king loved Esther above all the women--The choice fell on
Esther, who found favor in the eyes of Ahasuerus. He elevated her to
the dignity of chief wife, or queen. The other competitors had
apartments assigned them in the royal harem, and were retained in the
rank of secondary wives, of whom Oriental princes have a great number.
he set the royal crown upon her head--This consisted only of a purple
ribbon, streaked with white, bound round the forehead. The nuptials
were celebrated by a magnificent entertainment, and, in honor of the
auspicious occasion, "he made a release to the provinces, and gave
gifts, according to the state of the king." The dotation of Persian
queens consisted in consigning to them the revenue of certain cities,
in various parts of the kingdom, for defraying their personal and
domestic expenditure. Some of these imposts the king remitted or
lessened at this time.
Es 2:21-23.
MORDECAI,
DISCOVERING A
TREASON,
IS
RECORDED IN THE
CHRONICLES.
21. In those days . . . two of the king's chamberlains . . . were
wroth and sought to lay hand on the king, &c.--This secret conspiracy
against the king's life probably arose out of revenge for the divorce
of Vashti, in whose interest, and at whose instigation, these eunuchs
may have acted. Through the vigilance of Mordecai, whose fidelity,
however, passed unnoticed, the design was frustrated, while the
conspirators were condemned to be executed and as the matter was
recorded in the court annals, it became the occasion afterwards of
Mordecai's preferment to the place of power and influence for which, in
furtherance of the national interests of the Jews, divine providence
intended him.
CHAPTER 3
Es 3:1-15.
HAMAN,
ADVANCED BY THE
KING, AND
DESPISED BY
MORDECAI,
SEEKS
REVENGE ON
ALL THE
JEWS.
1. After these things did king Ahasuerus promote Haman . . . set his
seat above all the princes--that is, raised him to the rank of vizier,
or prime confidential minister, whose pre-eminence in office and power
appeared in the elevated state chair appropriated to that supreme
functionary. Such a distinction in seats was counted of vast importance
in the formal court of Persia.
2. all the king's servants, that were in the king's gate, bowed, and
reverenced Haman--Large mansions in the East are entered by a spacious
vestibule, or gateway, along the sides of which visitors sit, and are
received by the master of the house; for none, except the nearest
relatives or special friends, are admitted farther. There the officers
of the ancient king of Persia waited till they were called, and did
obeisance to the all-powerful minister of the day.
But Mordecai bowed not, nor did him reverence--The obsequious homage of
prostration not entirely foreign to the manners of the East, had not
been claimed by former viziers; but this minion required that all
subordinate officers of the court should bow before him with their
faces to the earth. But to Mordecai, it seemed that such an attitude of
profound reverence was due only to God. Haman being an Amalekite, one
of a doomed and accursed race, was, doubtless, another element in the
refusal; and on learning that the recusant was a Jew, whose
nonconformity was grounded on religious scruples, the magnitude of the
affront appeared so much the greater, as the example of Mordecai would
be imitated by all his compatriots. Had the homage been a simple token
of civil respect, Mordecai would not have refused it; but the Persian
kings demanded a sort of adoration, which, it is well known, even the
Greeks reckoned it degradation to express. As Xerxes, in the height of
his favoritism, had commanded the same honors to be given to the
minister as to himself, this was the ground of Mordecai's refusal.
7. In the first month . . . they cast Pur, that is, the lot--In
resorting to this method of ascertaining the most auspicious day for
putting his atrocious scheme into execution, Haman acted as the kings
and nobles of Persia have always done, never engaging in any enterprise
without consulting the astrologers, and being satisfied as to the lucky
hour. Vowing revenge but scorning to lay hands on a single victim, he
meditated the extirpation of the whole Jewish race, who, he knew, were
sworn enemies of his countrymen; and by artfully representing them as a
people who were aliens in manners and habits, and enemies to the rest
of his subjects, he procured the king's sanction of the intended
massacre. One motive which he used in urging his point was addressed to
the king's cupidity. Fearing lest his master might object that the
extermination of a numerous body of his subjects would seriously
depress the public revenue, Haman promised to make up the loss.
9. I will pay ten thousand talents of silver . . . into
the king's treasuries--This sum, reckoning by the Babylonish
talent, will be about £2,119,000; but estimated according to the
Jewish talent, it will considerably exceed £3,000,000, an immense
contribution to be made out of a private fortune. But classic history
makes mention of several persons whose resources seem almost
incredible.
10. the king took his ring from his hand, and gave it unto
Haman--There was a seal or signet in the ring. The bestowment of
the ring, with the king's name and that of his kingdom engraven on it,
was given with much ceremony, and it was equivalent to putting the sign
manual to a royal edict.
12-15. Then were the king's scribes called . . . and there
was written--The government secretaries were employed in making out
the proclamation authorizing a universal massacre of the Jews on one
day. It was translated into the dialects of all the people throughout
the vast empire, and swift messengers were sent to carry it into all
the provinces. On the day appointed, all Jews were to be put to death
and their property confiscated; doubtless, the means by which Haman
hoped to pay his stipulated tribute into the royal treasury. To us it
appears unaccountable how any sane monarch could have given his consent
to the extirpation of a numerous class of his subjects. But such acts
of frenzied barbarity have, alas! been not rarely authorized by
careless and voluptuous despots, who have allowed their ears to be
engrossed and their policy directed by haughty and selfish minions, who
had their own passions to gratify, their own ends to serve.
15. the king and Haman sat down to drink; but the city Shushan was
perplexed--The completeness of the word-painting in this verse is
exquisite. The historian, by a simple stroke, has drawn a graphic
picture of an Oriental despot, wallowing with his favorite in sensual
enjoyments, while his tyrannical cruelties were rending the hearts and
homes of thousands of his subjects.
CHAPTER 4
Es 4:1-14.
MORDECAI AND THE
JEWS
MOURN.
1, 2. When Mordecai perceived all that was done--Relying on the
irrevocable nature of a Persian monarch's decree
(Da 6:15),
Hamman made it known as soon as the royal sanction had been obtained;
and Mordecai was, doubtless, among the first to hear of it. On his own
account, as well as on that of his countrymen, this astounding decree
must have been indescribably distressing. The acts described in this
passage are, according to the Oriental fashion, expressive of the most
poignant sorrow; and his approach to the gate of the palace, under the
impulse of irrepressible emotions, was to make an earnest though vain
appeal to the royal mercy. Access, however, to the king's presence was,
to a person in his disfigured state, impossible: "for none might enter
into the king's gate clothed with sackcloth." But he found means of
conveying intelligence of the horrid plot to Queen Esther.
4. Then was the queen . . . grieved; and . . . sent raiment to . . .
Mordecai--Her object in doing so was either to qualify him for resuming
his former office, or else, perhaps, of fitting him to come near enough
to the palace to inform her of the cause of such sudden and extreme
distress.
5. Then called Esther for Hatach, one of the king's chamberlains, whom
he had appointed to attend upon her--Communication with the women in
the harem is very difficult to be obtained, and only through the medium
of the keepers. The chief eunuch receives the message from the lips of
the queen, conveys it to some inferior office of the seraglio. When
the commission is executed, the subaltern communicates it to the
superintendent, by whom it is delivered to the queen. This chief
eunuch, usually an old man who has recommended himself by a long course
of faithful service, is always appointed by the king; but it is his
interest, as well as his duty, to ingratiate himself with the queen
also. Accordingly, we find Hatach rendering himself very serviceable in
carrying on those private communications with Mordecai who was thereby
enabled to enlist Esther's powerful influence.
8. charge her that she should go in unto the king--This language is
exceedingly strong. As it can scarcely be supposed that Mordecai was
still using authority over Esther as his adopted daughter, he must be
considered as imploring rather than commanding her, in the name of her
brethren and in the name of her God, to make a direct appeal to the
feelings of her royal husband.
11. whosoever, whether man or woman, shall come unto the king into the
inner court, who is not called--The Persian kings surrounded themselves
with an almost impassable circle of forms. The law alluded to was first
enacted by Deioces, king of Media, and afterwards, when the empires
were united, adopted by the Persians, that all business should be
transacted and petitions transmitted to the king through his ministers.
Although the restriction was not intended, of course, to apply to the
queen, yet from the strict and inflexible character of the Persian laws
and the extreme desire to exalt the majesty of the sovereign, even his
favorite wife had not the privilege of entree, except by special
favor and indulgence. Esther was suffering from the severity of this
law; and as, from not being admitted for a whole month to the king's
presence, she had reason to fear that the royal affections had become
alienated from her, she had little hope of serving her country's cause
in this awful emergency.
13, 14. Then Mordecai commanded to answer Esther--His answer was to
this effect, that Esther need not indulge the vain hope she would, from
her royal connection, escape the general doom of her race--that he
(Mordecai) confidently believed God would interpose, and, if not
through her, by some other deliverer, save His people; but that the
duty evidently devolved on her, as there was great reason to believe
that this was the design of Providence in her elevation to the dignity
of queen, and therefore that she should go with a courageous heart, not
doubting of success.
16. so will I go in unto the king, which is not according to the
law--The appeal of Mordecai was irresistible. Having appointed a
solemn fast of three days, she expressed her firm resolution to make an
appeal to the king, though she should perish in the attempt.
I . . . and my maidens--It is probable that she had surrounded herself
with Jewish maidens, or women who were proselytes to that religion.
CHAPTER 5
Es 5:1-14.
ESTHER
INVITES THE
KING AND
HAMAN TO A
BANQUET.
1. Esther put on her royal apparel--It was not only natural, but, on
such occasions, highly proper and expedient, that the queen should
decorate herself in a style becoming her exalted station. On ordinary
occasions she might reasonably set off her charms to as much advantage
as possible; but, on the present occasion, as she was desirous to
secure the favor of one who sustained the twofold character of her
husband and her sovereign, public as well as private considerations--a
regard to her personal safety, no less than the preservation of her
doomed countrymen--urged upon her the propriety of using every
legitimate means of recommending herself to the favorable notice of
Ahasuerus.
the king sat upon his royal throne in the royal house, over against
the gate of the house--The palace of this Persian king seems to have
been built, like many more of the same quality and description, with an
advanced cloister, over against the gate, made in the fashion of a
large penthouse, supported only by one or two contiguous pillars in the
front, or else in the center. In such open structures as these, in the
midst of their guards and counsellors, are the bashaws, kadis, and
other great officers, accustomed to distribute justice, and transact
the public affairs of the provinces
[SHAW, Travels]. In such a
situation the Persian king was seated. The seat he occupied was not a
throne, according to our ideas of one, but simply a chair, and so
high that it required a footstool. It was made of gold, or, at least,
inlaid with that metal, and covered with splendid tapestry, and no one
save the king might sit down on it under pain of death. It is often
found pictured on the Persepolitan monuments, and always of the same
fashion.
2. the king held out to Esther the golden sceptre that was in his
hand--This golden scepter receives an interesting illustration from
the sculptured monuments of Persia and Assyria. In the bas-reliefs of
Persepolis, copied by Sir Robert Ker Porter, we see King Darius
enthroned in the midst of his court, and walking abroad in equal state;
in either case he carries in his right hand a slender rod or wand,
about equal in length to his own height, ornamented with a small knob
at the summit. In the Assyrian alabasters, those found at Nimroud as
well as those from Khorsabad, "the great king" is furnished with the
same appendage of royalty, a slender rod, but destitute of any knob or
ornament. On the Khorsabad reliefs the rod is painted red, doubtless to represent gold; proving that "the golden sceptre" was a simple
wand of that precious metal, commonly held in the right hand, with one
end resting on the ground, and that whether the king was sitting or
walking. "The gold sceptre" has received little alteration or
modification since ancient times
[GOSS]. It was extended to Esther as a
token not only that her intrusion was pardoned, but that her visit was
welcome, and a favorable reception given to the suit she had come to
prefer.
touched the top of the sceptre--This was the usual way of acknowledging
the royal condescension, and at the same time expressing reverence and
submission to the august majesty of the king.
3. it shall be even given thee to the half of the kingdom--This mode of
speaking originated in the Persian custom of appropriating for the
maintenance of great men, or royal favorites, one city for his bread,
another for his wine, a third for his clothes, &c., so that the phrase
denoted great liberality.
4. let the king and Haman come this day unto the banquet that I have
prepared for him--There was great address in this procedure of
Esther's; for, by showing such high respect to the king's favorite, she
would the better insinuate herself into the royal affections; and gain
a more suitable opportunity of making known her request.
8. let the king and Haman come to the banquet that I shall prepare--The
king ate alone, and his guests in an adjoining hall; but they were
admitted to sit with him at wine. Haman being the only invited guest
with the king and queen, it was natural that he should have been elated
with the honor.
CHAPTER 6
Es 6:1-14.
AHASUERUS
REWARDS
MORDECAI FOR
FORMER
SERVICE.
1. the king . . . commanded to bring the book of records of the
chronicles--In Eastern courts, there are scribes or officers whose
duty it is to keep a journal of every occurrence worthy of notice. A
book of this kind, abounding with anecdotes, is full of interest. It
has been a custom with Eastern kings, in all ages, frequently to cause
the annals of the kingdom to be read to them. It is resorted to, not
merely as a pastime to while away the tedium of an hour, but as a
source of instruction to the monarch, by reviewing the important
incidents of his own life, as well as those of his ancestors. There
was, therefore, nothing uncommon in this Persian monarch calling for
the court journal. But, in his being unable to sleep at that
particular juncture, in his ordering the book then to be read to him,
and in his attention having been specially directed to the important
and as yet unrewarded services of Mordecai, the immediate interposition
of Providence is distinctly visible.
4. Now Haman was come into the outward court--This was early in the
morning. It is the invariable custom for kings in Eastern countries to
transact business before the sun is hot, often in the open air, and so
Haman was in all probability come officially to attend on his master.
6. What shall be done unto the man whom the king delighteth to
honour?--In bestowing tokens of their favor, the kings of Persia do
not at once, and as it were by their own will, determine the kind of
honor that shall be awarded; but they turn to the courtier standing
next in rank to themselves, and ask him what shall be done to the
individual who has rendered the service specified; and according to the
answer received, the royal mandate is issued.
8. the royal apparel . . . which the king useth to wear--A coat which
has been on the back of a king or prince is reckoned a most honorable
gift, and is given with great ceremony.
the horse that the king rideth upon--Persia was a country of horses,
and the highbred charger that the king rode upon acquired, in the eyes
of his venal subjects, a sort of sacredness from that circumstance.
and the crown royal which is set upon his head--either the royal
turban, or it may be a tiara, with which, on state processions, the
horse's head was adorned.
9. delivered to the hand of one of the king's most noble princes . . .
array the man--On grand and public occasions, the royal steed is led by
the highest subject through the principal streets of the city, a
ceremony which may occupy several hours.
11. Then Haman took, &c.--This sudden reverse, however painful to
Haman as an individual, is particularly characteristic of the Persian
manners.
14. came the king's chamberlains, and hasted to bring Haman unto the
banquet that Esther had prepared--Besides the invitation given to an
entertainment, a message is always sent to the guests, immediately at
the day and hour appointed, to announce that all things are ready.
CHAPTER 7
Es 7:1-6.
ESTHER
PLEADS FOR
HER
OWN
LIFE AND THE
LIFE OF
HER
PEOPLE.
4. we are sold, I and my people, to be destroyed--that is, by the
cruel and perfidious scheme of that man, who offered an immense sum of
money to purchase our extermination. Esther dwelt on his contemplated
atrocity, in a variety of expressions, which both evinced the depth of
her own emotions, and were intended to awaken similar feelings in the
king's breast.
But if we had been sold for bondmen and bondwomen, I had held my
tongue--Though a great calamity to the Jews, the enslavement of that
people might have enriched the national treasury; and, at all events,
the policy, if found from experience to be bad, could be altered. But
the destruction of such a body of people would be an irreparable evil,
and all the talents Haman might pour into the treasury could not
compensate for the loss of their services.
Es 7:7-10.
THE
KING
CAUSES
HAMAN TO
BE
HANGED ON
HIS
OWN
GALLOWS.
7. he saw that there was evil determined against him by the king--When
the king of Persia orders an offender to be executed, and then rises
and goes into the women's apartment, it is a sign that no mercy is to
be hoped for. Even the sudden rising of the king in anger was the same
as if he had pronounced sentence.
8. Haman was fallen upon the bed whereon Esther was--We do not know
the precise form of the couches on which the Persians reclined at
table. But it is probable that they were not very different from those
used by the Greeks and Romans. Haman, perhaps, at first stood up to beg
pardon of Esther; but driven in his extremity to resort to an attitude
of the most earnest supplication, he fell prostrate on the couch where
the queen was recumbent. The king returning that instant was fired at
what seemed an outrage on female modesty.
they covered Haman's face--The import of this striking action is, that
a criminal is unworthy any longer to look on the face of the king, and
hence, when malefactors are consigned to their doom in Persia, the
first thing is to cover the face with a veil or napkin.
9. Harbonah, one of the chamberlains, said before the king, Behold
also, the gallows--This eunuch had probably been the messenger sent
with the invitation to Haman, and on that occasion had seen the
gallows. The information he now volunteered, as well it may be from
abhorrence of Haman's cold-blooded conspiracy as from sympathy with his
amiable mistress, involved with her people in imminent peril.
10. So they hanged Haman on the gallows that he had prepared for
Mordecai--He has not been the only plotter of mischief whose feet have
been taken in the net which they hid
(Ps 9:15).
But never was condemnation more just, and retribution more merited,
than the execution of that gigantic criminal.
CHAPTER 8
Es 8:1-6.
MORDECAI
ADVANCED.
1. On that day did the king Ahasuerus give the house of Haman . . .
unto Esther--His property was confiscated, and everything belonging
to him, as some compensation for the peril to which she had been
exposed.
Mordecai came before the king--that is, was introduced at court and
appointed one of the seven counsellors. Esther displayed great prudence
and address in acknowledging Mordecai's relation to her at the moment
most fitted to be of eminent service to him.
2. the king took off his ring, . . . and gave it unto Mordecai--By that
act transferring to him all the power and authority which the ring
symbolized, and promoting him to the high dignity which Haman had
formerly filled.
Esther set Mordecai over the house of Haman--as her steward or factor,
to manage that large and opulent estate which had been assigned to her.
3. Esther spake yet again before the king, and fell down at his
feet--The king was then not reclining at table, but sitting on a divan,
most probably in the Persian attitude, leaning back against the
cushions, and one foot under him.
besought him with tears to put away the mischief of Haman--that is, to
repeal the sanguinary edict which, at the secret instigation of Haman,
had been recently passed
(Es 3:12).
4. Then the king held out the golden sceptre toward Esther--in token
that her request was accepted, and that she needed no longer to
maintain the humble attitude of a suppliant.
5, 6. reverse the letters devised by Haman . . . to destroy the
Jews--The whole conduct of Esther in this matter is characterized
by great tact, and the variety of expressions by which she describes
her willing submission to her royal husband, the address with which she
rolls the whole infamy of the meditated massacre on Haman, and the
argument she draws from the king's sanction being surreptitiously
obtained, that the decree should be immediately reversed--all indicate
the queen's wisdom and skill, and she succeeded in this point also.
Es 8:7-14.
AHASUERUS
GRANTS TO THE
JEWS TO
DEFEND
THEMSELVES.
8. Write . . . in the king's name, and seal it with the king's
ring--Hence it is evident that the royal ring had a seal in it,
which, being affixed to any document, authenticated it with the stamp
of royal authority.
which . . . may no man reverse--This is added as the
reason why he could not comply with the queen's request for a direct
reversal or recall of Haman's letters; namely, that the laws of the
Medes and Persians, once passed, were irrevocable.
10. sent . . . by posts . . . and riders on . . . camels, and young
dromedaries--The business being very urgent, the swiftest kind of
camel would be employed, and so the word in the original denotes the
wind-camel. Young dromedaries also are used to carry expresses, being
remarkable for the nimbleness and ease of their movements. Animals of
this description could convey the new rescript of Ahasuerus over the
length and breadth of the Persian empire in time to relieve the unhappy
Jews from the ban under which they lay.
11-13. the king granted the Jews . . . to stand for their life . . .
to slay . . . all . . . that would assault them--The fixed and
unalterable character claimed for Persian edicts often placed the king
in a very awkward dilemma; for, however bitterly he might regret things
done in a moment of haste and thoughtlessness, it was beyond even his
power to prevent the consequences. This was the reason on account of
which the king was laid under a necessity not to reverse, but to issue
a contradictory edict; according to which it was enacted that if,
pursuant to the first decree, the Jews were assaulted, they might, by
virtue of the second, defend themselves and even slay their enemies.
However strange and even ridiculous this mode of procedure may appear,
it was the only one which, from the peculiarities of court etiquette in
Persia, could be adopted. Instances occur in sacred
(Da 6:14),
no less than profane, history. Many passages of the Bible attest the
truth of this, particularly the well-known incident of Daniel's being
cast into the den of lions, in conformity with the rash decree of
Darius, though, as it afterwards appeared, contrary to the personal
desire of that monarch. That the law of Persia has undergone no change
in this respect, and the power of the monarch not less immutable,
appear from many anecdotes related in the books of modern travellers
through that country.
Es 8:15-17.
MORDECAI'S
HONORS, AND THE
JEWS'
JOY.
15. Mordecai went out . . . in royal apparel--He was invested with the
khelaat of official honor. A dress of blue and white was held in great
estimation among the Persians; so that Mordecai, whom the king
delighted to honor, was in fact arrayed in the royal dress and
insignia. The variety and the kind of insignia worn by a favorite at
once makes known to the people the particular dignity to which he has
been raised.
CHAPTER 9
Es 9:1-19.
THE
JEWS
SLAY
THEIR
ENEMIES WITH THE
TEN
SONS OF
HAMAN.
1. in the twelfth month, . . . on the thirteenth day of the same--This
was the day which Haman's superstitious advisers had led him to select
as the most fortunate for the execution of his exterminating scheme
against the Jews
[Es 3:7].
2. The Jews gathered themselves . . . no man could withstand them--The
tables were now turned in their favor; and though their enemies made
their long meditated attack, the Jews were not only at liberty to act
on the defensive, but through the powerful influence enlisted on their
side at court together with the blessing of God, they were everywhere
victorious.
the fear of them fell upon all people--This impression arose not alone
from the consciousness of the all-powerful vizier being their
countryman, but from the hand of God appearing so visibly interposed to
effect their strange and unexpected deliverance.
5-16. Thus the Jews smote all their enemies--The effect of the two
antagonistic decrees was, in the meantime, to raise a fierce and bloody
war between the Jews and their enemies throughout the Persian empire;
but through the dread of Esther and Mordecai, the provincial governors
universally favored their cause, so that their enemies fell in great
numbers.
13. let it be granted to the Jews which are in Shushan to do
to-morrow also according unto this day's decree--Their enemies
adroitly concealing themselves for the first day might have returned on
the next, when they imagined that the privilege of the Jews was
expired; so that that people would have been surprised and slain. The
extension of the decree to another day at the queen's special desire
has exposed her to the charge of being actuated by a cruel and
vindictive disposition. But her conduct in making this request is
capable of full vindication, on the ground (1) that Haman's sons having
taken a prominent part in avenging their father's fall, and having been
previously slain in the melee, the order for the exposure of
their dead bodies on the gallows was only intended to brand them with
public infamy for their malice and hatred to the Jews; and (2) the
anti-Jewish party having, in all probability, been instigated through
the arts or influence of Haman to acts of spiteful and wanton
oppression, the existing state of feeling among the natives required
some vigorous and decisive measure to prevent the outbreak of future
aggressions. The very circumstances of their slaying 800 eight hundred
Jews in the immediate vicinity of the court
(v. 6, 15)
is a proof of the daring energy and deep-rooted malice by which
multidues were actuated against the Jews. To order an extension,
therefore, of the permissive edict to the Jews to defend themselves,
was perhaps no more than affording an opportunity for their enemies to
be publicly known. Though it led to so awful a slaughter of
seventy-five thousand of their enemies, there is reason to believe that
these were chiefly Amalekites, in the fall of whom on this occasion,
the prophecies
(Ex 17:14, 16;
De 25:19)
against that doomed race were accomplished.
19. a day of . . . feasting . . . of sending portions one to
another--The princes and people of the East not only invite their
friends to feasts, but it is their custom to send a portion of the
banquet to those who cannot well come to it, especially their
relations, and those who are detained at home in a state of sorrow or
distress.
Es 9:20-32.
THE
TWO
DAYS OF
PURIM
MADE
FESTIVAL.
20. Mordecai wrote these things--Commentators are not agreed what is
particularly meant by "these things"; whether the letters following, or
an account of these marvellous events to be preserved in the families
of the Jewish people, and transmitted from one generation to another.
26. they called these days Purim after the name of Pur--"Pur," in the
Persian language, signifies "lot"; and the feast of Purim, or lots, has
a reference to the time having been pitched upon by Haman through the
decision of the lot. In consequence of the signal national deliverance
which divine providence gave them from the infamous machinations of
Haman, Mordecai ordered the Jews to commemorate that event by an
anniversary festival, which was to last for two days, in accordance
with the two days' war of defense they had to maintain. There was a
slight difference in the time of this festival; for the Jews in the
provinces, having defended themselves against their enemies on the
thirteenth, devoted the fourteenth to festivity; whereas their brethren
in Shushan, having extended that work over two days, did not observe
their thanksgiving feast till the fifteenth. But this was remedied by
authority, which fixed the fourteenth and fifteenth of Adar. It became
a season of sunny memories to the universal body of the Jews; and, by
the letters of Mordecai, dispersed through all parts of the Persian
empire, it was established as an annual feast, the celebration of which
is kept up still. On both days of the feast, the modern Jews read over
the Megillah or Book of Esther in their synagogues. The copy read
must not be printed, but written on vellum in the form of a roll; and
the names of the ten sons of Haman are written on it a peculiar manner,
being ranged, they say, like so many bodies on a gibbet. The reader
must pronounce all these names in one breath. Whenever Haman's name is
pronounced, they make a terrible noise in the synagogue. Some drum with
their feet on the floor, and the boys have mallets with which they
knock and make a noise. They prepare themselves for their carnival by a
previous fast, which should continue three days, in imitation of
Esther's; but they have mostly reduced it to one day
[JENNINGS, Jewish Antiquities].
CHAPTER 10
Es 10:1-3.
AHASUERUS'
GREATNESS.
MORDECAI'S
ADVANCEMENT.
1. Ahasuerus laid a tribute--This passage being an appendix to the
history, and improperly separated from the preceding chapter, it might
be that the occasion of levying this new impost arose out of the
commotions raised by Haman's conspiracy. Neither the nature nor the
amount of the tax has been recorded; only it was not a local tribute,
but one exacted from all parts of his vast empire.
2. the declaration of the greatness of Mordecai--The experience of
this pious and excellent Jew verified the statement, "he that humbleth
himself shall be exalted"
[Mt 23:12;
Lu 14:11; 18:14].
From sitting contentedly at the king's gate, he was raised to the
dignity of highest subject, the powerful ruler of the kingdom. Acting
uniformly on the great principles of truth and righteousness, his
greatness rested on a firm foundation. His faith was openly avowed, and
his influence as a professor of the true religion was of the greatest
usefulness for promoting the welfare of the Jewish people, as well as
for advancing the glory of God.
3. For Mordecai . . . was next unto King Ahasuerus . . . great among
the Jews, &c.--The elevation of this pious and patriotic Jew to the
possession of the highest official power was of very great importance
to the suffering church at that period; for it enabled him, who all
along possessed the disposition, now to direct the royal influence and
authority in promoting the interests and extending the privileges of
his exiled countrymen. Viewed in this light, the providence of God is
plainly traceable in all the steps that led to his unexpected
advancement. This providential interposition is all the more
remarkable, that, as in the analogous case of Joseph, it was displayed
in making the ordinary and natural course of things lead to the most
marvellous results. To use the pious words of an eminent prelate,
"though in the whole of this episode there was no extraordinary
manifestation of God's power, no particular cause or agent that was in
its working advanced above the ordinary pitch of nature, yet the
contrivance, and suiting these ordinary agents appointed by God, is in
itself more admirable than if the same end had been effected by means
that were truly miraculous." The sudden advancement of individuals from
obscurity and neglect to the highest stations of power and influence
is, in Eastern courts, no extraordinary nor infrequent occurrence. The
caprice, the weak partiality of the reigning sovereign, or, it may be,
his penetrating discernment in discovering latent energy and talent,
has often "raised the beggar from the dunghill, and set him among
princes"
[1Sa 2:8].
Some of the all-powerful viziers in modern Persia, and not a few of the
beys in Egypt, have been elevated to their respective dignities in this
manner. And, therefore, the advancement of "Mordecai, who was next unto
Ahasuerus, and great among the Jews," was in perfect accordance with
the rapid revolution of "the wheel of fortune" in that part of the
world. But, considering all the circumstances of Mordecai's
advancement, not only his gaining the favor of the king, but his being
"accepted of the multitude of his brethren, it was beyond all
controversy the doing of the Lord, and was truly marvellous in his
people's eyes."
accepted of the multitude of his brethren--Far from being envious
of his grandeur, they blessed God for the elevation to official power
of so good a man.
speaking peace to all his seed--While his administration was
conducted with a mild and impartial hand, he showed a peculiarly warm
and friendly feeling to all his countrymen when asked his counsel or
his aid.
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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871)
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