Esther 7 NLT
We are continuing with our series, “Esther: The Story of Purim”. Part 14 is called, “Poetic Justice”, and we discuss how Esther presents her petition to the king. The question we will ask today is, what happens to those who try to kill God’s people?
1 So the king and Haman went to Queen Esther’s banquet:
Respect:
Esther cordially invited Xerxes and Haman to another banquet. Xerxes returned the honor by gracing Esther with his presence. He made certain that Haman also accepted the invitation and ordered Harbona, the palace charioteer, to pick up Haman on time.
2 On this second occasion, while they were drinking wine, the king again said to Esther, “Tell me what you want, Queen Esther. What is your request? I will give it to you, even if it is half the kingdom!”
Second banquet:
This is the second banquet Esther prepared for her husband indicating that she is reverencing him with double the honor. One banquet would not have been enough to give tribute to so great a king! And Haman is the only other guest to attend, both times! No wonder he was over the moon!
Wine:
In the King James version of the Bible, the word wine is recorded six times in the Book of Esther. The Persians mixed wine with drugs as a truth serum to loosen tongues and gather information (1). Xerxes will later find out that even though he’s used wine as a means to gather information, this method has failed miserably. He was totally in the dark about the most important piece of information of all! His very own wife was a Jew and her foster father was his most faithful servant who saved his life.
The number 6:
In Hebrew, the number six represents man, imperfection and incompleteness (2). As humans, we are flawed, our perspective and methods are finite and incomplete. Only God’s is perfect. His perspective is infinite and His course of action is absolutely faultless.
Not in the know:
Xerxes prides himself in being privy to all of the latest news in the empire. Yet, he cannot fathom what Esther wants or needs. His curiosity was eating him up. Haman is also intrigued but says nothing because he has his “all knowing” facade to protect. So he patiently waits to hear Esther’s request.
Third time Xerxes asked the question:
This is the third time that Xerxes asks Esther about her request. He was willing to give her up to half of his kingdom because he trusted her implicitly.
Esther is offered a coveted position:
Esther would be capable of governing half the kingdom. It would force the other kings in the empire to view her as a strategic ally and one of the wealthiest and most influential people in the empire. As one of his main counselors, Esther would have access to all of the inside information and would participate in the decision making process.
3 Queen Esther replied, “If I have found favor with the king, and if it pleases the king to grant my request, I ask that my life and the lives of my people will be spared.
Stumped:
This is the third time that Esther ignores his offer. Xerxes must have been dumbfounded that she did not jump at this extraordinary opportunity. But, she has something much more pressing to address!
Segments:
Notice that Esther delivers her information in segments so Xerxes can digest what she is relaying. First she asks that her life be saved and then for the lives of her people. But, Xerxes still does not comprehend what she is asking of him. Who would want to kill her? From what people did she come from and why do their lives need to be spared?
4 For my people and I have been sold to those who would kill, slaughter, and annihilate us. If we had merely been sold as slaves, I could remain quiet, for that would be too trivial a matter to warrant disturbing the king.”
Clueless:
Xerxes disassociated himself and Haman from the incident that happened a little over a month ago. He is still clueless as to what she is referring to.
5 “Who would do such a thing?” King Xerxes demanded. “Who would be so presumptuous as to touch you?”
Who are you talking about?
Do you hear what he is saying? Who would concoct such a massive and maniacal plan in order to have the queen killed? Attempting to clear away his mental fog from the wine mixed with drugs, he first deduces that this man is someone he is familiar with. And second, this man is so full of himself that he is totally confident that the king would choose him over his wife! Haman never crossed his mind. Xerxes’ greatest concern was the safety of his wife.
6 Esther replied, “This wicked Haman is our adversary and our enemy.” Haman grew pale with fright before the king and queen.
Wicked, adversary and enemy:
Haman depicted the Jews in three terms; Separatists, Sovereign Citizens, and Expatriates. In fact, he never called them by name.
Esther finally makes it clear to Xerxes who she is speaking of and calls him out by name. Interestingly, she depicted him in three terms; wicked, an adversary and an enemy.
Wicked is defined as a person who is malignant, someone who is morally and ethically evil (3). Esther was communicating to Xerxes that Haman is not at all someone who practices this “Good Religion” as he claims.
Adversary is defined as an opponent, someone who is against you (4). Esther is telling the king that this man is not supporting Xerxes agenda for the empire, but is pushing his own agenda.
Enemy is defined as someone who has deep hatred and is hostile towards another (5). She is saying that Haman may appear to be a friend, but in reality, he plans a hostile invasion of the kingdom.
Even more to the point, Haman is “their” adversary and enemy. He hates the king, his wife, all of their citizens, and especially the Jews.
Lies will come back to bite you:
And if this is the case, it appears that the person he wanted to kill the most was Queen Esther, not Mordecai. In fact, this was not so. Haman had no idea that she was Jewish. He was not as “all knowing” as he claimed to be. But Xerxes didn’t know that. More importantly, Haman’s true character is no longer hidden and the blinders were removed from Xerxes’ eyes.
7 Then the king jumped to his feet in a rage and went out into the palace garden.
Haman, however, stayed behind to plead for his life with Queen Esther, for he knew that the king intended to kill him.
Duped:
Xerxes has learned from his “Vashti experience” to remove himself from a situation before making a knee jerk decision. Walking through the garden, Xerxes rewound the video in his mind and reviews Esther’s words. He recalls Haman depositing 10,000 talents of silver into the treasury even though he was told to keep his money. Then, Haman described the Jews as Separatists, Sovereign Citizens, and Expatriots just waiting to spring up in a rebellion against the king. Convinced that Haman was divinely inspired by the gods with this foresight to keep the peace of the empire, Xerxes handed over his signet ring so the decree to annihilate the Jews was signed, sealed and delivered.
Then he analyzed his relationship with Esther. Right from the beginning, she disclosed his assassination plot by his most trusted guards and saved his life. She doesn't want his money. She’s not climbing the social ladder and she’s not playing political games. Xerxes had to absorb the fact that his most trusted confidant, Haman the astrologer, was not just after the Jews, but also his beloved queen, and intended to overthrow him. He had to accept the fact that he had been duped.
Haman fell into his own trap:
Haman understood how all of this situation appeared to be and that is how Haman knew that the king intended to kill him. It was his “all knowing” facade that would be his trap.
8a In despair he fell on the couch where Queen Esther was reclining, just as the king was returning from the palace garden.
Quaking in his boots:
Haman was so frightened that his knees knocked. He found himself in the state of fear that he attempted to induce upon Mordecai.
8b The king exclaimed, “Will he even assault the queen right here in the palace, before my very eyes?” And as soon as the king spoke, his attendants covered Haman’s face, signaling his doom.
Arrogant and obnoxious:
Xerxes knew that Esther was innocent. Xerxes may have concluded that Haman would consider Esther beneath him because she is a Jew and in his arrogance, proceed to harass her. He may have also witnessed Haman being obnoxious with other women, and just arrived at this conclusion.
The hood:
The king’s attendants immediately thrust a hood on Haman’s face signifying that he was guilty of betraying the king, and judged him to be executed. This is the second time Haman wears a hood. In Esther chapter 6 verse 12 of the King James version, Haman pulls a hood over his head as a sign of mourning after he leads Mordecai’s horse around the city.
Darkness:
The last emotions he would ever feel while living on this earth would be mourning, terror, hopelessness, and condemnation. The enlightenment from the gods that Haman the astrologer claimed to possess suddenly turned dark. The king would never lay eyes on Haman’s face again.
9 Then Harbona, one of the king’s eunuchs, said, “Haman has set up a sharpened pole that stands seventy-five feet tall in his own courtyard. He intended to use it to impale Mordecai, the man who saved the king from assassination.”“Then impale Haman on it!” the king ordered.
On the same page:
Harbona was the eunuch who picked up Haman for the banquet. His name means “driver” (6). He saw the sharpened pole being erected at Haman’s backyard with his very own eyes.
For a king’s eunuch to speak up before the king motioned to them would indeed be a rare thing. These eunuchs were very familiar with Xerxes and knew what to do before he even spoke. Everyone was on the same page. The king and the eunuchs were completely loyal to Esther and postured themselves to protect her.
50 stands for Jubilee:
This version says the pole was 75 ft but in actuality, it was 50 cubits. The 50 is important because it stands for Jubilee (7). On Jubilee, everything that was lost or stolen would be restored.
In this case, we are about to witness a reversal of a law that was not supposed to be disputed. God’s covenant people will miraculously be spared and all of their enemies would be destroyed instead! Haman intended to eventually get rid of the king and become ruler supreme of Persia. Rather, Xerxes became the king used by God to save His people.
10 So they impaled Haman on the pole he had set up for Mordecai, and the king’s anger subsided.
Relief:
This time, it was the king that needed relief from his fury against Haman because of all the damage he has caused. With Haman dead, Xerxes no longer had to be wary of being used as a tool for needless destruction, or of Haman staging a coup and deposing him from his throne, or losing his wife. Haman’s impalement was a public statement to the citizens of Susa and the Persian Empire that this is what happens to a man that displeases the king. This is what happens to those who try to kill God’s people.
Let’s pray:
Father,
You do not tolerate evil. Although the enemy conspires and sets a trap against Your people, they eventually fall into their own pit. They are crushed by their own devices and caught in the web of their own lies. Help me Father, never to harm anyone in any way. In Jesus name, Amen.