The Queen and I
Discovery Books
WORD BOOKS, publisher Waco, Texas
THE QUEEN AND I
Copyright @ 1977 by Ray C. Stedman. All rights
reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, except for brief
quotations in reviews, without the written permission of the publisher.
Quotations
from the Revised Standard Version of the Bible, copyrighted 1946, 1952, @ 1971,
1973 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the
Churches of Christ in the United States of America, are reprinted by
permission.
Discovery Books are published by Word Books,
Publisher, in cooperation with Discovery Foundation, Palo Alto, California.
ISBN 0-8499-2807-9 Library
of Congress catalog card number: 77-075471 Printed in the United States of
America
CONTENTS
Chapter 1 First:
A Key
Chapter 2 A
Pair of Queens
Chapter 3 The
Struggle for Control
Chapter 4 The
Crafty Foe
Chapter 5 Divine
Grief
Chapter 6 The
Dinner That Delays
Chapter 7 The
Price of Survival
Chapter 8 Haman's
Last Supper
Chapter 9 The
Law of the Spirit
Chapter 10 The
Sweet Taste of Victory
Chapter 1
FIRST: A KEY
Tucked
away in the Bible in an obscure corner of the Old Testament is the little book
of Esther. It is a delightful story of human love and palace intrigue set in
the days of Israel's captivity under the Median-Persian Empire. It tells of a
captive Jewish maiden who, through an amazing series of incidents, was elevated
to the throne of Persia as its queen, and how God used her position of power
and authority to preserve his people against a Hitler-like attack. Even to this
day the Jews celebrate the feast of Purim in memory of this deliverance
accomplished through Queen Esther.
But
for many this little book is a puzzle, for it seems to be out of place in the
Bible. There is no mention in it of the name of God; there is no reference to
worship or to faith; there is no prediction of the Messiah; there is no mention
of heaven or hell--in short, there is nothing religious about it, at least on
the surface. It is a gripping tale, but one might rather expect to find it in
the pages of the Reader's Digest than the Bible. The best that many
commentators can make of it is to view it as a revelation of God's
providence--the way he works behind the scenes to preserve his people in times
of peril.
Such
a view is certainly a valid approach to Esther. The book does beautifully
unfold the ability of God to work through natural means and to bring about his
will through the free choices of men who are unconscious of coercion, but there
is more to it even than that. The real key to the book lies in the New
Testament.
The
apostle Paul makes dear in several of his letters that the historic incidents
that happened to Israel are intended as types or parables for us. They occurred
so that we might have an illustration of what God intends to do with us. This
does not mean that these accounts are stylized legends of unhistoric events.
They really happened! But, in the wisdom of God, they happened in such a way as
to form a detailed picture of God's dealings with us on a spiritual level. The
Old Testament is thus God's visual aid to the truth of the New Testament.
Paul
could write to the Corinthians, "Now these things happened to them as a
warning (actually the word is "as types"), but they were written down
for our
instruction, upon whom the end of the ages has come" (1 Corinthians 10:11,
emphasis added). And again to the Romans he says, "For whatever was
written in former days was written for our instruction, that by steadfastness and by
the encouragement of the scriptures we might have hope" (Romans 15:4,
emphasis added). If we learn to read Old Testament stories using this key from
the New Testament, we will discover that these stories are far more than mere
history. They are highly practical accounts of what is happening to us on our
own spiritual journey.
If
we take the authentic history of the book of Esther in this light, we shall
find it a living parable of exquisite and accurate insight. Jesus frequently
taught by parables, laying one truth alongside another to illuminate and
explain it. He used the Old Testament in this way, indicating that the days of
Noah were a picture of world conditions at the time of his second coming, and that
the experience of Jonah in the fish's belly was a foreview of his death and
resurrection. The very first parable God ever devised for man's instruction was
to take a rib from Adam's side and make a woman and lay her alongside him. When
Adam looked into Eve's face he saw a reflection of his own life. Man has been
busy trying to interpret that parable ever since and has come up with some
rather remarkable explanations of it. It is still a great mystery!
To understand the book of Esther, then, we shall
look for the story behind the story, for only thus will the book come to life
for us. We shall discover that the story of this book is really our story, that
what happens here is happening also in our lives. In the unfolding of this story
we shall find an unfolding also of the mystery of our own makeup. The greatest
mystery to man is man himself. The Bible is given to us not only that we may
learn to know God, but that we may also learn to know ourselves. There is no
book in the Bible more helpful to this end than Esther.
The story centers around a kingdom and its king. It
opens with a report of the magnificence of that kingdom.
In
the days of Ahasuerus, the Ahasuerus who reigned from India to Ethiopia over
one hundred and twenty-seven provinces, in those days when King Ahasuerus sat
on his royal throne in Susa the capital, in the third year of his reign he gave
a banquet for all his princes and servants, the army chiefs of Persia and Media
and the nobles and governors of the provinces being before him, while he showed
the riches of his royal glory and the splendor and pomp of his majesty for many
days, a hundred and eighty days. (Esther 1:1-4)
Perhaps you might be startled to learn that the
name of this king is never given to us. The word Ahasuerus is not a personal
name; it is a title, like Czar or Emperor. It means "The Venerable
Father," an apt title indeed for a king. Many Bible scholars identify this
king with Xerxes the Great who led the Persian armies against the power of
Greece in the fifth century B.C. It seems more likely, however, that this man
is Astyages, the son of Cyrus the First of Persia. Astyages may well be the
man, who is called "Darius the Mede" in the book of Daniel, who took
the kingdom from Belshazzar on the night of the great drunken orgy in the city
of Babylon when the handwriting of God appeared on the wall.
Sixty-five miles east of the city of Teheran, in
the present land of Iran, a great rock rises out of the plains in lonely
splendor. It crests some thirteen hundred feet above the level of the plain.
Five hundred feet up the side of the rock a great area has been smoothed off
which contains many carved inscriptions and figures. The rock is called the
Rock of Behistun, and the inscriptions were carved there by the Persian
monarch, Darius the Great, who left a record of his own kingdom and genealogy.
His father was Cyrus the Great and his grandfather was Astyages, also called
Arsamanes. At the time of the events of the book of Esther, Astyages would have
been a youth of about eighteen years of age, having but recently ascended to
the throne of Persia. The fact that the Book of Esther never gives us the
historic name of this Ahasuerus doubtless indicates that this is not germane to
the significance of the story, but it is interesting to see a possible
connection to the Book of Daniel.
If we regard this story as a kind of mirror we
shall see ourselves here. At the point the story opens, we find the kingdom
lying at peace. The king is holding a feast which lasts for one hundred and
eighty days, perhaps the longest feast ever known to man--six months long!
Obviously there was no threat to this kingdom from the outside. It was a time
of peace and blessing, fullness and fruitfulness. The king was perfectly free
to do nothing but display the lavish glory of the riches of his kingdom.
We know from other scriptures that each man is made
to be just such a king, ruling over such an empire. Our empire is our life,
reaching out to touch all those with whom we come in contact and over whom we
have influence. Our capital city, corresponding to Susa in the book of Esther,
is our body. With its brain, heart, and nervous system, it is a marvelously
complex and intricate mechanism. Through it, by means of the senses, reports from
the empire without are brought to the king. From it, through the eyes and voice
and hands, flow those responses that vitally affect the empire from one end to
the other.
But everyone knows that man is more than a body.
There is an invisible part which forms our personality, that immaterial but
conscious part that lives with and expresses itself through the body. Even a
baby realizes that man is more than an animated piece of beefsteak. Years ago I
was lying in bed one morning when my three-year old daughter crawled into bed
with me. I was trying to catch up on my beauty sleep (I need all of that I can
get), and she was trying to wake me up. She pinched me and poked me, but I
would not open my eyes. Finally, she reached up and pried open one of my
eyelids. Leaning over to peer within, she said "Are you in there,
daddy?" Thus she made it unmistakably dear that she knew man is more than
a piece of meat with a nervous system!
This immaterial something that controls the life of
the kingdom is represented here by the king. The Bible calls it the soul of
man; it involves the faculties of mind, emotion, and will. The will, acted upon
by the mind and the emotions, exercises authority within the kingdom. Whatever
the king does affects the entire kingdom. Whatever occurs in your soul--the
realm of your mind, your emotions, or your will--has an immediate effect, not
only on the capital city of your body, but upon the empire--all those with whom
you come in contact and over whom you have influence.
The Bible confirms the fact that man was made to be
king. In Psalm 8, David acknowledges to God the place that God has given man:
Thou
hast given him dominion over the works of thy hands;
thou
hast put all things under his feet,
all
sheep and oxen,
and
also the beasts of the field,
the
birds of the air, and the fish of the sea,
whatever
passes along the paths of the sea. (Psalm 8:6-8)
God intended man to be a king, to have power and
authority. But it was a derived authority; he was to manifest the glory of the
invisible God. That is, he was to be the human vehicle of the divine life. As
man gave himself to the task of properly governing the earth over which he was
established as king, he would be displaying the majesty and glory of the God
who indwelt him. Unfallen Adam, in the garden of Eden, was just such a king.
Like Ahasuerus here, his whole empire lay at rest and he was free to do nothing
more than manifest the riches and the fruitfulness and the glory of his
kingdom, while enjoying unhindered communion with God.
But if man is made to commune with God there must
be provision within man for that communion. There is, then, a function which
lies below the level of the conscious life. It is this subconscious life which
we call the human spirit. This spirit, designed to be the place of communion
between the soul of man and the Holy Spirit of God, is pictured for us in the
book of Esther by the queen, who, as the story opens, is Queen Vashti:
And
when these days were completed, the king gave for all the people present in
Susa the capital, both great and small, a banquet lasting for seven days, in
the court of the garden of the king's palace. There were white cotton curtains
and blue hangings caught up with cords of fine linen and purple to silver rings
and marble pillars, and also couches of gold and silver on a mosaic pavement of
porphyry, marble, mother-of-pearl and precious stones. Drinks were served in
golden goblets, goblets of different kinds, and the royal wine was lavished
according to the bounty of the king. And drinking was according to the law, no
one was compelled; for the king had given orders to all the officials of his
palace to do as every man desired. Queen Vashti also gave a banquet for the
women in the palace which belonged to King Ahasuerus. (Esther 1:5-9)
It is the presence of the human spirit within man
which makes an immortal being--just as the whole hope of a continuing kingdom
lies in the queen. When a king without a queen dies, the whole kingdom
perishes--at least the dynasty does. So also, if man were nothing more than a
body and a soul, then when man died he would die like an animal. Humanism
insists that man is nothing more than an animal. He has a body and a soul as an
animal does and, therefore, he can be treated like an animal. He can be bred
like an animal and he can be improved like an animal, for he breathes like one,
eats like one, and dies like one. But the Bible flatly contradicts this, and
says that man is more than body and soul; he also has a spirit. It is the spirit
of man which, the book of Ecclesiastes tells us, does not perish when the man
dies, but "returns to God who gave it."
It is also in the realm of the spirit that man
finds his comfort and counsel from a higher being. In the book of Esther, the
queen provides this place of communion for the king. She is the one to whom the
king goes for private fellowship and comfort. In the same way, what takes place
between the soul and spirit of man is the most intimate, most essential
activity of man's nature. So intimate and delicate is this union between the
soul and the spirit (portrayed by the king and queen), that only one thing can
expose it. In Hebrews 4:12 we read, "The word of God is living and active,
sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and
spirit." Only the Word of God can make distinction between these two,
revealing the innermost recesses of our life at the deepest level of existence.
So, as we move into the book of Esther, we have our
key: the king is a picture of the soul of man, comprising mind, emotions, and
will. His capital city, Susa, is the body, in which all his decisions and
actions will be most immediately felt. His empire is the sphere of influence
each man has in life. And finally, his queen is the spirit of man. It is so
closely bound to his soul that no division or separation can be seen. The
queen, bound in marriage to the king, depicts the place of fellowship,
refreshment, and communion with God which is intimately related to our soul.
Each of us is a walking book of Esther, and we shall see how accurate this
portrayal is as the story progresses.
Chapter 2
The great feast of King Ahasuerus began on a note
of joy and merrymaking, but it did not end that way. Before the feast was over,
a tragic action on the part of the king instantly severed his communion with
his queen, and introduced a principle which was to destroy the peace of the
entire kingdom:
On
the seventh day, when the heart of the king was merry with wine, he commanded.
. . the seven eunuchs who served King Ahasuerus as chamberlains, to bring Queen
Vashti before the king with her royal crown, in order to show the peoples and
the princes her beauty; for she was fair to behold. But Queen Vashti refused to
come at the king's command conveyed by the eunuchs. At this the king was
enraged, and his anger burned within him. (Esther 1:10-12)
Here,
in pictorial form, is the story of the fall of man. In the garden of Eden man
was intended to display in his own human personality all the majesty, glory,
wisdom, and might of the God who indwelt him. But here, the king is not content
to display the authority that was properly his. As the party goes on he seems
to feel that the glory and majesty are of his own making. Lifted up with pride
and weakened by his own indulgence, he foolishly sends for the queen to come
and display her beauty before the crowd. In a sense he is attempting to pervert
his own nature, violating, by the use of his reason and will, the revelation
available to him in the place of private and intimate communion.
Perhaps we can understand this scene better if we
ask when it was that Adam actually fell? Did he fall when Eve ate of the
forbidden fruit? No! That was when Eve fell--that was the fall of woman! But it
was also the means by which the tempter gained access to the man. Adam fell
when, confronted with the fact of his wife's disobedience, he deliberately
chose to assert the supremacy of emotion (his love for his wife), over the
revelation of his spirit wherein God spoke to him. When he thus violated the
function of his spirit by asserting the supremacy of his soul, he became a
fallen being. He tried to reverse the order of his nature to make his reason
superior to revelation, and this has been the hallmark of fallen man ever
since.
When the queen was summoned to appear before the
king in this wrongful fashion, she refused to do so. Then, instead of honestly
facing the rash pride that made him act so foolishly, the king summoned his
counselors and angrily asked them what he should do with the reluctant queen.
They slyly insinuated that the fault was all the queen's, and if he did not act
to support his foolish demand he would encourage a revolt among the women of
the kingdom and "there would be contempt and wrath in plenty." This
was, of course, a lie, just as it was a lie when the tempter in the garden
suggested to Eve that God was putting unwarranted restrictions upon her
freedom, and if she didn't act to claim her fancied rights, she would never
realize the full potential of her being and would be troubled with endless
regrets.
As a result of this advice, King Ahasuerus made a
choice from which he could not retreat. The evil counselors said to the king,
"If
it please the king, let a royal order go forth from him, and let it be written
among the laws of the Persians and the Medes so that it may not be altered,
that Vashti is to come no more before King Ahasuerus." (Esther 1:19)
This advice pleased the king, and letters were sent
out to all the provinces in the entire domain of the empire to this effect. The
law which the king thus promulgated was to be "written among the laws of
the Persians and the Medes"--a law which could not be changed; the king
himself must be forever subject to it.
In the greater parable of our own lives this
unalterable law is known as "the law of sin and death." It is the law
of retribution, or the law of inevitable consequence. When Adam was approached
by Eve with the fruit of disobedience and he understood clearly what the issues
were, he deliberately chose what his reason said over what God's revelation
taught and ate of the fruit, thus cutting himself off from the glory of God in
his own spirit. He chose the desire of his heart over fellowship with God, and
set in motion a string of circumstances he was powerless to alter.
So the human spirit became dark and unresponsive
and man entered upon the lonely restlessness that has characterized him ever
since. Man became a soulish being, governed only by his mind, emotions, and
will. His own ego, sitting on the throne of his kingdom, brooking no
opposition, is the highest authority he knows. He has lost the joy and peace
and insights which were made available to him in the communion of his spirit
with God's Spirit, and he is helpless to reverse this fact. Here is ample
explanation for all the folly, injustice, evil, sin, misery, and darkness of
human life as we know it today.
Chapter 2 begins the story of redeeming grace. It
opens with the king vainly seeking to satisfy his restless soul in a fruitless
search for someone to fill the vacuum of his life:
After
these things, when the anger of King Ahasuerus had abated, he remembered Vashti
and what she had done and what had been decreed against her. (Esther 2:1)
Man can never forget that he has a spirit. Though
dark and unresponsive to his present longings, it remains as a vestigial memory
of the joys and delights he was intended by God to have. The king cannot be
satisfied with the choice he has made. His heart is empty; he is searching for
someone, and he is restless and unhappy.
This is the whole story of human life without God.
Dr. Karl Jung, the great Austrian psychologist, says that man is suffering from
a neurosis of emptiness. He says, "When God goes, goal goes; and when goal
goes, purpose goes; and when purpose goes, meaning goes; and when meaning goes,
life goes dead on our hands." Man is forever restless and dissatisfied,
never daring to be alone with his own thoughts, always demanding something to
anesthetize the pain of his own loneliness. That yearning search is portrayed
in this next section:
Then
the king's servants who attended him said, "Let beautiful young virgins be
sought out for the king. And let the king appoint officers in all the provinces
of his kingdom to gather all the beautiful young virgins to the harem in Susa
the capital, under custody of Hegai the king's eunuch who is in charge of the
women; let their ointments be given them. And let the maiden who pleases the
king be queen instead of Vashti." This pleased the king, and he did so.
(Esther 2:2-4)
Driven by loneliness man begins his aching search.
But he little realizes what is involved, and the God who made man is unwilling
to abandon him to the result of his own foolish choice. At this point in our
story, therefore, we are introduced to two of the most important characters in
the book:
Now
there was a Jew in Susa the capital whose name was Mordecai, the son of Jair,
son of Shimei, son of Kish, a Benjaminite, who had been carried away from
Jerusalem among the captives carried away with Jeconiah king of Judah, whom
Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon had carried away. He had brought up Hadassah,
that is Esther, the daughter of his uncle, for she had neither father nor
mother; the maiden was beautiful and lovely, and when her father and her mother
died, Mordecai adopted her as his own daughter. (Esther 2:5-7)
As a Jew, Mordecai belongs to the nation chosen by
God to be his point of contact with the human race. Jesus himself said,
"Salvation is of the Jews." This strange race was chosen to be the
instrument in the hands of the Holy Spirit by which the world was to be
redeemed, and it was through Jesus, the Jew, that redemption was accomplished.
Mordecai's name, "Little man," suggests the humility of the One who
laid aside his glory and became man, to die at last upon a cross of shame that
man might enter once again into life (Philippians 2:5-8). It is not difficult,
therefore, to see in Mordecai the Spirit of Christ, the Holy Spirit, whose
specific work is to restore man to the fellowship with God which he had lost.
Mordecai had a lovely young cousin whose name was
Esther. In Hebrew her name is Hadassah, which means "Myrtle," a lowly
shrub that was commonly regarded as the symbol of Israel. Her Persian name,
Esther, is usually taken to mean "Star," but Gesenius, one of the
greatest of Hebrew authorities, says that it is taken from the word "to
hide." It means, therefore, "something hidden," and is beautifully
descriptive of the spirit of man--so hidden in our essential nature that we can
only describe it in terms of mystery such as "the super-ego,"
"the id," or "the subconscious."
Though Mordecai is really Esther's cousin, we read
that after the death of her own father and mother, he adopted her as his own
daughter. Thus the union between Esther and Mordecai is perfectly descriptive
of the union of the human spirit with the Holy Spirit, accomplished by the
process of adoption. Paul says in Romans 8:15: "You did not receive the
spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you have received the spirit of
sonship. When we cry, 'Abba! Father!' it is the Spirit himself bearing witness
with our spirit that we are children of God." The work of the Spirit of
God in any individual's life can only begin when that human spirit is
introduced into the family of God by the sovereign adoption of the Holy Spirit.
What we have seen thus far takes place in our lives
on the subconscious level. The Holy Spirit moves in sovereign power upon the
heart; he chooses it and awakens within it a hunger for the family of God. But
all this must now be brought up to the level of conscious knowledge. In the
language of our story, the union of the redeemed spirit and the soul of man
(the king) must now be openly manifested.
Thus, the next step is for the king to discover the
lovely Esther, although he is quite unaware that Mordecai is moving to bring
the two face to face. The Bible urges man to "seek the Lord while he may
be found" (Isaiah 55:6), and reminds us that "he rewards those who
seek him" (Hebrews 11:6); but it also reveals that it is really the Holy
Spirit who is doing the seeking, and when our search is ended, we are
invariably astounded to discover that it was not we who found him, but he who
found us. So, in this account of Esther, we have what may be the classic
example of the old proverb, "He pursued her until she captured him."
In the course of the king's search, maiden after maiden was brought before the
king, but he rejected them all. At last, Esther's turn came:
When
the turn came for Esther the daughter of Abihail the uncle of Mordecai, who had
adopted her as his own daughter, to go in to the king, she asked for nothing
except what Hegai the king's eunuch, who had charge of the women, advised. Now
Esther found favor in the eyes of all who saw her. And when Esther was taken to
King Ahasuerus into his royal palace in the tenth month, which is the month of
Tebeth, in the seventh year of his reign, the king loved Esther more than all the
women, and she found grace and favor in his sight more than all the virgins, so
that he set the royal crown on her head and made her queen instead of Vashti.
(Esther 2:15-17)
This hardly needs interpreting. We can call this
the conversion of King Ahasuerus. Esther came before him without any of the
artificial emollients to beauty which the other maidens had used. She stood
before him in the loveliness of natural beauty; and when the king saw her, he
immediately loved her and set the sign of royal authority upon her head. He
recognized in this lovely girl the answer to his empty, restless life, and in
setting the crown upon her head he entered at last into the joy and comfort of
a life made complete.
There was an immediate effect throughout the whole
empire:
Then
the king gave a great banquet to all his princes and servants; it was Esther's
banquet. He also granted a remission of taxes to the provinces, and gave gifts
with royal liberality. (Esther 2:18)
There is a sense in which the king had no right to
this girl. She belonged to a special race, a race forbidden by its own law to
marry with another race; she was a Jewess. Yet here in this foreign land, by
the sovereign overruling grace of God, she is brought before the king and when
he finds her he knows that this is the one for whom his heart has longed. How
beautifully representative this is of the fact that we have no right to the
grace of God in our lives. The king, in his gratitude, immediately expresses
his joy with a great banquet and new laws that reach out to the farthest limits
of his empire. There is a lifting of the burden of taxation; there is a
distribution of royal gifts with great liberality.
Did you discover, when you became a Christian, what
Paul meant when he wrote, "If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation;
the old has passed away, behold, the new has come" (2 Corinthians
5:17)? Was there, in your life, a
sense of the lifting of the burden of sin and an enjoyment of God's royal gifts
such as you never had dreamed of before? We sing in the old hymn:
Heaven above is softer blue,
Earth around is sweeter green,
Something lives in every hue,
Christless eyes have never seen.*
* George Wade Robinson, "Loved with
Everlasting Love."
This experience is possible to all. We may not
understand all that happened on the day when, by faith in Jesus Christ, we
received a spirit made alive by grace. But if it has occurred, we know there
has been a wonderful change. We can never be the same again. Much must yet
happen before the full value of that transaction is realized, but already there
is new joy, new liberty, new richness.
THE STRUGGLE FOR CONTROL
The
joy of a new Christian is delightful to see and even more delightful to
experience, but it is forever set against the background of a bloody, fearsome
cross. No Christian walks continually in the sunshine beneath blue skies. He
must soon learn that joy and sorrow go hand in hand, that out of death comes
life, and that only in the mystery of the cross is discovered the secret of
joy. So, immediately after the marriage of Esther and Ahasuerus, there is
recorded an incident of somber import:
When the virgins were gathered together the second
time, Mordecai was sitting at the king's gate. Now Esther had not made known
her kindred or her people, as Mordecai had charged her; for Esther obeyed
Mordecai just as when she was brought up by him. And in those days, as Mordecai
was sitting at the king's gate, Bigthan and Teresh, two of the king's eunuchs,
who guarded the threshold, became angry and sought to lay hands on King
Ahasuerus. And this came to the knowledge of Mordecai, and he told it to Queen
Esther, and Esther told the king in the name of Mordecai. When the affair was
investigated and found to be so, the men were both hanged on the gallows. And
it was recorded in the Book of the Chronicles in the presence of the king.
(Esther 2:19-23)
Here is the first hint of the existence of an evil force
which is at work to destroy the king, and in picture, to capture the mind,
emotions and will of man and pervert these to its own use. Nothing more is said
of this incident at the moment, but later on in this book it becomes of
transcending importance in effecting the complete deliverance of the king.
At the time it happens, however, the king knows nothing of
this event. Mordecai (who represents for us the Holy Spirit) is sitting in the
gate of the city as a judge, but has not yet gained access to the palace (the
place of control). Unknown to the king, he discovers the plot against the king's
life, reports it, and the adversaries are taken out and publicly "nailed
to a tree." The rendering "hanged on the gallows" is not
literal, but is an interpretation. The literal Hebrew is that they were
impaled, or nailed to a tree.
The parallel of this in Christian experience is
easily traced. Long before we ever knew it ourselves, the Lord Jesus Christ
through the Eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God as a living
sacrifice upon a cross. He had taken upon himself the evil that was determined
to destroy the soul of man. Thus, we read in Colossians 2:13:
And
you, who were dead in trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, God made
alive together with him, having forgiven us all our trespasses, having canceled
the bond which stood against us with its legal demands; this he set aside, nailing
it to the cross.
He disarmed the principalities and powers and made a public example of them,
triumphing over them in it [that is, in the cross]. (emphasis added)
The principle of a cross is thus introduced to us
as the only means by which God deals with evil. We may be ignorant of this
truth for long years, but we shall never find deliverance from the power of sin
until we learn the full meaning of the historic cross. Thus the incident of
Bigthan and Teresh, we are told, was recorded in a book to which the king had
access. We, too, have such a book. God has recorded for our edification the
tremendously fascinating story of the cross, and has revealed that by means of
that cross he intends to deliver us from the sinister power which is at work to
rob us of our blessing in Christ. The actual deliverance has already been
accomplished. It is our knowledge of it by means of the book which will make it
effectual in our experience.
Now, if Christianity were nothing more than
becoming a Christian, that is, being saved so that we may go to heaven when we
die, the book of Esther would end right here. But this is not the end; it is
not even the beginning of the end; it is simply the end of the beginning. So
far, the story has but set the stage for the deliverance which God intends to
work in the life of the king, just as he intends to work a similar deliverance
in the kingdom of your own heart. The experience of conversion has made us fit
for heaven, but many of us may be many years yet away from heaven. What is to
happen in between? Are we to struggle on as best we can until at last we are
taken to be with the Lord? It is tragically true that many Christians know no
more of the Christian life than having their sins forgiven and waiting, often
in heartbreak and defeat, for the time when God shall call them home.
But there is much more to come! We pick up the
story in the opening of chapter 3:
After
these things King Ahasuerus promoted Haman the Agagite, the son of Hammedatha,
and advanced him and set his seat above all the princes who were with him. And
all the king's servants who were at the king's gate bowed down and did
obeisance to Haman; for the king had so commanded concerning him. But Mordecai
did not bow down or do obeisance. Then the king's servants who were at the
king's gate said to Mordecai, "Why do you transgress the king's
command?" And when they spoke to him day after day and he would not listen
to them, they told Haman, in order to see whether Mordecai's words would avail;
for he had told them that he was a Jew. And when Haman saw that Mordecai did
not bow down or do obeisance to him, Haman was filled with fury. (Esther 3:1-5)
Mordecai we know, but who is Haman? He is suddenly
introduced into the record here and an immediate antagonism develops between
Mordecai and Haman. Haman is the prime minister of the kingdom, but Mordecai
will not bow before him, though this is the command of the king. Who is this
sinister figure?
We find a clue to the answer in the man's
parentage. He is called "Haman, the son of Hammedatha, the Agagite."
What is an Agagite? Here we will need to do a little detective work. If you
haven't yet learned the thrill of studying our Bible as though you were a Perry
Mason, you've missed a great deal. It is far more interesting than a murder
mystery, for this concerns you! An Agagite is a descendant of Agag, and if we
turn to a concordance we find there is an Agag in Scripture. In the days of
Saul, the first king of Israel, the prophet Samuel was sent by God to order
King Saul to destroy the Amalekites of whom Agag was the king. We have the
account in 1 Samuel 15:
And
Samuel said to Saul, "The Lord sent me to anoint you king over his people
Israel; now therefore hearken to the words of the Lord. Thus says the Lord of
hosts, 'I will punish what Amalek did to Israel in opposing them on the way,
when they came up out of Egypt. Now go and smite Amalek, and utterly destroy
all that they have; do not spare them, but kill both man and woman, infant and
suckling, ox and sheep, camel and ass.''' (1 Samuel 15:1- 3)
Saul's commission was unmistakable! He was
explicitly told to destroy all the Amalekites--to totally obliterate this
people. This grisly command seems difficult to understand until we remember the
incident recorded in the seventeenth chapter of Exodus when Israel was on its
way through the wilderness from Egypt to Canaan. We are told there:
Then
came Amalek and fought with Israel at Rephidim. And Moses said to Joshua,
"Choose for us men, and go out, fight with Amalek; tomorrow I will stand
on the top of the hill with the rod of God in my hand." So Joshua did as
Moses told him, and fought with Amalek; and Moses, Aaron, and Hur went up to the
top of the hill. Whenever Moses held up his hand, Israel prevailed; and
whenever he lowered his hand, Amalek prevailed. (Exodus 17:8-11)
The issue of the battle did not
lie in the fighting of Israel, but in the uplifting of the rod of God held in
Moses' hand. When Moses grew weary, Aaron and Hur stood on each side and held
his hands until the battle was won. At the end of the battle the Lord said to
Moses:
"Write
this as a memorial in a book and recite it in the ears of Joshua, that I will
utterly blot out the remembrance of Amalek from under heaven. . . . The Lord
will have war with Amalek from generation to generation." (Exodus
17:14-16)
God has declared war with Amalek forever. He will
never make peace with it. If we trace Amalek even further back, we discover
that he was the grandson of Esau--the same Esau of whom God said, "Jacob
have I loved but Esau have I hated." These Amalekites, descendants of
Esau, are singled out in Scripture as a picture of the principle of evil at
work in the human heart with which God will never make peace. Throughout
Scripture, Amalek is always the enemy of all that God wants to do. To return to
the account in 1 Samuel, we read of Saul:
And
he took Agag the king of the Amalekites alive, and utterly destroyed all the
people with the edge of the sword. But Saul and the people spared Agag, and the
best of the sheep and of the oxen and of the fatlings, and the lambs, and all
that was good, and would not utterly destroy them; all that was despised and
worthless they utterly destroyed. (1 Samuel 15:8-9)
Saul, in his foolish ignorance, felt that he knew
better than God. He spared Agag and thus presumed to find good in what God had
declared to be bad. For this failure Samuel was sent to tell Saul that the
kingdom was to be taken from him and given to another. Now, centuries later,
here is Haman the Agagite, a representative of the tribe against whom God has
declared war forever.
The New Testament reveals that there is in every
life, even a Christian life, a satanic principle at work. It is called by
various names--pride, sin, the flesh. It lives only to exalt itself, as we see
depicted in Haman here. The man of the flesh is never so happy as when the
world around him is bowing and scraping and doing obeisance to him. Pride loves
to be flattered. Our egos seek to be bolstered constantly. Our pride is forever
seeking status and position in the eyes of others. It glories in prestige and
prominence.
But within the Christian, Haman has an implacable
enemy--it is our Mordecai, the Holy Spirit. The New Testament says, "The
desires of the flesh are against the Spirit, and the desires of the Spirit are
against the flesh; for these are opposed to each other" (Galatians 5:17).
There can never be peace between them, for God has said he will make war
against Amalek from generation to generation. Thus we read in Romans 8:
"The mind that is set on the flesh is hostile to God" (v. 7). No
matter how fine and respectable the flesh may appear to us, it is inherently
displeasing to God. It can never be made acceptable to him.
The Holy Spirit has gained a bridgehead in the
Christian heart for one purpose only: that he might oppose this diabolical,
satanic influence within us which so subtly and cleverly deceives and destroys
us. He has come so that we might have deliverance from this traitorous
"friend." But the presence of the Spirit in the heart arouses the
flesh to an explosion of fury. Have you discovered that? When you first became
a Christian you may have felt that life should go on smoothly and easily from
then on; but it was not very long before you discovered this was not the case.
You found fightings and frustrations within. You found yourself in the center
of a vast and swirling torment, an explosion of tension and tumult.
As long as Haman is in the seat of power the whole
kingdom will be affected by his evil designs, even the communion of the king
and the queen will be affected. There can be no peace while Haman is
controlling the throne. But the king is not at an aware of his evil character.
To him he appears as a trusted and reliable friend. The problem, then, is how
to get the evil man out and the good man in. Since Haman rules by the will of
the king, it will be necessary to open the king's eyes as to the true nature of
his prime minister.
It is not an easy task, but the Holy Spirit has
launched upon nothing less than this as his goal in our lives. The enemy is
crafty and subtle and not easily dislodged, but until he is overthrown the
kingdom can never know peace. But Haman knows that he cannot prevail if
Mordecai ever gains the king's ear. The battle is now joined. Who will prevail?
Chapter 4
THE CRAFTY FOE
Never underestimate the power of the enemy! That is a vital principle in
military warfare and many a battle has been lost because that principle was
ignored. It is important, therefore, that we understand the strategy of the
flesh in its unending battle with the Spirit of God. Like the apostle Paul who
had learned to live in victory over the enemy within, we must be able to say,
"We are not ignorant of his devices." Having learned the character of
Haman the Agagite, we are now told how he works.
Haman
is determined to use the king to destroy Mordecai, but he does not launch a
frontal attack against him. He is far too clever for that.
But
he disdained to lay hands on Mordecai alone. So, as they had made known to him
the people of Mordecai, Haman sought to destroy all the Jews, the people of
Mordecai, throughout the whole kingdom of Ahasuerus. (Esther 3:6)
As a Christian, how long would you entertain the
thought of rejecting God's influence outright? In the first joy of Christian
experience you would be repelled at any suggestion that you tell the Holy
Spirit to go to hell. The tempter never starts there with us. He does not begin
at the center where he must ultimately come; he begins at the periphery of our
life, in the area of our attitudes rather than our convictions. So Haman
begins, not with Mordecai, but with the people of Mordecai, the Jews. In the
Bible, the story of the Jews is the revelation of God at work among men. The
whole purpose of this strange nation is that in their history we might see
unquestioned evidences of God at work. Therefore, in the story, Mordecai's
people, the Jews, represent that which gives evidence to the world of God at
work.
How do others around you know that God is at work
in your life? Will it be by what you say? Not necessarily--words lose their
meaning unless they are backed by deeds. Neither will it be by religious activities,
which can be nothing but pious hypocrisy. But there are unmistakable signs.
They are listed in Galatians: "The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy,
peace, patience, kindness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control"
(Galatians 5:22-23).
Here are the true marks of God at work in a life.
Shabby imitations of these are possible for a while, but the true qualities can
never be produced apart from the supernatural activity of the Holy Spirit.
These are "the people of Mordecai" in your life as a Christian. It is
here that the flesh within begins its attack.
The whole strategy of the flesh is to convince us
that these attitudes are marks of weakness, that they are not really for our
good. We must, of course, always pay lip-service to them, but when it comes to
really wanting them in our life the enemy seeks to convince us that we would
get along much better without them, that it is really the opposite attitudes
that will pay off for us. If we can be led to distrust and reject the attitudes
of godliness, we will thereby frustrate the work of the Holy Spirit in our
life.
To accomplish this aim, Haman employs his favorite
tactic--fear. In this particular case it is the form of fear we call
superstition. All superstition is fear and fear is the enemy of faith. So, we
read in verse 7:
In
the first month, which is the month of Nisan, in the twelfth year of King
Ahasuerus, they cast Pur, that is the lot, before Haman day after day; and they
cast it month after month till the twelfth month, which is the month of Adar.
(Esther 3:7)
What a strange procedure! But the casting of lots
to determine a lucky day on which to do something was common practice in
oriental kingdoms. It is very similar to the practice today of shooting dice in
order to select a propitious day for some activity. When the record says,
"They cast it month after month till the twelfth month," it does not
mean they shook dice for a whole year in front of Haman. It means that every
cast made stood for a different day. A cast was made for each day of the
calendar and if a propitious number turned up that day was regarded as a lucky
day; thus they went through 365 casts before they found the lucky day. When
they found it, it was in the twelfth month called the month of Adar.
This whole process made it possible for Haman to go
to the king and say, "Look! If you really want good luck in your life, if
you want fortune to smile upon you, there's only one thing to do--get rid of
these people! I've read your horoscope and on this one particular day if you
will move against your enemies you will discover that all the stars are working
in your favor. It is your weakness in letting these people live that is causing
the problems in your kingdom, and if you want to break away from these limiting
restrictions you must obey the stars and all will be well."
Do you ever knock on wood whenever you speak of
good health or prosperity? Perhaps you smile lamely and make a joke of it, but
nevertheless, you feel that if you don't knock, something bad may happen to
you. Do you ever throw salt over your shoulder, or refuse to walk under a
ladder, or avoid the number thirteen? Why do we do these superstitious things?
Is it not a lingering fear that some jealous spirit may take away our
prosperity or bring bad luck upon us? We are afraid of the jealousy of God. The
tempter has planted in our hearts the feeling that God is not truly concerned
about our welfare, that we must take care of things ourselves. Our fear makes
us distrust the goodness of God.
Haman knows that if the king will heed this black
magic, he has succeeded in driving a wedge of distrust into his heart. His
first move is to make him distrust the people of Mordecai, to fear them and
regard them as a threat rather than a blessing. Just so the enemy within us
makes us afraid to show love and compassion; he labels these weakness and makes
us distrust them.
The wily prime minister couples with this awakening
distrust an apparent solicitude for the king's welfare:
Then
Haman said to King Ahasuerus, "There is a certain people scattered abroad
and dispersed among the peoples in all the provinces of your kingdom; their
laws are different from those of every other people, and they do not keep the
king's laws, so that it is not for the king's profit to tolerate them. If it
please the king, let it be decreed that they be destroyed, and I will pay ten
thousand talents of silver into the hands of those who have charge of the
king's business, that they may put it into the king's treasuries. (Esther 3:8-9)
Talk to a king about a threat to his throne and you
are touching something that is very close to his heart. When, in addition, you
infer that you have a plan that will make him more wealthy than ever before,
you interest him greatly. This is Haman's approach. He openly suggests that the
people of Mordecai are not only unprofitable to him, but are a threat to his
liberty, and that if he will remove them and trust Haman, Haman will make him
rich.
Has Haman been talking to you recently? Has he
suggested that it is not to your advantage to practice love, joy and peace,
longsuffering, gentleness and meekness, but that if you live this way people
will walk all over you? Has he, for instance, suggested that keeping your
temper and giving a soft answer to those around you never really gets you
anywhere, especially where you work, that it is the fellows who tell everyone
off who get the promotions? Has he slyly insinuated that it is the man who is
willing to stand up for his own rights and not let anyone walk all over him who
gets advancement?
Has he, perhaps, whispered to you that honesty is
really not the best policy, at least when it comes to filling out your income
tax? After all, what the government won't know really won't hurt them, and you
can save a lot of money by a few short cuts. Has he suggested that love is all
right for sentimentalists, but the only way to really defend the faith and the
American way of life is to picket those who don't agree with you and hound them
out of town?
Has Haman suggested that good manners and courteous
words are needed for business and for strangers, but at home you can let your
hair down and say what you like to your wife and kids; they will respect you
all the more for it? Has he been talking to you? Does it sound pretty good?
Does it sound like it will work, especially when he can show you from your
horoscope that this is the day to throw your weight around?
Well, then, look at the program of defeat that
inevitably follows. It begins with the fateful decision of the king:
So
the king took his signet ring from his hand and gave it to Haman the Agagite,
the son of Hammedatha, the enemy of the Jews. And the king said to Haman,
"The money is given to you, the people also, to do with them as it seems
good to you." (Esther 3:10-11)
Nothing can be done in your life without the
consent of your will. You cannot pass the buck to someone else. You alone must
bear final responsibility for what happens, for nothing can be done either good
or evil apart from the consent of your will. You may be perfectly sincere and
confident that you are doing the right thing, as this king was, but sincerity
is never any defense against error. If evil gains control of your life it is
because you have permitted it to do so.
Furthermore, it is clear from this that when we
make a decision we hand the authority to act to another. The New Testament
declares that man can do nothing by himself. We are not made to be activists;
we are made only to be deciders. As Paul reminds us in Romans 6, we are either
instruments of righteousness or unrighteousness; in either case we are merely
the instruments. The power to act belongs to another. The tragedy of evil
choices is that when we commit ourselves to such forces within us they often act
far beyond our desires. Nevertheless, the decision to permit them to act is
ours alone.
This decision on the part of the king is
immediately followed by a widespread disturbance:
Then
the king's secretaries were summoned on the thirteenth day of the first month,
and an edict, according to all that Haman commanded, was written to the king's
satraps and to the governors over all the provinces and to the princes of all
the peoples, to every province in its own script and every people in its own
language; it was written in the name of King Ahasuerus and sealed with the
king's ring. Letters were sent by couriers to all the king's provinces, to
destroy, to slay, and annihilate all Jews, young and old, women and children,
in one day, the thirteenth day of the twelfth month, which is the month of
Adar, and to plunder their goods. A copy of the document was to be issued as a
decree in every province by proclamation to all the peoples to be ready for
that day. The couriers went in haste by order of the king, and the decree was
issued in Susa the capital. (Esther 3:12-15)
The whole of the kingdom is immediately involved in
whatever the king does. The effect of this decision was felt throughout the
entire empire. What we do is never done in a corner. What we decide in the
depths of our heart affects everyone who knows us. The decision made in the
innermost part of our thoughts sooner or later touches the lives of everyone
with whom we have to do. Secret thoughts must ultimately become evident in
deeds. We cannot give ourselves to playing with thoughts in secret that do not
sooner or later break out in actual deeds. Thus disturbance is always the
result of some inner decision.
The final step in the program of defeat initiated
by the flesh is one of delusion: "And the king and Haman sat down to
drink; but the city of Susa was perplexed" (v. 15). The king is quite
confident that he has taken a wise step, but he is totally deluded. He thinks
he is acting in his own interest. He is grateful to Haman for his obvious concern
for his welfare so he invites him in to celebrate with a glass or two of wine.
But outside in the city there is nothing but confusion and perplexity. No one
knows what to do; this strange edict has thrown them into confusion.
Have you ever had a drinking session with yourself
to congratulate yourself for the clever way you solved a problem in your life?
You've had to cut corners a bit and maybe tell off a few people along the way,
but you got what you wanted. It's a pretty good feeling, isn't it? You go home
and pat yourself on the back and congratulate yourself. You and Haman have a
drinking session together. But when you get around to taking the next step you
discover you don't know what to do. You've lost your sense of direction. You
started out well, but before you know it somehow you have become confused and
distracted. Trivial things have become all-important and that which is of vital
importance you treat as though it were of no concern.
Is this where you are living today? Are you a
victim of your own sense of dedication? You meant to do right, you tried to do
right, you thought you were making the right choices on the basis of what was
the right thing to do, but it has turned out to be so confusing, so baffling!
Many Christians live right here, defeated, deluded, disappointed, and they
don't know why. The Lord Jesus said, "If your eye is sound, your whole
body will be full of light; but if . . . the light in you is darkness, how
great is the darkness!" (Matthew 6:22-23)
Such darkness in Christian lives is what the
Scriptures call the reign of sin. The king (your will) is wholly under the
influence of the evil prime minister. The result in the kingdom is perplexity,
confusion, despair, and darkness. The king never meant it to be so, but as long
as he is unaware of the true nature of Haman he is helpless to correct this
condition. His deliverance and that of the empire's can only begin when he is
made to see the true character of Haman.
At this point, Mordecai begins to act. In his
action we shall learn the full meaning of the great statement in Galatians:
"The Spirit lusts against the flesh so that you cannot do the thing that
you would." All hope for deliverance from the subtle flesh lies in that
sovereign activity of the Spirit of God.
Chapter 5
DIVINE GRIEF
When the confusion and perplexity that result from
Haman's fiendish proposal to the king are felt throughout the capital city,
Mordecai's reaction is profound and significant:
When
Mordecai learned all that had been done, Mordecai rent his clothes and put on
sackcloth and ashes, and went out into the midst of the city, wailing with a
loud and bitter cry; he went up to the entrance of the king's gate, for no one
might enter the king's gate clothed with sackcloth. And in every province,
wherever the king's command and his decree came, there was great mourning among
the Jews, with fasting and weeping and lamenting, and most of them lay in
sackcloth and ashes. (Esther 4:1-3)
What
a picture of grief! The Jews are thrown into a panic by the hideous
pronouncement and express their sorrow by weeping and lamenting and wearing
sackcloth and ashes. But it is Mordecai alone who fully understands the true
import of the situation. He knows that not only will this destroy the people of
God throughout the whole kingdom, but it will touch the very throne. The queen
herself, as a Jewess, is in danger, for the decree had become the law of the
Medes and the Persians and it could not be changed. Therefore he, too, reacted
with bitter and painful grief.
Lay
this parable from the Old Testament alongside a passage from the New. In
Ephesians 4:30 the apostle Paul warns us, "Do not grieve the Holy Spirit
of God, in whom you were sealed for the day of redemption." What is it
that grieves the Holy Spirit? The next verse tells us, "Let all bitterness
and wrath and anger and clamor and slander be put away from you, with all
malice." These are the things that grieve the Spirit. They are the works
of the flesh, the exact opposites of the fruit of the Spirit--love, joy, peace,
longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, etc.
It
is most remarkable to see that what grieves the heart of God is not the enmity
of the sinner so much as the unthinking foolishness of the saint. The problem
we face in the book of Esther is not that of stubborn, deliberate opposition to
the will of God. When we manifest that attitude, God simply lets us go ahead
and live out our folly, for we can only learn to reject our stubborn pride by
experiencing something of the sad results that follow. But these times of
deliberate rebellion are not nearly as frequent as the occasions when, wanting
to do right and thinking we are doing right, we fall into a circumstance or
reaction which ultimately proves very wrong and destroys the fruit of the
Spirit in our lives. Thus sincerely, with the best of intentions, quite openly
and honestly, we launch upon a course which threatens ultimately to destroy our
peace, our joy, our patience, our kindness, or our self-control. When this
occurs we don't know what is wrong. We are confused and baffled.
It is at such times that the Spirit of God is
deeply grieved within us. Mordecai wept out of sympathy for the king and the
kingdom because of the sorrow they unwittingly brought upon themselves. As a
Jew he knew the history of his race. He knew that the Jews were under special
protection from God wherever they went. He knew that no nation laid its hand
upon the Jew in anger or in punishment with impunity. This, incidentally, is
the thing that Hitler forgot. Mordecai knew that if the king carried out his
foolish intention to destroy these people, there would be an opposite reaction
upon the kingdom; every nation that has ever touched the Jew in anger has
itself been destroyed.
So also in the parable of our own lives, the Spirit
knows that when we unthinkingly permit our natural human reactions to control
us, we ultimately destroy ourselves in the process. Unrealized by us, this
"natural reaction" creates in us tensions and pressures that result
in neuroses and compulsions which tear us apart, causing us to come unglued in
moments of pressure and creating depression of mind and spirit. This depression
is what is referred to in Romans 6 as death: "The wages of sin is
death." Death, there, does not mean the end of natural life. It means the
absence of spiritual blessing--that is, barrenness, emptiness, a sense of
futility and frustration. The Spirit within weeps out of sympathy and grief.
You see this spirit of grief in the Lord Jesus on
his way to the tomb of Lazarus, leading a sorrowing, wailing company along the
way. He knew that in a few moments he would speak the words that would bring
that man who had been dead four days back to life, and all the grief and sorrow
would be turned into joy. Yet we read that as he went to the tomb his spirit
was deeply moved within him. The Greek is much stronger than the English. It
says he was torn inside. Thus we have the shortest verse in our English Bible,
"Jesus wept." The tears rolled down his face even in expectation of
that moment of triumph and deliverance, because he knew the sorrow, heartache,
and pain that inevitably result from human sin no matter what the final outcome
might be.
Thank God for the grieving of the Spirit. It is
this grieving Spirit within us that is the guarantee of God that he will never
leave us in our ignorant folly. It marks the unwillingness of God to let us go
stumbling along into the full results of our own wrong choices.
As yet, neither the king nor the queen is aware of
Mordecai's grieved heart. Mordecai's only channel of approach to the king is
through the queen and therefore it is imperative that she understand the whole
situation. Thus we are next shown the results in the human spirit when the
grieving of the Holy Spirit is made known:
When
Esther's maids and her eunuchs came and told her, the queen was deeply
distressed; she sent garments to clothe Mordecai, so that he might take off his
sackcloth, but he would not accept them. (Esther 4:4)
Do you recognize this? Here is the first uneasy
realization that something is wrong. It does not take place in the soul at the
level of the conscious life, but deep in the subconscious, in the depths of the
spirit. Have you ever sensed that you are living with a grieved Spirit? You
don't know specifically yet what it is, but deep in your heart, you feel there
is something wrong. Perhaps, as here, you try to cover up your disquiet by
assuming a forced attitude of cheerfulness and well-being. But the Holy Spirit
is not so easily put off. You find you cannot talk yourself out of your
distress. Something is wrong!
Esther immediately does the wise and sensible
thing:
Then
Esther called for Hathach, one of the king's eunuchs, who had been appointed to
attend her, and ordered him to go to Mordecai to learn what this was and why it
was. (Esther 4:5)
There is never need to be in doubt as to exactly
what may be causing confusion and perplexity in our lives. The Spirit of God is
always willing to tell us exactly what is wrong if we will seek as specifically
and definitely as Esther does here.
But a word of warning may be in order. We need to
carefully distinguish between the condemning voice of Satan and the true grief
of the Holy Spirit. The one is vague, unspecific, creating a hazy sense of
guilt, designed to trap us into some legality or busy activity in the flesh. We
have all experienced that nagging feeling of undefined guilt which, no matter
how often we may ask about it, remains always the same. We may be sure that it
is the voice of Satan. It is his attempt to get us concerned with our inner
self so that we will compensate in some other direction by assuming some legal
bondage or getting busy in a flurry of religious activity. Satan well knows
that if he can get us operating out of the flesh we are utterly useless in the
kingdom of God.
But on the other hand, the voice of the Spirit is
always specific and to the point--patiently, quietly insistent. If we refuse to
allow the matter to come into our conscious thinking, he keeps continually
bringing us back to it. We may not want to look at it and may try to shove it
out of our mind, but we cannot escape the sense that something is wrong. If we
will definitely and honestly go to him directly, we shall find it will
immediately lead to a further clear revelation.
Hathach
went out to Mordecai in the open square of the city in front of the king's
gate, and Mordecai told him all that had happened to him, and the exact sum of
money that Haman had promised to pay into the king's treasuries for the
destruction of the Jews. Mordecai also gave him a copy of the written decree
issued in Susa for their destruction, that he might show it to Esther and
explain it to her and charge her to go to the king to make supplication to him
and entreat him for her people. And Hathach went and told Esther what Mordecai
had said. (Esther 4:6-9)
Notice how clear and specific this is. Mordecai
knew the whole story. He knew the exact sum of money that Haman, in secret, had
told the king he would put into his treasury; he also had a copy of the decree.
He revealed the whole plan to Esther in specific, exact detail.
It is also significant that the name of the servant
who acted as an intermediary is Hathach, which means "the truth."
When you realize that something has come between you and the Lord, some shadow
has come in and hidden his face, where do you go to find out what it is? Have
you not frequently found the answer in the Word of Truth? Perhaps in your
morning devotional time, seeking light from the Scriptures, you found the
Spirit of God illuminating a verse and making it speak out to you, and suddenly
you knew the thing that was wrong. Or perhaps in prayer you asked God to make
the matter clear and there came into your mind an image of something that was out
of line and you could not shake it off. Out of the blue there comes a
remembrance of that business deal you maneuvered, the word you spoke, or the
thing you did, and you knew this was it--the truth! Perhaps a word of counsel
or reproof comes from someone else and you know as he speaks that the thing he
is saying is the truth. It is in some such way that the Spirit undertakes to
make the whole matter clear to us.
Does it surprise us to see that when Esther
understands the matter clearly her reaction is one of reluctance?
Then
Esther spoke to Hathach and gave him a message for Mordecai, saying, "All
the king's servants and the people of the king's provinces know that if any man
or woman goes to the king inside the inner court without being called, there is
but one law; all alike are to be put to death, except the one to whom the king
holds out the golden scepter that he may live. And I have not been called to
come in to the king these thirty days." And they told Mordecai what Esther
had said. (Esther 4:10-12)
What a remarkable picture this gives of the inner
workings of our hearts. The king, you remember, is the soul--your mind,
emotions, and will. The soul is a creature of moods and tends to reject
unpleasant information when it is in a bad mood. Frequently we allow thoughts
to live unexamined in our subconscious until such a time as we are in a good
mood and are willing to think openly and seriously about them. Psychologists
tell us this tendency explains the nature of many of our dreams. In a dream, we
are sometimes confronted with thoughts that our conscious mind has resisted and
refused to face. We are often reluctant to read or listen to anything that
would tear the veil off the true nature of the flesh within us, but the Holy Spirit
knows how to proceed.
At this point Mordecai acts with vigor and
insistence. He sends word back to Esther immediately:
Then Mordecai told them to return answer to Esther,
"Think not that in the king's palace you will escape any more than all the
other Jews. For if you keep silence at such a time as this, relief and
deliverance will rise for the Jews from another quarter, but you and your
father's house will perish. And who knows whether you have not come to the
kingdom for such a time as this?" (Esther 4:13-14)
Mordecai is absolutely inflexible at this point. He
will not let Esther delay or try to seek another way. He is saying:
"Although you may not act, deliverance for the Jews will arise from
another quarter." The idea is that God has an infinite number of ways to
accomplish his will. We may fail in what he gives us to do, but that doesn't
stop him from doing his will. God is never hindered by man's failure. But we
may miss out on the beauty of God's perfection for us; we may "suffer
loss," as Paul puts it.
Esther's reluctance to face the possibility of
death is understandable, but there is no other way out. Like her, we may long
seek to delay action on the painful matter of condemning the
"natural" urges that rise within us, but there is no other way.
"Unless a grain of wheat fall into the ground and dies, it remains
alone" (John 12:24). If we seek to control the flesh by will power or
discipline, we shall find it too strong for us. It is no light thing to believe
what Romans tells us: we are crucified with Christ. It will mean we shall have
to face up squarely to the nauseous character of the flesh within us and
condemn it in its totality. We can no longer defend any part of it or excuse
it. Our will must be squarely confronted with the whole issue and an
irrevocable commitment made.
The importance of this decision is highlighted by
Mordecai's words to Esther: "Who knows whether you have not come to the
kingdom for such a time as this?" What is the real purpose of conversion?
Is it only that God might take you to heaven some day? Is it that you might
reign with him in glory in the sweet by-and-by? No! "Thou art come to the
kingdom for such a time as this." The Holy Spirit has entered your life in
order that you might live in fruitfulness and victory right now, right where
you live and work, that in the day-to-day experiences of your life you might
manifest the fullness of the character of God. Your conversion is but the
beginning. It will never have any meaning unless you learn to walk in victory
over bitterness, resentment, malice, anger, lust, anxiety, and every other
manifestation of the flesh, right now!
If we refuse to face up to this fact, if we try to
make peace with the flesh so as to avoid accepting the full meaning of the
death of Christ for us, we have no choice but to go on under the dominion and
reign of sin. Heaven may still be ours at the end because of the work of Jesus
Christ on our behalf, but we shall look back upon a wasted and ruined life. If
this happens it will be our own fault, for the Holy Spirit has entered our
lives "for such a time as this."
Esther is most impressed with the firm insistence
of Mordecai at this point. The issue is now perfectly clear and she sends back
to Mordecai a most significant answer:
"Go,
gather all the Jews to be found in Susa, and hold a fast on my behalf, and
neither eat nor drink for three days, night or day. I and my maids will also
fast as you do. Then I will go to the king, though it is against the law; and
if I perish, I perish." Mordecai then went away and did everything as
Esther had ordered him. (Esther 4:16-17)
With courage and grace, Esther bows to the will of
Mordecai. In the symbolism of a fast she indicates her complete willingness to
enter into death--a death three days and three nights long! Jesus said,
"As Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the whale, so
will the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the
earth" (Matthew 12:40). Esther is saying in effect, "With the meaning
of the death of Jesus Christ before me and the consciousness of what it will
effect, I am willing to die myself-- 'If I perish, I perish'." Just as we
must be willing to accept in practical experience the judgment of the cross
upon our natural, Adamic life, so she was willing to enter into death.
If you laid the book of Romans alongside the book
of Esther at this point, you would find yourself standing right at Romans 6:6:
"We know that our old self was crucified with him so that the sinful body
might be destroyed, and we might no longer be enslaved to sin." In this
wonderful, typical way, the book of Esther is teaching us that the death of
Jesus Christ actually involved the death of our old self with him; therefore we
are no longer to operate on the basis of the flesh. Without reservation, it is
declared to be absolutely worthless. When we believe that, then we can begin to
walk in the liberty and freedom God has intended for us.
How beautifully Esther's words picture this
identification of the believer with the death of Jesus Christ. This is not yet
the realm of the soul, the emotional life, the feelings which are subject to
change. Rather, this concerns the realm of the spirit, the deepest part of
man's nature. What this declares is that down at the very deepest level of your
life a fact has taken place from which all deliverance will stem. It means that
if this has occurred, whether or not you feel like a Christian, you still are a
Christian. Christ's death for you and your death with him are unchangeable
facts, and nothing you do or don't do can affect them.
This is a truth we greatly need, for until we begin
to believe what God says is true about what happened to us when Jesus Christ
died, we will never have the confidence to accept the deliverance that he has
based upon that truth. If you once died with him you are not the same--you
never will be the same again. Even though temporarily you do fall into sinful
acts which are the same as those you committed before you were a Christian,
still you are not the same--you cannot be. You have been transferred, the New
Testament says, "from the dominion of darkness. . . to the kingdom of his
beloved Son" (Colossians 1:13), and the evil one cannot lay his hands upon
you any longer. You are not in bondage; you are a believer and your deliverance
rests upon an unchangeable fact.
A number of years ago, I was talking with a young
man who had been staying away from church for some time. When I asked him why,
he said, "Well, I hesitate to come any longer because when I'm at work I
can't seem to live like I ought to. There is so much failure in my life at
work. I lose my temper and sometimes curse and say things that I shouldn't.
That's why I don't want to come to church, because I feel like a hypocrite when
I do."
I said, "You know, a hypocrite is someone who
acts like something he isn't. When do you act that way?" "Well,"
he said, "if I came to church after the way I lived through the week, I'd
be a hypocrite, wouldn't I?" I said, "Are you a Christian?" He said,
"Yes, I am." "All right," I said, "if you are a
Christian, then when is it that you do not act like one? At church or at
work?" "Oh," he said, "I see what you mean. I'm being a
hypocrite at work!" "Yes," I said, "when you come to church
you're being what you really are for perhaps the first time that week."
It is not hypocritical to come among the people of
God with a sense of weakness and even failure. You belong there--that's what
Christians are. You may be a hypocrite at work, and if you wish to avoid acting
like a hypocrite, that is the place to do it.
The point is this: You need not go on being deluded
and deceived, because God has arranged a way out to the believer in Christ.
"No temptation has overtaken you that is not common to man. God is faithful.
. . ." Whether you are or not is beside the point. God's Word never
changes. The death of Jesus Christ is an unchangeable fact in your experience
if you have received him. "God is faithful, and he will not let you be
tempted beyond your strength, but with the temptation will also provide the way
of escape, that you may be able to endure it" (1 Corinthians 10:13). He
will bring you through if you rest upon the unchangeable fact of what he has
already done in your life.
From this vantage point, the identification of the
believer with the death of Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit is ready to move into
the realm of the conscious life, the soul (our emotions, reason, and will). It
is necessary to bring to our conscious attention what is going on deep in our
life before we can be delivered. And the power with which God works in our life
will always be the power of a resurrected life.
So Esther, in grace and loveliness and on the third
day, takes her courage in her hand and goes before the king. The fateful
decision must now be his.
Chapter 6
THE DINNER THAT DELAYS
Esther
is now standing outside the palace door, afraid to enter, wondering if the king
will receive her or not. It is a moment of high drama. We pick up the story
from chapter 5 of the text:
On
the third day Esther put on her royal robes and stood in the inner court of the
king's palace, opposite the king's hall. The king was sitting on his royal
throne inside the palace opposite the entrance to the palace; and when the king
saw Queen Esther standing in the court, she found favor in his sight and he
held out to Esther the golden scepter that was in his hand. Then Esther
approached and touched the top of the scepter. And the king said to her,
"What is it, Queen Esther? What is your request? It shall be given you,
even to the half of my kingdom." (Esther 5:1-3)
The queen dressed in her royal robes of authority
and power, comes to the king on the third day! In Scripture, the third day is
always the day of resurrection. For three days and nights she has fasted as
though she were dead, but now, in a sense risen from the dead, she comes to the
king to make her request.
We have already learned that the human spirit, made
alive in resurrection power by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, becomes the
means by which the Holy Spirit seeks to influence and repossess our minds,
emotions, and will. Guidance imparted by the human spirit is therefore true,
realistic, and morally upright because the human spirit is under the control of
the Holy Spirit. This is why the translators of Scripture sometimes have great
difficulty distinguishing between the human spirit and the Holy Spirit. In some
versions of the Bible, the word "spirit" is spelled with a small s while in other versions it
will be spelled in the same place with a capital S, simply because it is
difficult to tell whether the writer means the Holy Spirit or the human spirit.
But it really makes little difference since, in the redeemed spirit, the Holy
Spirit is always in full control. It is the soul that is in rebellion, never
the spirit.
That soul, the king, has the power to reject the
pleadings of the spirit. The will must always give its consent to whatever
occurs in our lives. This is why God moves to bring to our intelligent
understanding the facts of the cross and resurrection that we may either accept
their full implications or else deny them.
Even babies sense the supremacy of the will. A
three-year-old can rule as a queen in a household. If you hold out your arms to
her to hold her, she will sometimes look at you with icy disdain. If she
decides to accept your offer, she regally holds out one arm like a scepter, and
you know you are accepted. But if she is not in the mood she turns her head
away, and there is nothing left to do but slink off and wait for a more
opportune time. This is the power of the will. We instinctively know we have a
right to choose. Our soul was designed by God to this very end. God himself
does not coerce the human will, but woos it and wins its consent.
Thus when God moves to bring to our intelligent
understanding the facts of the cross and the resurrection, he does so in the
fullness and beauty of resurrection power. Christ does not come to threaten us
or berate us, but to overwhelm us with his loveliness. He lets us see him in
the freshness and fragrance of his total adequacy and, melted by grace, we are
ready to say, "Lord Jesus, whatever you want--anything you say--whatever
you want me to do, I am ready to do."
Thus, on the third day Esther appears before the king,
and he is greatly struck by her beauty. He is immediately ready to grant her
request.
But now we read of something very strange:
And
Esther said, "If it please the king, let the king and Haman come this day
to a dinner that I have prepared for the king." Then said the king,
"Bring Haman quickly, that we may do as Esther desires." So the king
and Haman came to the dinner that Esther had prepared. And as they were
drinking wine, the king said to Esther, "What is your petition? It shall
be granted you. And what is your request? Even to the half of my kingdom, it
shall be fulfilled." But Esther said, "My petition and my request is:
If I have found favor in the sight of the king, and if it please the king to
grant my petition and fulfill my request, let the king and Haman come tomorrow
to the dinner which I will prepare for them, and tomorrow I will do as the king
has said." (Esther 5:4-8)
Why this strange delay? Why should Esther put off
making her request like this? The king seems quite eager to grant her
desire--even to the half of his kingdom. Under the law of the Medes and
Persians, this was the utmost a king was permitted to give away. Why then, this
strange delay?
Have you ever experienced this in your relationship
with the Lord? Have you ever come to the place where, captivated by the beauty
of Christ and sensing something of the glory and joy he brings, you have, with
complete sincerity and honesty, dedicated yourself anew to him? Perhaps you
have gone forward in a meeting, or raised your hand, or knelt in the secrecy of
your own room and given yourself again to Christ. Then you waited for God to
act, and nothing happened. He seemed to do nothing about it. Perhaps you
dedicated yourself to go to the mission field, or to enter a new line of endeavor.
And then nothing happens--no doors open. You ask, "Why the delay? I've
yielded, I'm ready, here am I, Lord, send me!" But nothing is done. How do
you explain it?
There are two reasons suggested in this account.
The first is that God is never content with a decision that is based on
emotions alone. We need to recognize this. We have seen that Haman can move the
king as easily as Esther can. If decisions are to be based on emotions only
they will continuously shift back and forth whichever way the wind blows. This
is precisely the story of many Christians. But God is not content with this. So
when a moment of surrender or dedication occurs, God frequently delays action
in order to give us time to think the matter through and allow our understanding
to catch up with our faith.
When I was still a young, growing Christian, I
wanted to be a surgeon. Even as a little boy in the early grades of school I
would sit at my desk and manipulate my fingers so my knuckles would be supple
enough to tie knots. I haunted every hospital I could get to and read
everything I could on medicine. I learned the parts of the body, the nerves and
the muscles, while still in high school.
Then quietly, I don't know quite how or when, I
began to realize that God was moving in a different direction, and that he was
suggesting to me that I consider entering the ministry. At first I resented
this, and fought against it, resisting the insistent plea of the Spirit. But
when the Spirit is after someone, he never gives up. Finally, in a moment of
surrender and dedication, overwhelmed with the joy of what Christ meant to me,
in my own room alone, I said to him, "All right, Lord, I'll be a minister,
if that is what you want."
But then nothing happened! I expected an invitation
the next day to preach at some prominent church, but it never came. I waited,
and went on, doing the things that were before me to do. When I left the city
of Chicago I went to Denver and from there, after a year or so, I went to
Honolulu, after the war began. While the war was on, I was engaged in teaching
Bible classes in bomb shelters, but still nothing was moving, no doors opened.
It wasn't until the war ended, and I was discharged from the service, that the
Lord opened the door for me to go to seminary and enter into training for the
ministry. But I discovered that when I did go, when the door did open, I was
much more ready for it. I realized so much more of what was involved in the
ministry and felt that I was able to appropriate much more of the value of
seminary because I knew what the battle was about.
So God knows the king needs time to base his
decision on more than the warmth of his love alone. He needs to understand
certain facts, and in the next chapter we will see how those facts are made
clear to him. This all points up the essential truth that all growth in grace
requires that emotion must lead on to knowledge. Faith leads out first, but if
our understanding doesn't catch up, faith soon begins to fail. "You will know the truth, and the truth
will make you free" (John 8:32, emphasis added).
A second reason for this delay on the part of
Esther appears in the next section:
And
Haman went out that day joyful and glad of heart. But when Haman saw Mordecai
in the king's gate, that he neither rose nor trembled before him, he was filled
with wrath against Mordecai. Nevertheless Haman restrained himself, and went
home; and he sent and fetched his friends and his wife Zeresh. And Haman
recounted to them the splendor of his riches, the number of his sons, all the
promotions with which the king had honored him, and how he had advanced him
above the princes and the servants of the king. And Haman added, "Even
Queen Esther let no one come with the king to the banquet she prepared but
myself. And tomorrow also I am invited by her together with the king. Yet all
this does me no good, so long as I see Mordecai the Jew sitting at the king's
gate." Then his wife Zeresh and all his friends said to him, "Let a
gallows fifty cubits high be made, and in the morning tell the king to have
Mordecai hanged upon it; then go merrily with the king to the dinner."
This counsel pleased Haman, and he had the gallows made. (Esther 5:9-14)
The flesh is cunning and crafty in its subtlety,
but the Holy Spirit is more than a match for it. By these tactics of delay and
with amazing skill, the Holy Spirit tricks the flesh within us into an open
display of pride and arrogance that shocks us, catches us up short, and makes
us realize what is the true condition of our hearts. Delay gives opportunity
for the flesh to grow puffed up with a sense of its own importance and thus to
drop its subtlety and act in such open arrogance that even we can see how
rotten and evil it is. Then we shall begin to judge it as an enemy rather than
a friend.
Haman goes out to Esther's dinner walking on air.
It looks to him as though he has won both the king and queen to his side. At
first he is jubilant, but one thing sticks in his craw--outside the gate he
sees Mordecai who refuses to bow and scrape before him. All the self-inflated
joy he felt over the apparent favor shown him by Queen Esther is spoiled by
this continual fly in his ointment. He seeks to relieve his wounded ego in the
only way the flesh knows--by an orgy of self-praise. "And Haman recounted
to them the splendor of his riches, the number of his sons, all the promotions
with which the king had honored him, and how he had advanced him above the
princes and the servants of the king."
There is nothing that soothes our battered egos
more than sympathetic listeners to the tale of our own prowess. Have you ever
indulged in this: "I said to him. . . and he said to me . . . and I said
back to him. . . and I really told him. . ." and so on? Whatever comes
from the Haman-nature within us is characterized by pride, and pride always
blinds. When men become blind they are helpless and stumble unwittingly into
folly. When I give way to pride and allow Haman to rule my life, I, too, become
blind and stumble into some stupid, foolish action to my own detriment. I am
tricked into some egotistical action or word. I become vain, arrogant,
swaggering--and vulnerable! The kindest thing God can do, therefore, is to
allow me to become so puffed up in pride that I act in a way that shocks me.
Then I see the truth and give serious attention to the program he has designed
to deal with this.
In the Gospel accounts, the Lord Jesus is
continually stripping false pretenses from men and showing them exactly what
they are. Read the stories of his dealings with the Pharisees and you will see
this repeated pattern all the way through. Men would come to him with questions
obviously contrived and designed to trap him and show him in the wrong. Each
question would be carefully worded to anticipate all possible answers that
would make the questioner look bad. Again and again he would allow them to
state their case, crawl out on a limb, and then his answer would be so
unexpected, so keenly perceptive, that he would leave them chagrined, all their
deceitfulness exposed, naked before the eyes of the crowd. They hated him for
it! They would gather in little groups to whisper and plot his death. Our Lord
knew this was going on, and the whole story of the gospels is that of how he
continually exposed them and drove them to the place where they did the
deed--his crucifixion--which ultimately revealed them for what they were before
the whole world.
So it is with Haman here: "Yet all this does
me no good," he says, "so long as I see Mordecai the Jew sitting at the
king's gate." Then his wife Zeresh and his friends said to him,
"There is only one thing you can do. If something stands in the way of
self-expression and your need to satisfy your own ego, then get rid of it--hang
it! Let a gallows fifty cubits high be made and tell the king to hang Mordecai
on that and then go merrily to dinner." As we have already seen, the word
"gallows" does not suggest a hangman's noose; rather it is a tall
pole on which a man is to be nailed or impaled. It is, in effect, a cross. This
is God's revelation to us that there is in each of us an element which would
willingly put Jesus Christ to death again if it could. Our most hopeful moment
comes when we recognize it is there, stop defending it, and begin to treat it
as God directs.
Have you learned to recognize Haman within, even
when he comes smiling and bowing and dripping with solicitude? When you have
been relieved from a job in which you thought you were indispensable and no one
even notices, do you feel slighted within, full of self-pity? Do you recognize
Haman when your patience wears thin and you explode, saying something you wish
you hadn't? Do you recognize your slimy friend when lust rises within and you
keep it hidden from others, but allow the thoughts to dwell in your mind so
that you can play with them?
This is the thing that put Jesus Christ on the
cross and would do it again if it had the chance. This is our enemy. God alone
knows how to end his trickery and defeat his evil purpose. He has already made
his strategy known: It will be by means of a cross.
Chapter 7
We have now arrived at a moment of suspense and
sinister possibilities. The collision course between Mordecai and Haman
approaches its climax. Guided by Mordecai, Queen Esther is preparing the king
for the revelation of Haman's real nature. It is a very ticklish matter. It is
always a delicate thing to reveal the perfidy and treachery of some trusted
friend--which is why Esther moves carefully and slowly. She has managed to awaken
the king's curiosity and build up his sense of expectation. At the same time
she has tricked Haman into dropping all subtlety so as to seek boldly and
openly the destruction of Mordecai by nailing him to a gallows seventy-five
feet high.
Chapter 6 of the biblical text opens with the king
making a great discovery:
On
that night the king could not sleep; and he gave orders to bring the book of
memorable deeds, the chronicles, and they were read before the king. And it was
found written how Mordecai had told about Bigthana and Teresh, two of the
king's eunuchs, who guarded the threshold, and who had sought to lay hands upon
King Ahasuerus. And the king said, "What honor or dignity has been
bestowed on Mordecai for this?" The king's servants who attended him said,
"Nothing has been done for him." (Esther 6:1-3)
Momentous events often hang upon seeming
trivialities. Here is a restless king who cannot sleep, and because of that his
empire is saved. Doubtless the king lay down on this night expecting to go right
off to sleep, but his mind began to go over the events of the day, and he was
curious and perplexed about Esther's behavior. Why had she come to him with
this strange request, asking him to bring Haman to dinner the next day? And
why, at the risk of her life, did she brave his disfavor to come? What is back
of all this? His mind went over and over it. He tried to forget it, but he
found himself coming back to it, tossing and turning restlessly. In the wee
hours of the morning he decided to read something to get his mind off his
thoughts, so he sent for the chronicles of the kingdom.
Perhaps you are saying, "Well, he certainly
picked the right kind of book. I don't know what could be more dull and prosaic
than the records of the kingdom. That kind of reading ought to put anyone to
sleep." But these were not dull accounts. These were the records of
memorable deeds, that is, true accounts of adventure and heroism. They were
fascinating records of costly and daring achievements, exciting and significant
history.
As these records were read, the king heard for the
first time the story of Mordecai's loyalty toward him, when Mordecai had
discovered the treachery of two of the king's trusted eunuchs. At considerable
personal risk, he had reported the plot against the king's life to the queen,
and she had in turn told the king. Though the king knew of the incident, he had
not known of Mordecai's part in it. Not until the story was read to him early
in the morning did he realize the unpaid debt he owed to Mordecai.
The discovery of this act of loyalty moved the king
greatly. In these ancient days as even yet today, palace revolt was the scourge
and fear of kings. November 22, 1963, stands as a grim reminder to us that even
in safe America the assassination of a national leader is a dread possibility.
Therefore, the king did not take this lightly, but was gripped by the sudden
realization that he owed his very life and throne to Mordecai.
Is there not a parallel to this in our Christian
lives? In the Bible we have a record of memorable deeds. This book is the story
of One who risked his life for us. In those dark hours upon the cross, Jesus
entered into a death grapple with the powers of darkness that were against us.
It is the most daring deed ever recorded in human history. There is nothing
like it anywhere else in the records of mankind. One man, abandoned and alone,
struggled with the invisible, stupefying forces of evil and conquered them for
us.
It is this story which God uses to break through
the stubborn willfulness of our hearts and make us realize that we are bought
with a price. We owe our very lives to this man. John Wesley, until the day of
his death, preserved a picture that someone had drawn him of the fire in the
old rectory where he had once lived--the fire from which, as a boy of six, he
had been rescued in the very nick of time. Beneath the picture in his own hand
he had written the words, "Is not this a brand plucked from the
burning?"
This is what the Holy Spirit brings before us when
he wishes to awaken us to the fact that the flesh is not our friend, as we
think, but an enemy. "You are not your own; you are bought with a
price." The one you can trust is the one to whom you owe your life. It is
this discovery of the right of Jesus Christ to our life which is the basis of
all deliverance and victory. I do not mean some abstract acknowledgement that
Christ died for us, or the recital of some orthodox creed. I mean the quiet
realization that comes, perhaps in a communion service or when you are alone in
your own home, when the truth breaks in upon you with shattering, staggering
power that you are truly a brand plucked from the burning, that you have no
right to a life of which he does not approve. In that moment of realization you
discover that he who risked his life for you is your true friend.
This is a most significant moment for King
Ahasuerus. He does not, as yet, know the true character of Haman, but for the
first time he is made aware of the fact that Mordecai is his friend. He is
deeply moved by this discovery and though it is yet early in the morning he
hastens to display the gratitude he feels:
And
the king said, "Who is in the court?" Now Haman had just entered the
outer court of the king's palace to speak to the king about having Mordecai
hanged on the gallows that he had prepared for him. So the king's servants told
him, "Haman is there standing in the court." And the king said,
"Let him come in." So Haman came in and the king said to him,
"What shall be done to the man whom the king delights to honor?"
(Esther 6:4-6)
Out of the king's discovery comes delight. Even
though it is early in the morning he hastens to display the gratitude he feels.
He asks, "Who is in the court?" By a strange twist of fate--one of those
coincidences which are never coincidence--Haman is entering at that very moment
to propose his bloody plan to the king. When the king greets him with the
words, "What shall be done to the man whom the king delights to
honor?", Haman has no doubt who that man is:
And
Haman said to himself, "Whom would the king delight to honor more than
me?" And Haman said to the king, "For the man whom the king delights
to honor, let royal robes be brought, which the king has worn, and the horse
which the king has ridden, and on whose head a royal crown is set; and let the
robes and the horse be handed over to one of the king's most noble princes; let
him array the man whom the king delights to honor, and let him conduct the man
on horseback through the open square of the city, proclaiming before him: 'Thus
shall it be done to the man whom the king delights to honor.''' (Esther 6:6-9)
In the twisted mind of Haman there is only one man
who he thinks can fit the description, "the man whom the king delights to
honor,"--himself! How beautifully characteristic this is of the flesh in
each of us. We feel we have an inherent right to the breaks in life. We are
resentful and bitter when things do not go well. We feel we are being cheated
of that which we eminently deserve. In our own estimation we have as much right
to honor as the next fellow, and if we are passed by we leave the clear
impression that sooner or later our superior qualities are bound to be
recognized. That is the mind of the flesh.
True Honor
But the remarkable thing here is that Haman well
knows what true honor is. When we wish to honor someone we hold a testimonial
dinner and give him a gold watch or a plaque to hang on the wall. But Haman
knows there is something much better than that. Without hesitation he replies
to the king, in effect, "Look, if you want to really honor this man in
whom you delight, give him your kingly clothes to wear. Give him your personal
horse to ride. Give him your own crown--in other words, give him yourself,
publicly!"
That is true honor! Jesus said, "If anyone
serves me, the Father will honor him" (John 12:26). And the honor God
gives is himself. God offers us his own clothing, his crown, all that he is. Do
you honestly desire to honor the One to whom you owe your life? Then there is
only one way you can do it. Give him your clothes to wear, give him your horse
to ride, give him your crown. Give him authority in your life. Yield your
members to him; as Paul said, "Present your bodies as a living sacrifice
... to God" (Romans 12:1). Grant him the right to be Lord over every area,
every detail, every aspect of your life. That is what true honor is.
The next movement of the story is one of sardonic
humor:
Then
the king said to Haman, "Make haste, take the robes and the horse, as you
have said, and do so to Mordecai the Jew who sits at the king's gate. Leave out
nothing that you have mentioned." So Haman took the robes and the horse,
and he arrayed Mordecai and made him ride through the open square of the city,
proclaiming, "Thus shall it be done to the man whom the king delights to
honor." Then Mordecai returned to the king's gate. But Haman hurried to
his house, mourning and with his head covered. (Esther 6:10-12)
What a scene this is! Imagine the bitter
humiliation as Haman, in a blinding rage, walks through the streets of the city
leading the horse of Mordecai who is clad in the royal garments of the king,
wearing the royal crown upon his head. Can you imagine what must have gone
through Haman's heart? All his plans of glory have fallen through. All his
proud ambitions are threatened by this galling thing that he must do. Outwardly
he is praising Mordecai, "This is the man whom the king delights to
honor," but inwardly he is grinding his teeth with rage and awaiting a
time of revenge.
But the whole point of the story is that he does
this humiliating thing. In fact he will do anything as the price of survival.
He is willing to stoop to any hypocrisy, any deceit, as long as he himself can
stay in the seat of power. Left to itself, the flesh is openly arrogant,
overbearing, boastful, lustful, cynical, proud. But when it is driven by the
Spirit into a corner, it can assume a garb of righteousness. It becomes pious,
religious, scrupulous about morals, zealous in church work, indignant over
wrong, provokingly evangelical. Have you ever met Haman like this, walking
through the streets of the city openly proclaiming, "This is the man whom
the king delights to honor," but inwardly seething, hating, willing to do
anything that looks good as long as it can survive?
Perhaps as a Christian you have discovered it is
quite possible to look like you were serving Christ, but actually not do so.
You can get by saying the right things, or going the right places with the
right people, but inside you are still very much determined to have your own
way and run your own life. Perhaps you have quarreled with someone and you know
the Christian thing to do is to apologize and forgive; so you go through the
motions, you say the words, but inside you vow you will never forget. That is
the flesh--Haman--bowing to the demands of the king, but only because it is the
price of survival to be a respectable Christian.
Haman will do anything. He will be scrupulously
religious if he has to, anything as long as he can survive. The flesh can
memorize Scripture, the flesh can teach Sunday school, the flesh can distribute
tracts, give large gifts of money, give a stirring testimony, teach a Bible
class, sing solos or preach a sermon. It can apologize after a fashion and
repent to some extent and suffer with a martyred air. But there is one thing it
will never do--it will never surrender, it will never change, it will never
give up--never! It is a slippery, elusive thing and when backed into a corner
it simply takes on a disguise and appears in a different form, but it is the
same old deadly evil flesh. It would rather wreck your life than give up.
The righteousness of the flesh is always a
counterfeit righteousness. It is centered in self and therefore it is always self-righteousness.
Haman can seemingly honor Mordecai, but in fact he never really does. Thus the
flesh can seemingly please God, but it never actually does. Romans 8:8
declares: "Those who are in the flesh cannot please God."
There is only one way the flesh can be overcome. It
must be put to death. And when, in desperation, it is driven to turn religious
and moral, its end may be very near. Haman has a premonition of this:
And
Haman told his wife Zeresh and all his friends everything that had befallen him.
Then his wise men and his wife Zeresh said to him, "If Mordecai, before
whom you have begun to fall, is of the Jewish people, you will not prevail
against him but will surely fall before him." While they were yet talking
with him, the king's eunuchs arrived and brought Haman in haste to the banquet
that Esther had prepared. (Esther 6:13-14)
One step yet remains to bring about Haman's defeat.
Haman's slimy guise of friendship must be stripped from him in the presence of
the king. The time for action has come. Thus Haman is brought "in
haste" to the banquet Esther has prepared.
Chapter 8
HAMAN'S LAST SUPPER
The
fateful moment has arrived. Nothing further can be done to deliver the kingdom
from the evil influence of Haman until the king is made to see his true
character. The moment for that revelation of evil has arrived:
So
the king and Haman went in to feast with Queen Esther. And on the second day,
as they were drinking wine, the king again said to Esther, "What is your
petition, Queen Esther? It shall be granted you. And what is your request? Even
to the half of my kingdom it shall be fulfilled." Then Queen Esther
answered, "If I have found favor in your sight, O king, and if it please
the king, let my life be given me at my petition, and my people at my request.
For we are sold, I and my people, to be destroyed, to be slain, and to be
annihilated. If we had been sold merely as slaves, men and women, I would have
held my peace; for our affliction is not to be compared with the loss to the
king." Then King Ahasuerus said to Queen Esther, "Who is he, and
where is he, that would presume to do this?" And Esther said, "A foe
and enemy! This wicked Haman!" (Esther 7:1-6)
Have you experienced this moment? Have you ever
seen, in a God-given flash of insight, that the problem in your life is not the
circumstances you live under, but the principle you have been living by? We
call these "moments of truth" when suddenly we catch a glimpse of the
way we look to others and are horrified by what we see. God opens our eyes to
see that the evil attitude which we have been treating as a friend, defending,
protecting, building little fences about, making excuses for, is not a friend
and never has been. It is, in fact, the bitterest enemy we have.
This is the moment when we believe, perhaps for the
first time, what the Scripture says concerning the natural life we have
inherited from Adam--that it is totally worthless and no good thing dwells in
it. What a shattering time this is! Haman the friend is revealed as Haman the
traitor, the enemy, the double-dealing foe. When we see this, it is almost
always followed by a time of struggle:
Then
Haman was in terror before the king and the queen. And the king rose from the
feast in wrath and went into the palace garden; but Haman stayed to beg his
life from Queen Esther, for he saw that evil was determined against him by the
king. (Esther 7:6-7)
Why does the king leave now that he knows who the
real enemy is? Why doesn't he simply shout, "Off with his head!" like
the queen in Alice In Wonderland? But he rises and goes off into the garden alone.
You can see him pacing up and down, struggling with himself. He is angry at
Haman and quite properly so. Haman knows this bodes no good for him, but the
king is uncertain what to do. After all, Haman is the prime minister. He has
deeply entrenched himself in the affairs of the kingdom. It is a radical step
to execute a prime minister. It necessarily must involve a change in the whole
pattern of life of the empire.
How do you feel when you finally see yourself in
the wrong, perhaps after years of justifying and excusing yourself? Suddenly
you see that the principle you have been living by has been the whole problem.
But you know that to admit it and renounce it will mean a deep and radical
adjustment on your part. Perhaps a deep-seated habit of life must be eradicated
and the whole pattern of life will have to be changed. What do you do then?
It is always a shock to discover that it is not
others' thoughtlessness that is the problem in our lives, as we fancied, but it
is our own selfishness. It is not their malice; it is our lovelessness. It is
shattering to realize that the actions we dislike in others are simply
reactions to what we are doing to them. It isn't others' weaknesses; it is our
relentless nagging of them. It isn't others' fickleness; it is our jealousy. It
is our pretentious attitude of self-confidence and self-trust--or perhaps
self-pity and self-excuse--that is the whole problem. What a struggle this
revelation awakens within us. We are tempted to compromise, to smooth it over
and go on, perhaps vowing to try a bit harder to control ourselves.
When the rich young ruler came to the Lord Jesus,
the Lord quickly revealed that young man's heart and showed him that his love
for what money could give possessed and owned his life. Then he said to him,
"Go and sell all that thou hast and give to the poor and come and follow
me." We read that the young man went away sorrowful, filled with struggle,
unwilling to call that thing the enemy it was and cut it off sharply and
completely. But the Lord, looking after him, was grieved because he loved him.
Like that young man, the king struggles with his
feelings in the garden of the palace. At last he realizes there is only one
possible escape from Haman's tyranny.
And
the king returned from the palace garden to the place where they were drinking
wine, as Haman was falling on the couch where Esther was; and the king said,
"Will he even assault the queen in my presence, in my own house?" As
the words left the mouth of the king, they covered Haman's face. Then said
Harbona, one of the eunuchs in attendance on the king, "Moreover, the
gallows which Haman has prepared for Mordecai, whose word saved the king, is standing
in Haman's house, fifty cubits high." And the king said, "Hang him on
that." So they hanged Haman on the gallows which he had prepared for
Mordecai. Then the anger of the king abated. (Esther 7:8-10)
When the king returns from the garden he sees Haman
half-fallen on the queen's couch, clawing at her cravenly, pleading for mercy.
The sight of it revolts and disgusts the king. With sarcasm he says, "Is
he even trying to attack her in my very presence?" At that moment, a
courtier standing by reminds him of the debt he owes to Mordecai. Pointing out
the window he indicates the gallows which Haman had built for Mordecai,
standing seventy-five feet high. In a flash the king sees the way out.
Mordecai, the man whose word saved his life, shall be the new prime minister.
So the king pronounces Haman's doom, "Hang him on that tree."
The moment the king gives the sentence of death,
the evil power of Haman is ended. Thus, when you agree with God that the things
of the flesh no longer have a right to live in your life, you will find
deliverance from their power. In the language of Romans 6:11, this is to
"consider yourselves dead to sin and alive to God in Christ Jesus."
This chapter opened with an intimate supper in a
private, banqueting room, but it closed with a man nailed, screaming, to a tree
until he is dead. Here is one of those timeless foreshadowings of the cross in
the Old Testament. Centuries after this event another supper was held in a
private banqueting room, upstairs in a building in Jerusalem. On that very
similar occasion, three forces were represented. There were eleven disciples
who did not know what was going on. Their hearts were troubled; they were
concerned and perplexed, full of questions, ignorant and unknowing. And there
was Jesus Christ their Lord, their Master, the perfect Son of Man, indwelt by
the Father, aware of everything, fully awake to the danger of the hour and
moving to avert the world's greatest disaster. And there also was Judas the
traitor, intent only on fulfilling his own desire, ready to destroy everything
if by hypocrisy and pretense he could get what he wanted, unconcerned for the
terrible results that would follow his deed. That supper, too, ended with a man
hanging upon a tree, nailed to a gallows. Wherever there is a cross in
Scripture it is always for one purpose only--to put an evil man to death. That
is what the cross will do in your life. That is what the cross of Jesus was--an
instrument by which an evil man met death.
Does that shock you? Did you ever think of Jesus as
an evil man? One of the most amazing sentences in all Scripture is that word in
Paul's second letter to Corinthians, "For our sake he made him to be sin
who knew no sin" (2 Corinthians 5:21). That is, on the cross Jesus became
Haman. Jesus was "made sin," made selfish, cruel, grasping, proud,
cunning, slimy, evil; and when he was made sin, God's reaction was to put him
to death, to nail him to a cross. That is the end of Haman! That is what the
Bible says took place on the cross of our Lord Jesus. He became sin, and God
put him to death.
Now what is true of a timeless event, such as the
cross, becomes part of our experience when we reenact it in our own lives. This
is why the cross of Jesus Christ, with all its possibilities of salvation and
deliverance, can be an utterly useless thing as far as we are concerned if it
is not translated into our experience. When we believe and act (that is what
faith is--acting on the principles set forth in the cross) the cross becomes
true in experience. Once we learn this principle, we must act upon it daily.
This is not the decision of a single moment, never to be repeated. It is a
decision made again and again and again. Jesus said, "If any man would
come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross" (Matthew
16:24). How often must he take it up? "Daily." "Let him deny
himself and take up his cross daily, and follow me."
"Hang it on that tree." That is the
sentence that brings victory. No other way will work. It must be said every
time Haman arises, for while we are in this body we are never delivered from
the attempts of the flesh to influence us. But Haman need never be victorious,
for if we believe what has been revealed about his nature, then without
compromise or mercy we can look at this evil thing--jealousy, resentment,
bitterness, malice, lust, self-confidence, pride, whatever it may be--and
recalling that this is what put Jesus Christ to death and made Judas do what he
did, and that this is what Jesus became when he took our place on the tree, we
say, "Hang it on that tree."
When jealousy burns within you, hang it on the
tree. When self-pity comes moaning and tempts you to feel sorry for yourself,
hang it on the tree. When self-will rises up and says, "I am going to have
my way. I don't care what others say," hang it on the tree. When
resentment flames because we have been ignored or mistreated, hang it on that
tree. When a critical spirit whispers some malicious thing, hang it on the
tree. Say, "Lord Jesus, because I see this through your eyes as the evil
thing it is, then standing here in the light of your cross, I put my will
alongside yours and I agree it has no right to live. It must be put, in my
experience, in the place where you put it in reality, the place of death."
This is the only possible way to victory.
In the biblical text, a chapter division occurs at
this point, but we must not stop here. The wrong man has now been toppled from
his seat of power, but the right man must be brought in:
On
that day King Ahasuerus gave to Queen Esther the house of Haman, the enemy of
the Jews. And Mordecai came before the king, for Esther had told what he was to
her; and the king took off his signet ring, which he had taken from Haman, and
gave it to Mordecai. And Esther set Mordecai over the house of Haman. (Esther
8:1-2)
This is a magic moment, full of possibilities. In
your life, this is the moment when consciously and deliberately you reject the
authority of self-interest and yield to the Holy Spirit the right to sovereign
direction in all your concerns. Mordecai is brought in before the king, and the
signet ring of authority is given to him. It is now possible for the wisdom and
insight of Mordecai to manifest itself, through the authority of the king, throughout
the entire empire. The moment we are ready to reject the authority of the
flesh, we can give to the Spirit of God his rightful position as the prime
minister of our kingdom.
This is sometimes called, in terms of human
experience, "a second work of grace." It has also been called
"full sanctification" or "the baptism of the Holy Spirit"
or some other such term. It is often taken to be the true beginning of a
Christian life and this has given rise to much confusion and misunderstanding
in the apprehension of spiritual truth. It is quite wrong to look on this as
though the Spirit of God were only now entering the life. You can see that
Mordecai has been in the book of Esther right from the beginning, but it is
only at this moment that he is brought before the king. This is the moment when
the soul, the conscious life, becomes aware of the Spirit's right to rule in
every area. But Mordecai has been there all along. He is not brought into the
kingdom; he is brought before the king.
This is not, then, the baptism of the Holy Spirit.
That takes place at the beginning of the Christian life, is never repeated, and
is continually the basis from which God works in our lives. But this is what
the New Testament calls "the filling of the Spirit." Since the task
of the Holy Spirit is to make real in our lives the person of Jesus Christ,
this could also picture the moment we consciously and with permanent intent
yield to the Lordship of Jesus Christ. To yield to the Lordship of Christ and
to live a Spirit-filled life is exactly the same thing. These terms are
interchangeable.
When we first yield conscious control of our
kingdom to the Holy Spirit, we enter into a new experience in our lives. Our
new Prime Minister sets about bringing everything in the kingdom under the
authority we gave him, at the moment we place the signet ring of power upon his
finger. This granting of authority may need to be reconfirmed in certain areas
of our lives which we later discover are yet unsubmitted to him. For the
strange thing about us is that we do not know ourselves. Though in some moment
of dedication we may yield to the Spirit with all our heart and consciously
grant him the right to rule, tomorrow we may discover there is another area
that has not been brought under his control and this, too, must be submitted.
When that occurs, we may have another experience of new advance similar to the
first, so that it is possible to have many fillings of the Spirit. Each time,
there is a return to the principle of dependence upon an indwelling Spirit for
an activity.
This is reflected in the wisdom Esther displays in
handling the "house of Haman." Haman, the old prime minister, is now
gone, but the sons of Haman are still around. The king gives Esther charge of
them, and she immediately turns them over to Mordecai as the only one with the
wisdom and knowledge to handle such a thorny matter properly.
You can recognize this in your own experience, if
you are a Christian. You may come to the place where you know the truth about
the flesh and believe that Christ's death has judged it within you;
nevertheless, you discover evidence of the flesh still affecting you. Though
the old man indeed has been hanged upon the tree, yet he still has, through the
house of Haman, the ability to influence you, distract you, tempt you, and even
defeat you. The answer to this is not to try to repress these influences by
your will power. The king here makes no effort to try to overcome the house of
Haman. He says, "It is your problem, Esther." And she, in turn, says
to the Holy Spirit, "It is your problem. You handle the matter."
This is exactly what the New Testament tells us to
do. We are to realize that our defense against the flesh will not be our own
will power, our determination to control ourselves, but it will rather be a
quiet resting upon the power of the Holy Spirit to handle the flesh whenever it
appears, and an unrelenting dependence upon him to do so.
But, though Haman is gone, our problem is still not
ended. Not only is the house of Haman still around, but there is that pesky
edict that Haman tricked the king into signing, which still threatens the
kingdom. What is to be done about this? It is the law of the Medes and the
Persians and cannot be changed. How can disaster be averted?
Chapter 9
THE LAW OF THE SPIRIT
While evil Haman was still the prime minister he
persuaded the king to sign an irrevocable law that permitted the armies of the
land to destroy the Jews throughout the kingdom. Though Mordecai is now prime
minister in Haman's place, the threat of the old law still hangs over the
kingdom. A time has already been set for its execution, and that time
inexorably draws nearer. The knowledge of this brings Esther in despair before
the king again:
Then
Esther spoke again to the king; she fell at his feet and besought him with
tears to avert the evil design of Haman the Agagite and the plot which he had
devised against the Jews. And the king held out the golden scepter to Esther,
and Esther rose and stood before the king. And she said, "If it please the
king, and if I have found favor in his sight, and if the thing seem right
before the king, and I be pleasing in his eyes, let an order be written to
revoke the letters devised by Haman the Agagite, the son of Hammedatha, which
he wrote to destroy the Jews who are in all the provinces of the king. For how
can I endure to see the calamity that is coming to my people? Or how can I
endure to see the destruction of my kindred? (Esther 8:3-6)
As we have seen earlier in this book, the law of
the Medes and Persians which cannot be altered pictures in our own experience
what Romans calls, "the law of sin and death." It, too, can never be
altered or revoked while we are yet in the body. It is this fact which produces
a most baffling experience to the Christian. Though we have come to the place
where we recognize the evil of the flesh, our old Haman, and refuse any longer
to defend it (no longer excusing our temper, impatience, resentment,
self-righteousness, and pride), and by that choice reenact in our experience
the meaning of the death of Christ for us, nevertheless we discover we are
still not free to be what we want. Our efforts to live a life that is pleasing
to God still result in defeat and barrenness.
It is this that baffles the apostle Paul as he
describes his experience in Romans 7: "I do not understand my own actions.
For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate. . . . I can will
what is right, but I cannot do it." (Romans 7:15-18) Paul is saying here,
"There was a time when I didn't really know what God wanted. But I have
passed beyond that place. I now know what he wants and I want very much to do
it. There is no longer anything wrong with my desire. I want desperately to
please the Lord, but when I try I discover that I am still under the control of
self." Paul's explanation for this experience is very important. "He
says in effect, "I have discovered an unchangeable law at work in my life
that even my experience of the cross and the resurrection has not eliminated--the
law of sin and death. It is this thing which is giving me this wretched,
miserable experience. "
It is at this point in the experience of a growing
Christian that he needs much help. His usual reaction is to feel there is
something lacking in his dedication. So he consecrates himself to the Lord
anew. Perhaps there is a service at the church and he goes forward, raises his
hand, or bows his head and resolves again to serve the Lord better. He has
discovered in experience what Paul means when he says, "I see in my
members another law at war with the law of my mind and making me captive to the
law of sin which dwells in my members. Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver
me from this body of death?" (Romans 7:23-24)
That is exactly what Queen Esther is saying at this
point. Her cry, as she comes before the king the second time is: "Oh
wretched woman that I am. Who will deliver me and my people from this law of
sin and death which still has authority over us and holds us in its grip and
power?"
The answer of the king to Esther is very revealing:
Then
King Ahasuerus said to Queen Esther and to Mordecai the Jew, "Behold, I
have given Esther the house of Haman, and they have hanged him on the gallows,
because he would lay hands on the Jews. And you may write as you please with
regard to the Jews, in the name of the king, and seal it with the king's ring;
for an edict written in the name of the king and sealed with the king's ring
cannot be revoked." (Esther 8:7-8)
Almost certainly the last statement of the king
here should begin with the word, "but," rather than "for."
It should read, "but an edict written in the name of the king and sealed
with the king's ring cannot be revoked." The king is here declaring his
utter bankruptcy to do anything about the law of destruction which still hangs
over the people of Mordecai. He refers to the first edict that he had issued
under Haman's instructions. He is saying, "I have done all I can. I have
given you the house of Haman and ordered him hung upon the gallows, but I can
do no more. The law of the Medes and the Persians cannot be changed. The matter
is now in the hands of Mordecai." It is this utter helplessness on the
part of the king and his readiness to admit it which is the great lesson the
Holy Spirit thrusts upon us from this passage. The astonishing thing, which
Paul says in Romans 7 he finally learned and which brought him to victory, was
that his very efforts to please God by determined activity on his part only
resulted in his becoming a carnal Christian! To his own amazement he discovered
that the flesh does not only consist of obvious evil--impatience, worry,
jealousy, pride, temper--but it also consists of much which he formerly thought
to be good. He discovered that self-effort is also wrong and part of the flesh.
Therefore, to set out to impress God by a demonstration of great zeal for his
cause was to find himself utterly baffled and broken before the law of sin and
death. He must learn at last that, "whatever does not proceed from faith
is sin" (Romans 14:23).
But King Ahasuerus makes no attempt at self-effort.
Immediately he recognizes his total helplessness. He does the only wise thing;
he puts the whole matter in Mordecai's hands. "Write whatever you
please," he says, "and I will sign it." Without hesitation
Mordecai acts:
The
king's secretaries were summoned at that time, in the third month, which is the
month of Sivan, on the twenty-third day; and an edict was written according to
all that Mordecai commanded concerning the Jews to the satraps and the
governors and the princes of the provinces from India to Ethiopia, a hundred
and twenty-seven provinces, to every province in its own script and to every
people in its own language, and also to the Jews in their script and their
language. (Esther 8:9)
What is Mordecai's answer to this threat which
hangs like the sword of Damocles over the kingdom? He cannot cancel out the old
law; that is impossible. But there is one thing he can do. He can issue a new
law, with the king's consent and authority, which would affect the farthest
bounds of the kingdom, and which could turn the threatened defeat into victory.
The details of the new law are now given us:
The
writing was in the name of King Ahasuerus and sealed with the king's ring, and
letters were sent by mounted couriers riding on swift horses that were used in
the king's service, bred from the royal stud. By these the king allowed the
Jews who were in every city to gather and defend their lives, to destroy, to
slay, and to annihilate any armed force of any people or province that might
attack them, with their children and women, and to plunder their goods, upon
one day throughout all the provinces of King Ahasuerus, on the thirteenth day
of the twelfth month, which is the month of Adar. A copy of what was written
was to be issued as a decree in every province, and by proclamation to all
peoples, and the Jews were to be ready on that day to avenge themselves upon
their enemies. So the couriers, mounted on their swift horses that were used in
the king's service, rode out in haste, urged by the king's command; and the
decree was issued in Susa the capital. (Esther 8:10-14)
Here is a new law that gave the Jews authority to
act over all their enemies. The first law could not be eliminated, but its
effects could be cancelled out. So we read in Romans 8:2, "The law of the
Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has set me free from the law of sin and
death." Again in Galatians Paul says in triumph, "It is no longer I
who live, but Christ who lives in me" (Galatians 2:20). That is, the law
of his life in me is able to counteract the effects of sin and death. It is no
longer I who work, but it is he who works in me. And so I live his life. It is
still I who live it, but I live it by faith in the Son of God who loved me and
gave himself for me. When I count on his indwelling life to work through me, he
turns even my failures into victories. The very circumstances of defeat become
the stairway to triumph.
"Your sorrow will turn into joy," the
Lord Jesus said to his disciples before he went to the cross (John 16:20). He
did not say, "Your sorrow shall be replaced by joy." That is the best
we can hope for in the world's perspective. We look for a change of circumstances
by which we can move from sorrow into joy. But Jesus is saying, "The very
thing which causes you sorrow, when the Holy Spirit comes into your life will
be the very thing in which you find joy." Your sorrows shall be
translated, transmuted into joy. How right he was! The shadow of the cross had
stricken their hearts with fear and caused deep sorrow. They could see it as
nothing but pain, anguish, and heartache. But Jesus pointed out that when the
Spirit came that very cross would be the source of their richest joy. And so it
proved to be.
Thus the law of sin and death may continue to work
in our circumstances, but the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus
transmutes those very painful circumstances into rejoicing and blessing. Paul
learned this when he found one day a thorn in his flesh--a raw, grinding,
unpleasant thing from which he struggled to be free. He asked three times to
have it taken away, but the answer came, "My grace is sufficient for
you." Grasping that answer, he realized that the thorn made him feel weak
and helpless, and it was his sense of weakness which caused him to cast himself
upon the sustaining grace of an indwelling Lord. That, in turn, resulted in a
mighty display of the power of God in his ministry. So Paul could say, "I
will all the more gladly boast of my weaknesses, that the power of Christ may
rest upon me" (2 Corinthians 12:9).
So the new law of the Spirit never eliminates the
law of sin and death; it simply superimposes upon it a higher power. Some time
ago, as a growing boy, I discovered that something was happening to my eyes. I
could not see as well as other boys. Finally I checked with an eye doctor, and
he informed me that I was suffering from the law of myopia, that is, the law of
nearsightedness. No matter how hard I tried, I could not see as well as others.
I would squint and peer and strain, but all my efforts did me no good. I simply
could not see what others saw. I was suffering from a law in my members which
held me under bondage.
But some time later I discovered a new law. It is
called the law of contact lenses! I was told that if I would allow two tiny
bits of plastic, no bigger than the end of my finger, to be inserted into my
eyes, I would be able to see perfectly. The new law would counteract the law of
myopia. I am happy to say that I believed that propaganda and made the
experiment. The result was instant, perfect vision which has continued ever
since.
Now the law of myopia is still at work, and any
time I think it has been overcome for good I need only take the plastic lenses
from my eyes, and I discover I go right back into the same helplessness of
vision. But whenever I quietly reckon upon the law of contact lenses and insert
them into my eyes, there is nothing more I need to do. I don't have to think about
them again for long periods of time. They are constantly at work overcoming the
law of nearsightedness and giving me perfect vision. "
But to return to our story. When the new edict was
announced throughout the kingdom, there was great joy and gladness:
Then Mordecai went out from the presence of
the king in royal robes of blue and white, with a great golden crown and a
mantle of fine linen and purple, while the city of Susa shouted and rejoiced.
The Jews had light and gladness and joy and honor. And in every province and in
every city, wherever the king's command and his edict came, there was gladness
and joy among the Jews, a feast and a holiday. (Esther 8:15-17)
Note, this joy comes even before the deliverance
has actually been realized. It has simply been announced; it has not yet been
experienced. Mordecai and the Jews are now honored everywhere. The city of Susa
shouts with gladness.
When it breaks upon our defeated hearts that God
has made a way out of the barrenness of mere fleshly activity, we know instant
joy. What a relief it is! Compare this edict of Mordecai's with that of Haman's
in chapter 3. The result in the city when Haman's edict was announced was one
of confusion and bewilderment. But now Mordecai is in power, and when the new
edict is issued there is joy and gladness, feasting and holiday. What a
glorious thing it is to realize that deliverance is possible; that this
miserable, barren, unfruitfulness is not God's intended experience for us; that
each one of us, without exception, is free to step into the glorious reality of
a life lived in the power of the Spirit of God, for God is no respecter of
persons.
How well I recall the night when, as a young man in
the service of the United States Navy, I was standing watch in a building in
Pearl Harbor. It was my duty to be on watch for four hours, from two A.M. to
six A.M. During those hours I could write letters, read, or otherwise fill my
time as long as I remained on duty and awake. I had brought with me William R.
Newell's great book, Romans Verse by Verse. As I read the words of
Romans 6:14 they hit me with peculiar force. "Sin will have no dominion
over you, since you are not under law but under grace." I had been
struggling with so many things in my life which were holding me back, baffling
me, mocking me. Those words seemed to come to life. They leaped out from the
page and came thundering at me. "Sin will have no dominion over you"!
I did not understand the process by which victory would come, but my faith laid
hold of those words. Though I had not yet experienced deliverance, I walked up
and down the floor with my heart overflowing with victorious joy. Here was the
word of the Holy Spirit that the things which made for defeat in my life would
utterly be broken. Looking back through the years since I can see that the
promise of that hour has been fulfilled. The hindering shackles have been
broken away by the power of the indwelling life of Jesus Christ. But even
before I actually walked in victory I knew the joy of it by anticipation when
the promise came home to my heart in power.
Not only was there joy in the kingdom of Persia
when Mordecai's edict was announced, but there was also another remarkable
result. "And many from the peoples of the country declared themselves
Jews, for the fear of the Jews had fallen upon them" (v. 17). This simply
means that pagan Gentiles, seeing the Jews so joyous and confident in
Mordecai's wisdom and power, gave up their paganism and turned to the only true
God. For the first time they noticed something real about these Jews. Suddenly
these people had come to life, and there was a glorious quality of joy and
faith about them that made their neighbors say, "There must be something
wonderful about this faith in Jehovah." And they too became Jews!
When, because of your faith, your life too becomes
perceptibly different; when your reactions are quite opposite to what the
situation seems to call for and your activities can no longer be explained in
terms of your personality; that is when your neighborhood will sit up and take
notice. In the eyes of the world, it is not our relationship with Jesus Christ
that counts; it is our resemblance to him! In the midst of circumstances that
look like certain defeat, there is no more powerful testimony than the joy
produced by faith.
Chapter 10
THE SWEET TASTE OF VICTORY
Throughout
the book of Esther reference has been continually made to a specific day and
hour when the principles represented by the edict of Haman and that of Mordecai
shall clash headlong. That day has now arrived:
Now
in the twelfth month, which is the month of Adar, on the thirteenth day of the
same, when the king's command and edict were about to be executed, on the very
day when the enemies of the Jews hoped to get the mastery over them, but which
had been changed to a day when the Jews should get the mastery over their foes,
the Jews gathered in their cities throughout all the provinces of King
Ahasuerus to lay hands on such as sought their hurt. (Esther 9:1-2)
God has appointed a day when what we have learned
intellectually through the study of the Word of God, illuminated by the Holy
Spirit, must be put to the test in the hurly-burly and mud and blood of life.
Though our hearts may be filled with joy when we learn of the possibility of
total deliverance from the bondage of the flesh, the day must come when we go
back to the place of pressure, to the circumstances of former defeat, where our
head knowledge will be put to the test. God is forever conducting examinations.
Life is not merely an exercise in mental acrobatics. No principle of victory is
of any real value unless it can be lived out in the reality of daily
experience.
So, like the Jews, we must come to the actual day
of combat. When the moment of temptation is upon us, when the pressure is great
to give way to the flesh, what do we do? We can now trace in our story the
process of appropriation, the means by which the provision for victory is
applied to the specific time of combat. There is first the authority of faith!
And
no one could make a stand against them, for the fear of them had fallen upon
all peoples. All the princes of the provinces and the satraps and the governors
and the royal officials also helped the Jews, for the fear of Mordecai had fallen
upon them. (Esther 9:2-3)
Under the edict of Haman the people were literally
commanded to fight against the Jews, and under that edict the Jews were
forbidden to defend themselves. Any effort they made in their own defense was a
violation of the law of the land. The very law itself was against them, and
they could not fight back legally. Thus we read in Romans 7, "While we
were living in the flesh, our sinful passions, aroused by the law, were at work
in our members to bear fruit for death." (Romans 7:5) That simply means
that when we Christians endeavor to please God by our self-directed activities
in his behalf, without dependence upon the life of Christ within, and we go on
our own steam, the result is that our sinful passions within are aroused by the
law we are trying to obey. Have we not often felt this? Someone tells us not to
do something, and immediately we want to do that very thing. Our sinful
passions are aroused by the prohibition of the law. The very law that commands
our obedience also arouses our resentment against it.
But now a second edict has been issued. The edict
from Mordecai set the Jews free so that now in their fighting they would no
longer be outlaws or criminals. They can now fight with the full authority of
the throne behind them. Thus in Romans 7:6 we read, "But now we are
discharged from the law, dead to that which held us captive, so that we serve
not under the old written code but in the new life of the Spirit." We now
have God's full authority to stand on the basis of an imparted life--the life
of the Lord Jesus made real to us by an indwelling Spirit. We are now to
realize that we have full authority to withstand every manifestation of the
flesh. We must no longer use the excuse, "I can't help doing this; after
all, I'm only human." It is to free us from the effects of this fallen
"humanity" that the Holy Spirit has assumed the place of power in our
lives.
But note, also, that "all the princes of the
provinces and the satraps and the governors and the royal officials also helped
the Jews." The authority of faith is such that as we walk out on this
great principle of activity, even the very circumstances we thought were
against us now combine to help us on to victory. When Joseph was sold into slavery,
put into prison, and from there exalted to second place in the kingdom of
Egypt, his brethren, who had sold him, came to Egypt to seek relief from
famine. When Joseph made himself known to them they were very much afraid. But
to comfort them. Joseph said a wonderful thing: "You meant evil against
me; but God meant it for good" (Gen. 50:20). Thus the very circumstances
that we blame for defeating us and bringing us into bondage are often the very
thing that God uses to help us to victory. I have often wondered what those
Christians in Damascus must have thought when they saw being led by the hand
that poor, blinded Saul of Tarsus who had come there breathing out threats and
slaughter against them and from whom they were now hiding in fear of their
lives. But he had now come to be on their side. God had arrested the arrester
and brought him a captive to them. Of course they were afraid and couldn't
trust him at first, but gradually they saw that by the might of glory and
grace, God had transformed their greatest enemy into their greatest defender.
What a picture this is of what happens in the life of one who
understands the victory that God has planned.
But there is yet more to the pattern of victory.
There is not only the authority of faith; there is also dependence upon the man
of power:
For
Mordecai was great in the king's house, and his fame spread throughout all the
provinces; for the man Mordecai grew more and more powerful. So the Jews smote
all their enemies with the sword, slaughtering, and destroying them, and did as
they pleased to those who hated them. (Esther 9:4-5)
These Jews were now fighting in the consciousness
that the man of power was on their side. The power in which they fought was not
their own, but came right from the throne itself. Thus they were simply
irresistible in their fighting. Each of these Jews was saying, as we must learn
to say, "I can't; but He can; therefore I can!" Power flows from the
very throne of the universe itself when we act on that principle.
Not long ago I saw in a magazine a picture of a
straw that had been picked up by a tornado and driven through a telephone pole.
There was also an iron fire hydrant that had been pierced by several slivers of
wood. How could this happen? If I gave you a straw and said, "Would you
kindly go out and drive this through a telephone pole?", you would say it
was impossible. But it has actually happened. The explanation is that the weak
straw was caught up in the power of a tornado, and in the power of that mighty
wind, it was able to do that which it could never do by itself. Thus, in the
power of the mighty Wind of God we can do all that needs to be done. It won't
always be to put straws through telephone poles. The Holy Spirit will never be
like a tornado if all we need is a gentle breeze. But if we need a tornado,
that is what he will be. There is nothing we need to appropriate this other
than the authority of faith and dependence upon his royal power to bring to
pass all that he intends.
The next movement of this story brings before us
certain marks of victory. How can we really know that we are walking in the
Spirit? There are certain indelible marks, impossible to imitate, by which we
can know that we have found the principle of victory. Four of these marks are
given to us here. The first is the slaying of the ten sons of Haman:
In
Susa the capital itself the Jews slew and destroyed five hundred men, and also
slew Parshandatha and Dalphon and Aspatha and Poratha and Adalia and Aridatha
and Parmashta and Arisai and Aridai and Vaizatha, the ten sons of Haman the son
of Hammedatha, the enemy of the Jews; but they laid no hand on the plunder.
(Esther 9:6-10)
In the original Hebrew these ten sons of Haman are
listed here in a most striking way. Their names do not follow one another
across the page, as they appear in the English text, but are listed in a
column. In such a form they stand right out from the page. In a parallel column
at the other side of the page, opposite each of the names of Haman's sons, the Hebrew
word "self" is repeated. Thus the word "self" is linked
with the meaning of each name right down the column.
These ten names have most interesting meanings.
Some of them are of Persian derivation and their significance difficult to
determine, but the following meanings are generally accepted: Parshandatha means "Curious
Self," that is, nosiness, a busy-body in other people's matters. This
characteristic of the flesh is slain by the power of the Spirit. Dalphon means "Weeping
Self" or self-pity, picturing the remarkable ability we have to feel sorry
for ourselves. This, too, is put to death. Aspatha means "Assembled
Self," self-mobilized for its own ends or self-sufficiency. Poratha means "Generous
Self," but in the bad sense intended here it indicates spend-thriftiness,
impulsive buying for the sake of self. Adalia means "Weak
Self," or the feeling of inferiority, self-consciousness.
Aridatha means "Strong Self," that is,
assertiveness, the insistence on one's own way. Parmashta means "Preeminent Self."
This suggests ambition, that which desires to have preeminence over others. Arisai means "Bold
Self" or impudence. Aridai means "Dignified Self," which again in a
bad sense is pride or haughtiness, a sense of superiority. The last name, Vaizatha, is the worst of all. It
means "Pure Self," that is, self-righteousness, the self which
considers itself purer than everyone else.
All of these were put to death. They were refused
the right to live. The disappearance of these traits of the self-life is the first
great evidence of having discovered the secret of victory.
The second mark is the double victory recorded in
the capital city:
That
very day the number of those slain in Susa the capital was reported to the
king. And the king said to Queen Esther, "In Susa the capital the Jews
have slain five hundred men and also the ten sons of Haman. What then have they
done in the rest of the king's provinces! Now what is your petition? It shall
be granted you. And what further is your request? It shall be fulfilled."
And Esther said, "If it please the king, let the Jews who are in Susa be
allowed tomorrow also to do according to this day's edict." (Esther
9:11-13)
On the thirteenth day of the twelfth month, in
exact accord with the edicts of Haman and Mordecai, the great conflict occurred
throughout the one hundred and twenty-seven provinces of the kingdom. But in
the capital city of Susa, by special request of Esther, the slaughter was
extended another full day to include the fourteenth, so the victory in the
capital was double that in the provinces. When the law of the Spirit of life
has set us free from the law of sin and death so that the self-manifestations
cease, there will be rejoicing and gladness among all our friends and
associates throughout the kingdom of our influence. We will be so much easier
to live with! But they will not know the half of it. The joy of release in our
own hearts will be at least double that which others experience by our victory.
One dear woman said, "No one can ever possibly know the glorious sense of
relief that I have experienced in being set free from the chains of self.
Others see the happiness I experience, but only I know the fullness of joy
within!"
The third unmistakable mark of the fullness of the
Spirit is the public display of the ten sons of Haman. Esther's request to the
king continues:
"And
let the ten sons of Haman be hanged on the gallows." So the king commanded
this to be done; a decree was issued in Susa, and the ten sons of Haman were
hanged. (Esther 9:13-14)
These evil offspring of Haman had already been
slain, but now Esther requests that their dead bodies be publicly displayed.
There is no clearer sign of the victory of the Spirit than when a believer
finds himself willing to share with others the story of his battle with the
ugliness of self, and to encourage them in the true way of victory. If we
attempt to control the flesh by willpower, the last thing we want is to have
anyone know we have problems of such a nature. But let us begin to walk in the
Spirit and we become quite willing for anyone to know the character of these
struggles. The skeletons come out of our closets. We no longer fear discovery,
for the end of these self traits is obvious to all.
The last mark of true victory is three times
mentioned in this account. Wherever the Jews fought, though they defeated their
enemies on every hand, it is everywhere recorded of them, "they laid no
hands on the plunder." They did not take advantage of the victory to
enrich themselves. They were not interested in personal advancement as a result
of this remarkable turn of events. This is a clear mark of genuine spiritual
victory. There are always some Christians who wish to be free from certain
problems in their disposition because it will mean a chance for advancement in
employment, or it will improve conditions at home. Perhaps they hope to get
along better with their mothers-in-law! But the mark of true victory is that
you don't care a whit what happens to you, you want victory simply because it
is God's desire for you. A woman wrote in Decision magazine, "Such a
short time ago I was afraid of doing wrong because it might hurt me. Now I am
beginning to feel it is more important not to hurt my Father." Such an
attitude precludes all parade of piety, avoids any seeking for the admiration
of others. The delivered heart quickly rejoices in the sweetness of victory,
but makes no attempt to turn it to its own advantage.
The next section of the text repeats again and
again the words rest, feasting, gladness, holiday-making, concern for
others,
and gifts:
This
was on the thirteenth day of the month of Adar, and on the fourteenth day they
rested and made that a day of feasting and gladness. But the Jews who were in
Susa gathered on the thirteenth day and on the fourteenth, and rested on the
fifteenth day, making that a day of feasting and gladness. Therefore the Jews
of the villages, who live in the open towns, hold the fourteenth day of the
month of Adar as a day for gladness and feasting and holiday-making, and a day
on which they send choice portions to one another. And Mordecai recorded these
things, and sent letters to all the Jews who were in all the provinces of King
Ahasuerus, both near and far, enjoining them that they should keep the
fourteenth day of the month Adar and also the fifteenth day of the same, year
by year, as the days on which the Jews got relief from their enemies, and as
the month that had been turned for them from sorrow into gladness and from
mourning into a holiday; that they should make them days of feasting and
gladness, days for sending choice portions to one another and gifts to the
poor. (Esther 9:17-22)
Note how frequently the character of the
celebration of this day is emphasized. It was to be a day of feasting and
gladness (vv. 17, 18, 19, and twice again in v. 22). It was to be a day of
rest. It was to be a day of holiday-making of enjoying what was accomplished.
It was a day in which they obtained relief from their enemies. It was a day of
showing generosity and deep concern for others, of sending gifts to the poor.
All this indicates the results of the victory that was accomplished. What is
this but the enjoyment of the fruit of the Spirit?
How much did the kingdom of Persia experience these
blessings while Haman was in the prime minister's seat? None whatever! When
Haman ruled, the result in the kingdom was confusion, mourning, weeping,
dejection, and despair. How aptly this describes the experience of a Christian
who is earnestly struggling to do his best for God, but has never yet learned
what God wants to teach him in terms of a rest and dependence upon the
indwelling life of the Lord Jesus to work through him.
Care needs to be exercised at this point. We are so
used to looking to our circumstances as the source of happy feelings, that when
we hear that we can experience rest, gladness, and concern for others
continually, we instinctively feel that somehow that means we will have happy
circumstances all the time. We must be careful to understand exactly what is
offered. The promised supply of peace, victory, joy and a continual out-flowing
river of love does not necessarily mean that there will be a change in our
circumstances. Victory does not mean freedom from weariness, sickness, sorrow,
heartache, pressure, defeat, or danger in the Christian's experience. Rather,
in the midst of these things we shall, at the same time, experience a quiet
inner joy, a sense of sustaining strength, and a freedom from the
manifestations of self-life.
The Lord warned, "In the world you have
tribulation; but be of good cheer, I have overcome the world" (John
16:33). There is a place of relief and release despite the circumstances.
Deliverance comes not by a change of our conditions, but by another principle,
the continual imparting to us by the Holy Spirit of the indwelling life of the
risen Lord whose adequate resources maintain our spirits despite the
circumstances.
Now in the summary of this book we have the steps
outlined for us for the "how" of victory:
So
the Jews undertook to do as they had begun, and as Mordecai had written to
them. For Haman the Agagite, the son of Hammedatha, the enemy of all the Jews,
had plotted against the Jews to destroy them, and had cast Pur, that is the
lot, to crush and destroy them, but when Esther came before the king, he gave
orders in writing that his wicked plot which he had devised against the Jews
should come upon his head, and that he and his sons should be hanged on the
gallows. (Esther 9:23-25)
Every Christian who knows Jesus Christ as an
indwelling life stumbles occasionally into victory. The Spirit of God puts us
in circumstances where we are overwhelmed and in the moment of desperation we
cry out to God for help. Inevitably when we do that we experience deliverance,
victory. This is emergency help, requested only when we get our backs up
against the wall. But the normal condition of a believer is that we are always
to be in this condition, always experiencing in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus,
that the power of Christ may rest upon us. When we learn to walk in the
consistent knowledge that this is our true condition, then we become consistent
in our experience of victory.
The first step, we are reminded, was the exposure of
Haman. His name is given to us in full, Haman the Agagite. Remember, Agag was
the king of the Amalekites, against whom God has pronounced eternal enmity.
Agag was opposed to all God wanted to do. So here is Haman the Agagite, the son
of Hammedatha, the enemy of all the Jews, and his perfidy, treachery, and
subtlety are now fully exposed. So also, the first step in deliverance from the
Haman within us is to learn to recognize him. But this is far more difficult
than it sounds. We justify the things that are destroying us and make excuses
for them, calling them sweet-sounding names and thus putting honey and syrup
labels on bottles of poison. That makes them all the more deadly, doesn't it?
No wonder it is difficult to recognize the voice of the devil in our
experience.
The second step is the knowledge that a new decree
has been issued: "But when Esther came before the king, he gave orders in
writing that his wicked plot which he had devised against the Jews should come
upon his [Haman's] own head" (v. 25). The new decree meant that the Jews
were set free from the law of the old decree. For us, this pictures that law of
a new life in Jesus Christ, dwelling within us, which sets us free from the law
of sin and death in our experience. Christ is in us and he, therefore, becomes
our resource. It is no longer up to us to try to do our best. It is up to us
now to trust him to do his best through us. What a difference that is! It is
the difference between trying to show the world how much we can do for Christ
and letting him show the world what he can do through us. It isn't a struggle
now to try to be good, but by depending upon the One who is good, who dwells
within us, we step forward to do what needs to be done, and his life becomes
manifest in terms of our activity. The knowledge of this is the second step to
victory.
And then the third thing is the hanging of Haman
and his sons on the gallows. The amazing thing is that until we are willing to
put the old life with its manifestations in the place of death where God put it
in Jesus Christ, we never can lay hold of that indwelling life. When we try to
make both Haman and Christ live at the same time, keeping a portion of the ego
as a pet area from which we exclude God, we find we cannot lay hold of his life
in us. Victory comes when we are content to have our egos overlooked and
humiliated if need be, that the life of Jesus may be manifested and expressed
through us--that his self-giving may replace our self-seeking. When we are
content to have it that way, not only in terms of words, but in terms of
experience, then there is an immediate experience of his risen life flowing
through us, working everything out. That is victory.
The chapter ends with the establishment of the
feast of Purim:
Therefore
they called these days Purim, after the term Pur [the lot]. And therefore,
because of all that was written in this letter, and of what they had faced in
this matter, and of what had befallen them, the Jews ordained and took it upon
themselves and their descendants and all who joined them, that without fail
they would keep these two days according to what was written and at the time
appointed every year, that these days should be remembered and kept throughout
every generation, in every family, province, and city, and that these days of
Purim should never fall into disuse among the Jews, nor should the
commemoration of these days cease among their descendants. Then Queen Esther,
the daughter of Abihail, and Mordecai the Jew gave full written authority,
confirming this second letter about Purim. Letters were sent to all the Jews,
to the hundred and twenty-seven provinces of the kingdom of Ahasuerus, in words
of peace and truth, that these days of Purim should be observed at their
appointed seasons, as Mordecai the Jew and Queen Esther enjoined upon the Jews,
and as they had laid down for themselves and for their descendants, with regard
to their fasts and their lamenting. The command of Queen Esther fixed these
practices of Purim, and it was recorded in writing. (Esther 9:26-32)
Even today the Jews celebrate this story of Esther
in the feast of Purim. They set aside two days for holiday, feasting, gladness
and merrymaking. On the first evening they read through the story of Esther.
This is the day when all Jewish children come into their own. They bring noise
makers, little drums and horns to the service, and whenever the name of Haman
is mentioned, they blow the horns and pound on the drums, booing and hissing
through the reading of the book wherever Haman is mentioned. The second day is
set aside for feasting and merrymaking, and for exchanging gifts, very much as
we celebrate Christmas. All of this is in remembrance of the deliverance
accomplished by Esther and Mordecai in the days of the Persian Empire, some
five hundred years before Christ. It is celebrated to this day because God
wants the Jewish people never to forget this deliverance. It is to be forever a
very important day in their history.
There is a tradition among the Jews that the feast
of Purim is the only feast that will be observed after the Messiah comes. The
feasts of Tabernacles and Passover and all others will cease, they say, when
the Messiah comes. But the feast of Purim will go on even in the days of the
kingdom of God on earth. This reflects the truth that to walk in the Spirit is
normal for both time and eternity. We must teach it to our descendants as well
that our children may see what it means to walk in victory over resentment,
jealousy, impatience, envy, lust, self-love, self-seeking, pride, self-pity,
and all other experiences of the self-life. So many of our children grow up in
Christian homes and yet go out bewildered, bored, frustrated, unhappy, not
enjoying what they have because we who are parents have not learned to walk in
the Spirit. It is a walk, a continual process of taking the same steps over and
over, every time conflict comes, until there is a manifestation of continual
victory.
That is what Enoch learned. We are told that Enoch
lived sixty-five years before he learned to walk with God. I wonder if it will
take some of us that long. After he learned to walk he walked three hundred
years with God until one day, as a little girl once said, "God just said
to him, 'Come on, Enoch, come on home with me. It's too far to go back.' "
So he was not, because God took him. He walked on into glory. That is the
picture of what God would have for the believer in Christ.
The book closes on one last point God wants us to
remember:
King
Ahasuerus laid tribute on the land and on the coastlands of the sea. And all
the acts of his power and might, and the full account of the high honor of
Mordecai, to which the king advanced him, are they not written in the Book of
the Chronicles of the kings of Media and Persia? For Mordecai the Jew was next
in rank to King Ahasuerus, and he was great among the Jews and popular with the
multitude of his brethren, for he sought the welfare of his people and spoke
peace to all his people. (Esther 10:1-3)
Here is the same king and the same kingdom with
which the book began. The only difference is that Haman is out and Mordecai is
in. But what a difference! Mordecai "sought the welfare of the people and
spoke peace to all." Just as the king and the kingdom remain the same, so
the Christian remains the same person when the Spirit is granted the place of
control. Personality does not change, but is cleansed and enhanced by the
presence of the Spirit. So Paul can say, "I am crucified with Christ:
nevertheless I live." The person remains the same; the principle upon
which he lives and acts is entirely different. "Not I, but Christ lives in
me" (Galatians 2:20, KJV). This is the secret. This is the Spirit-filled
life. As Mordecai, through the will of the king, brings power and peace to the
kingdom, so the Spirit, through our will and never beyond it, brings peace and
prosperity into our lives.
This is why the Spirit-led Christian can fall into
a cesspool of circumstances and come up smelling like a rose. Disappointments
make him better, not bitter. Heartaches become sources of joy. Hard
circumstances produce in him the choicest of virtues. The weaker he feels, the
more impact his life has on others. He becomes sweeter, mellower, filled with
an inner beauty. Paul describes his own experience in these beautiful words:
"But thanks be to God, who in Christ always leads us in triumph, and
through us spreads the fragrance of the knowledge of him everywhere." (2
Corinthians 2:14)
Have you found this great secret? Have you learned to count upon an indwelling Spirit to meet every demand made upon you with wholly adequate resources? Perhaps you would like to pray that Paul's experience might also be yours, as we end this study together.