Seeing the Unseen: The Mystery of God's Hidden Hand in the Book of Esther
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The book of Esther is a small gem embedded within the vast Old Testament Scriptures. It's easy to overlook because it doesn't present lofty doctrine or mysterious prophecies; in fact, it doesn't even mention God. It simply follows the experiences of two Jewish cousins, Esther and Mordecai, who lived during the time of Israel's exile following the Babylonian conquest of Judah and Jerusalem. In one sense, Esther's story was the story of all the Jewish exiles living under Persian rule. But in another sense, her story was unique and remarkable. Unforeseen events and circumstances saw her emerge from obscurity as a young Hebrew woman to become the queen of the mightiest empire the world had ever known. But behind Esther's good fortune stood the eternal purpose of Esther's God. In a way that is both mysterious and thrilling, the story reveals an ever-faithful God who accomplishes his unchanging will for the world, not in the whirlwind but the still, small voice; not with spectacular displays of power but with an unremarkable, and often undetected, hand. Adding its own unique voice to the scriptural chorus, the book of Esther reveals and exalts the unseen, silent, and seemingly absent God whose loving designs are enduring and undaunted; the God who, in every circumstance, is worthy of complete trust and devotion.
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Seeing the Unseen - Christopher Culver
Chapter 1
Background
The Esther story is an ancient one. Its setting and circumstances and the manner of life it describes are very distant and foreign to modern readers and the world they know. But this story has enjoyed a prominent place in the history and religious life of the Jewish people up to the present day. So much so that it is the focal point of one of the great celebrations in the Jewish calendar, namely the festival of Purim.¹
The Jews afford this status to the Esther story because they recognize its vital contribution to the larger story of Israel; it adds its voice to the written record that chronicles their history as the covenant children of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. The Esther story is important to the Jewish people and their religious life, but it ought to be just as important to those who aren’t Jews. It is a Jewish story, but its main character is the One who is the God of all people; the God who created the world and whose hand continues to lovingly direct his world toward the marvelous goal he’s ordained for it. In this story, we see the heart and hand of the unseen God—often undetected, but always working powerfully and effectively—and this should capture the attention and imagination of all people everywhere.
The book of Esther concerns events involving the Israelite people which occurred in the fifth century BC during the time of their exile from the land of Canaan. As with much of the Old Testament, the author of Esther is unknown, so that information about the book’s origin must come from the account itself and other historical data. The story’s epilogue indicates that the account was written subsequent to the reign of the Persian king Ahasuerus (Xerxes), which ended in 464 BC (Est. 10:1–2). So, the author’s familiarity with Persian customs and details associated with Ahasuerus’s reign suggests that he lived in Persia during the general time period addressed in the book. This conclusion is reinforced by the writer’s intimate knowledge of the events, circumstances, and interactions he recounted. The festival of Purim provides another dating clue. The book of Esther addresses the institution of this festival and the earliest known historical reference to Purim dates to the Maccabean period of Israel’s history (second century BC). This strongly suggests that Esther was written by that time.
The Jewish Talmud teaches that Mordecai (one of the book’s main characters) wrote the original text, but this is a matter of tradition, not clear evidence. At the same time, the book’s Jewish perspective and orientation make it virtually certain that the author was a Jew. Given the Jews’ status in the Gentile world of that time, one can hardly imagine a non-Jew composing such an account. In the end, most conservative scholars hold that the original manuscript was written by a Jew by the beginning of the fourth century BC, after the death of the Persian king Ahasuerus, but before the time of Alexander the Great.
The book of Esther has many interesting and unique features, but perhaps the most notable is the obvious absence of any mention of God. This sets it apart from every other writing in the Hebrew and Christian scriptures. While the story has Israel’s covenant relationship with God as its sub-text, the text itself simply recounts the historical episode behind the Jewish festival of Purim. The book is also fiercely nationalistic in its Jewishness, and these considerations (among others) have caused Esther’s place in the Christian Bible to be debated and even contested in Church history. Martin Luther’s comment is illustrative, I am so hostile to this book (II Maccabees) and to Esther that I would wish they did not exist at all; for they Judaize too greatly and have much heathenish impropriety.
Historical Context
The Esther story is set in the period of the Jewish exile following Judah’s conquest by the Babylonians, who were the dominant Middle Eastern power at that time. The Babylonian king, Nebuchadnezzar, established his control over Judah in 605 BC and enthroned Zedekiah as his vassal lord in Jerusalem some eight years later. But after nine years on the throne, Zedekiah revolted against Babylonian authority, leading Nebuchadnezzar to return to Judah and lay siege to Jerusalem. His strategy was to surround and isolate the city and then wait for famine and disease to do their work. Two years later, in 586 BC, with Jerusalem’s residents sick and starving, Nebuchadnezzar breached the city walls, tore the temple to the ground, burned the city, and took the survivors in chains to Babylon (2 Kings 24:17–25:21; 2 Chron. 36:10–21; cf. also Jer. 52:1–30).
Babylonian rule over Judah continued for the next five decades until Cyrus, the young ruler of Medo-Persia, seized control of the Babylonian kingdom in 539 BC in a whirlwind conquest. In an ingenious move, he conquered the fortified city of Babylon by diverting the Euphrates River, which flowed into the city underneath the city wall. Cyrus then used the dry riverbed to move his army into the city while the people were preoccupied in a time of feasting.
Shortly after his conquest of the Babylonian kingdom, and in fulfillment of God’s word through his prophet Isaiah (Isa. 44:28), Cyrus issued a decree in 538 BC allowing the Jewish exiles to return to Jerusalem and rebuild the temple and the city (2 Chron. 36:22–23; Ezra 1:1–4). Many Jews returned to Judah (Ezra 2:1–65), but many others chose to remain in the cities and villages outside the land of Israel where the Babylonians had relocated them. Some eighty years later (457 BC), another company of exiles would return to Jerusalem under Ezra’s leadership (Ezra 7), followed about twelve years later by a third group led by Nehemiah (Neh. 1–2).
Esther lived during the period between the first and second return episodes (Ezra 4:6) and, like so many exiled Jews, her family had decided to remain behind rather than make the journey back to Judea. Residing in Susa, the capital of the Medo-Persian Empire (Est. 2:5–7; cf. also Neh. 1:1–3), Esther and her cousin, Mordecai, exemplified the people of Israel in their exile and dispersion among the nations.
Redemptive Historical Context
The redemptive-historical
context refers to the setting of a particular biblical text within the movement and development of God’s work of redemption. The Old Testament scriptures recount historical circumstances and events extending from the creation of the world to shortly before the birth of Jesus Christ. But the Old Testament isn’t concerned with world history as such, but the history of redemption—that is, the purposeful and orderly history of God’s activity in the world toward his goal of redeeming and restoring his creation in his Son, Jesus the Messiah.
This orientation and purpose are often overlooked in reading and interpreting the Old Testament scriptures, but are critically important. Some approach the Bible as if every book (if not every individual passage) stands on its own, but this is not the case. The fact that the Bible is a historical account shows that each book and context is related to all others by its place within the flow of history. So, for instance, one must read Isaiah’s prophecy in view of when it occurred in history and what came before it. So, the four gospel accounts presume all of the Old Testament history as their backdrop.
All of the content in the Bible is related historically, but history itself has a structure, flow, and goal. This truth lies behind the concept of redemptive history.
History isn’t an endless chain of independent circumstances and events, but a divinely-orchestrated scheme. History is his story—God’s work in the world to bring his creation to its final destiny. And this destiny involves the creation’s redemption, which is to say, its deliverance from the curse that came upon it at the fall of man. Biblical history, then, is the history of redemption, and this means that it isn’t sufficient to identify the historical context of a biblical writing. Knowing the who, what, where and when
of a scriptural text is critically important, but it’s even more important to understand where that text fits within the unfolding history of God’s work