Sunday, December 07, 2025

“Another Decree” [Matt's Messages]

“Another Decree”
Where Is God? - The Tale of Queen Esther
Lanse Evangelical Free Church
December 7, 2025 :: Esther 8:1-17  

Our story is not over yet. 

The Tale of Queen Esther did not end with the death of the wicked Haman at the tail end of chapter 7. 
“This vile Haman,” the enemy of the Jews, is dead, but his decree lives on.

The Jews are in still in danger of genocide. 

We just read to us from chapter 3 of this book reminding us of the danger that looms over the Jews throughout the kingdom of Persia in the middle of the fifth century before Christ was born.

A Jewish man named Mordecai had refused to fall in honor before a prominent national leader named Haman. And Haman had overreacted to this dishonor to the point of convincing the king, King Xerxes I (also known as Ahasuerus) to give Haman the unthinkable authority to decree the extermination of all of the Jews–not just Mordecai, not just some of Jews but all of them–in a single day in about a year’s time.

And this decree was signed and sealed with the king’s own ring.

The Jews throughout the world went into mourning, dressing in sackcloth and ashes and wailing and wailing while they waited for death to come to their entire people.

But then a lot happened in chapters 4 through 7! In just a few short days, a series of unlikely events occurred which resulted in the honoring of Mordecai and the execution of Haman!

And those unlikely events swirled around the courageous choices of the brave and beautiful Queen Esther (also known as Hadassah).

Queen Esther was Mordecai’s cousin whom he had raised since she was orphaned and therefore she also was a Jew–though a secret one. And Esther had (through another series of unlikely events!) been elevated above all of the other young women in the Persian kingdom to become the queen.

And after the decree of Haman went out, Mordecai persuaded Queen Esther to take her life in her hands and to plead with her husband the king to save the lives of the Jews. And she decided to do just that, no matter what. If was she going to die, well then she was going to die.

We read in chapter 5 how Esther fasted for three days, and then robed in royal majesty, she took her life in her hands, going against custom and law, to approach the king even when she had not been invited. And the king spared her life. He extended his golden scepter to welcome her into his presence and asked her what was her request. He said he would give her even up to half of his kingdom!

And Esther wisely and winsomely invited the king (and Haman!) to a short series of banquets (one of the king’s favorite things in all the world), and then and only then did she reveal her true nationality, her deepest identity, and beg him to spare her life and the life of all of the Jews.


Queen Esther had apparently been elevated to her royal position for such a time as this very moment.

The king had listened to her impassioned plea and became incensed and enraged. He demanded to know who was behind this plot to kill Esther and her people!

Of course, we know (having read chapter 3) that the king was fully implicated in this plot. He had carelessly and callously agreed to it. But Esther wisely sidestepped that part of it and pointed the finger at the true enemy of the Jews.

She said, “The adversary and enemy is this vile Haman.”

And then the king stormed out and Haman fell at Esther’s feet and the king came back in and charged Haman with attempted rape and had him impaled upon a ridiculously tall wooden pole that Haman had intended to impale Mordecai upon. The enemy of the Jews was dead.

But the story is not over. Haman has died, but his decree lives on.

That’s why we have chapter 8. Let’s look at it together, starting in verse 1.

By the way, let’s do what we’ve been doing since chapter 3. When I reed the name of Haman in chapter 8, let’s drown it out with loud sounds like boos and hisses. The Jews have been doing that for thousands of years when they retell this story. I think his name appears 6 times in this chapter. Let’s do it every time. I’ll remind you, but see if you can spot it before it comes. 

Hint: His name is in verse 1 and verse 2. Ready?

“That same day King Xerxes gave Queen Esther the estate of Haman, the enemy of the Jews. And Mordecai came into the presence of the king, for Esther had told how he was related to her. The king took off his signet ring, which he had reclaimed from Haman, and presented it to Mordecai. And Esther appointed him over Haman's estate.”

The storyteller begins chapter 8 with the words, “That same day...”

What a day that was!

This is the same day that has been two days long for Xerxes. He hasn’t slept since before Esther’s first banquet yesterday!

That night the king could not sleep, so instead of counting sheep, he had his servants read to him the chronicles of his kingdom as a bedtime story. And he just so happened to be reminded of a debt of honor he owed to Mordecai for once saving his life. So first thing in the morning, through a very funny misunderstanding (to us, not to Haman) the king had Haman parade Mordecai all through the city of Susa dressed in a royal robe and riding on a royal horse.  That’s this same day.

It’s the same day that Haman’s family told him that he was going down.

It’s the same day of Queen Esther’s Second Banquet when Haman did go down for good. (Timing is everything!)

The storyteller says that same day, the King gave Queen Esther all of Haman’s stuff! Literally, his “house.” And that same day Queen Esther put Mordecai in charge of all of Haman’s stuff.

The historian Herodotus says that in Persian law the property of a traitor reverted to the crown. So when Haman’s face had been covered and his body impaled, his stuff then belonged to King Ahasuerus to give to whomever he pleased.

And that’s not all that Mordecai got from Haman. Verse 1 says that “Mordecai came into the presence of the king” because Esther revealed their relationship. 

“Honey, I want to introduce you to my cousin Mordecai. He’s the one who saved your life a few years back, and he’s been my adviser and protector all of these years. You can trust him.”

And see how the king trusts him? He gives Mordecai the signet ring which he had taken off of the dead man! It’s like he’s making Mordecai the new Grand Vizier.

Now, I’m not sure he was being wise to just give away his ring again so quickly. But at least it’s in better hands!

Mordecai is no longer just a simple civil servant who works at the front desk. He has now been elevated to a top spot in the kingdom.

But what good is that if the Jews are all going to die anyway?

Esther begs once more. Verse 3.

“Esther again pleaded with the king, falling at his feet and weeping. [Here it comes...] She begged him to put an end to the evil plan of Haman the Agagite, which he had devised against the Jews.”

Don’t miss this dramatic moment. Esther knows that the clock is still ticking. The decree still stands. So she lets go of all of her dignity and falls at the king’s feet and weeps. 

She’s sobbing! Who cares if Haman is dead and she now owns his stuff? Who cares if Mordecai is prime minister? Even if they are both safe because they are so close to the king, who cares if the rest of their people are going to die?!

“Please, please, please, nullify the decree of Haman against the Jews!”

And it sure seems from verse 4 like she’s come again without being invited. Look at verse 4.

“Then the king extended the gold scepter to Esther and she arose and stood before him.”

She is safe once again. Safe to beg for her people’s survival. She stands there, her mascara running down her cheeks, and she does her best to persuade the king to do something more. Verse 5.

“‘If it pleases the king,’ she said, ‘and if he regards me with favor and thinks it the right thing to do, and if he is pleased with me, let an order be written overruling the dispatches that...Haman son of Hammedatha, the Agagite, devised and wrote to destroy the Jews in all the king's provinces.

For how can I bear to see disaster fall on my people? How can I bear to see the destruction of my family?’” (vv.5-6).

Esther knows her man. She knows that he’s “narcissistic, impulsive, passion-driven, tyrannical...” (Marion Ann Taylor, The Story of God Commentary, pg. 198). Xerxes is dangerous and not trustworthy, but he does like to be generous.  And he does respond to passionate counsel.

So Esther pulls out all the stops and persuades like she’s never persuaded before. She says it like four ways that if he really cares for her and really thinks it’s the right thing to do, that he would write out a new order to overrule the decree of Haman. Because if he doesn’t, she can’t imagine going on. She can’t endure it.

I don’t think that’s just an act, but I do think it’s very persuasive to a husband who might not have been inclined to do anything further. See what he says in verse 7?

“King Xerxes replied to Queen Esther and to Mordecai the Jew, [Here it comes, last one...] ‘Because Haman attacked the Jews, I have given his estate to Esther, and they have hanged him on the gallows.”

I feel like he's going to say, “What more do you want me to do? I've killed your enemy and made you incredibly wealthy. What else do you want, woman?" But he doesn't. He is persuaded. [Proverbs 21:1!] V.8  

“Now write another decree in the king's name in behalf of the Jews as seems best to you, and seal it with the king's signet ring–for no document written in the king's name and sealed with his ring can be revoked.’”

See what I mean about the “decree lives on?”

The Medes and the Persians apparently had this ridiculous rule that a law from their king could not be revoked. As if the king could never make a mistake!

We saw that back in the Book of Daniel, chapter 6, right? King Darius? He also was tricked into making a law–that for one month you couldn’t pray to anyone but him. And Daniel refused to obey that law, and the king couldn’t forgive him for it. He had to throw him into the lion’s den!
Is that going to be the fate of all of the Jews? They are all going to be thrown to the lions? “Nothing I can do about it. My hands are tied. Apparently, I signed the paper saying, ‘genocide,’ so it’s genocide.”

So much for “up to half of my kingdom!”
How do you change an unchangeable law? Xerxes says, “Write another decree.”

“Here’s the trick. Write a counter decree.”

Now, I find it flabbergasting that the king still just carelessly gives his ring over to Mordecai to write something in his name. Has he not learned anything?! 

But he does allow them to write something that could stop the massacre. And that’s not nothing. Because in many ways, it is admitting that his first decree was a bad idea. Probably hard for a guy like Xerxes to do.

Verse 8 again. “[W]rite another decree in the king's name in behalf of the Jews as seems best to you, and seal it with the king's signet ring–for no document written in the king's name and sealed with his ring can be revoked.”
 
Now, I’ve said that Chapter 8 rhymes with Chapter 3. Here’s what I mean. Something very similar happens in chapter 8 as nearly everything that is said or done in chapter 3. But just the opposite!

In fact, one statistic I read this week says that there are 78% of the exact same Hebrews words in verses 9 through 14 as were in chapter 3, verses 12 through 15. Chapter 8 rhymes with Chapter 3. Look at verse 9.

“At once the royal secretaries were summoned–on the twenty-third day of the third month, the month of Sivan. They wrote out all Mordecai's orders to the Jews, and to the satraps, governors and nobles of the 127 provinces stretching from India to Cush. These orders were written in the script of each province and the language of each people and also to the Jews in their own script and language. Mordecai wrote in the name of King Xerxes, sealed the dispatches with the king's signet ring, and sent them by mounted couriers, who rode fast horses especially bred for the king” (vv.9-10). Stop there for a second.

Sound familiar?

They call the secretaries. (Just like chapter 3.) They give the date. It’s actually been 2 months and 10 days since the first  decree went out. They address all of the leaders throughout the kingdom from India to (it says Cush) which is towards the southern part of Egypt. (Just like chapter 3.)

And what key kingdom is between India and Cush? Not just Persia. But Israel.

And Mordecai made sure that the Israelites got this message loud and clear.  That’s not something that was in chapter 3, but the Jews need to hear this in their own language so they can get ready.

And just like in chapter 3, they get the pony express to push this message out to the furthest corner of the kingdom before it’s too late. It will still take months to get there. There is no international texting.

And here’s what the new decree says. Verse 11.

“The king's edict granted the Jews in every city the right to assemble and protect themselves; to destroy, kill and annihilate any armed force of any nationality or province that might attack them and their women and children; and to plunder the property of their enemies.”

Does that sound familiar? Same words as chapter 3, “destroy, kill and annihilate,” but now it says that Jews could do that back to anyone who tried to do it to them.

Now they have a fighting chance. This second decree makes the first decree very hard to carry out. It basically authorizes a civil war if the followers of Haman ask for it.

Notice that Mordecai does not go overboard with the king’s ring. He doesn’t say, “All of the Jews are now in charge in every province. The king says!” He doesn’t say, “All of the Jews can now attack whomever they hate!” No, he just says that they can defend themselves against attackers. 

It does seem to say that they can “destroy, kill, and annihilate” their attackers and their attackers’ women and children, but we’re going to see next week that there’s no evidence that they went so far as to use that authorization. Perhaps it’s just there to rhyme. Perhaps that kind of authorization was only if the women and the children took part in the attacking, too. Or maybe Mordecai went too far. He is just a man, after all.

But the point here is that this second decree symmetrically counters the first decree and may spell the survival of the Jewish people.

When will this happen? Verse 12. (It’s probably going to rhyme with chapter 3.)

“The day appointed for the Jews to do this in all the provinces of King Xerxes was the thirteenth day of the twelfth month, the month of Adar. [March 7, 473BC. The exact same day as was picked by the pur cast by Haman. On they day, the Jews can fight back. V.13] A copy of the text of the edict was to be issued as law in every province and made known to the people of every nationality so that the Jews would be ready on that day to avenge themselves on their enemies. The couriers, riding the royal horses, raced out, spurred on by the king's command. And the edict was also issued in the citadel of Susa” (vv.12-14).

Sound familiar? Chapter 8 rhymes with Chapter 3. But it’s a much better song!

Now, how do we apply this part of the story to our lives today?

I don’t think the Bible is teaching us how to write decrees, amiright? And I don’t think it’s promising us that all of these same things that happened to Esther or Mordecai are always going to happen to us. At least, I hope not!

But what does chapter 8 teach us? What is the storyteller telling us today?

I think a good way into that is to return once again to the question in the title of our series, “Where Is God?”

Where is God in Esther chapter 8?

I’m sure that the Jews have been feeling that question all along. Where is God when you have an enemy at the very top of the kingdom you live in? Where is God when your enemy has been able to be authorize the death of your entire people group? Where is God when you’ve been traumatized like that? We could go on.

But now, things seems to be changing. Your enemy has been stopped and even killed! Now His decree is being countered. And the word is spreading fast.

Where is God now?

Well, it doesn’t say. God is never named in the book of Esther. The storyteller never comes out and says it directly. But at this point in the story it’s kind of hard to miss. God may be hidden, but it’s pretty obvious He’s right there doing stuff. Driving the story forward. Moving everything along according to His inscrutable but unimprovable plan.

I thought of three things to point out that chapter 8 suggests and the rest of the Bible confirms. Here’s number one.

Where is God in Esther chapter 8? He’s right there:

#1. RIGHTING EVERY WRONG.

I think that’s why chapter 8 rhymes with chapter 3, so that we feel how Someone in chapter 8 is undoing all of the evil of chapter 3. 

It’s poetic justice like we saw last week with Haman being hung on the very gallows that he had prepared for Mordecai. 

But it’s poetic justice writ large! Poetic justice on the grandest scale. Every single thing that is wrong in chapter 3 is being countered in chapter 8. And I think that points to the truth that everything that is wrong in the whole wild world is being righted and will be righted when the Lord Jesus returns.

Everything that is broken will be fixed.
Everything that is twisted will be straightened out.
Everything that is damaged will be mended.
Everything that has gone wrong will be set right.

Justice will be done and will be seen to be done. And things will be like they should have been and...even better! Because chapter 8 is not just the reverse of chapter 3, it is that and it’s also improved.  Chapter 8 rhymes with Chapter 3. But it’s a much better song!

Speaking of songs, it’s Christmas carol season, and one of my all time favorites is “Joy to the World.”

Verse 3 says:

“No more let sins and sorrows grow,
Nor thorns infest the ground;
He comes to make His blessings flow
Far as the curse is found!”
    - Isaac Watts

As far as the curse is found, the blessings will flow when Jesus Christ returns. He’s going to reverse the curse. And everything will be better than new!

Do you need to hear that today? I’ll bet you do. Because so often we feel the question, “Where is God? Is He paying attention? Is He going to do something? Does He know what they are doing to me?”

And this second decree sounding so much like the first one and yet so different and so much better reminds us that God is righting every wrong.

And the Jews felt this in their bones!

Remember, they have been in mourning now for two months and ten days. Scratchy sackcloth, ashes smeared all over them, crying every day for 70 days. And the chief mourner was Mordecai. But look at him now in verse 15.

“Mordecai left the king's presence wearing royal garments of blue and white, a large crown of gold and a purple robe of fine linen. And the city of Susa held a joyous celebration. For the Jews it was a time of happiness and joy, gladness and honor. In every province and in every city, wherever the edict of the king went, there was joy and gladness among the Jews, with feasting and celebrating” (vv.15-17a).

That word “feasting” is “mishteh” the word for banquet. The Jews were partying now!

You see how this chapter rhymes with chapter 3 and the first part of chapter 4? At the end of chapter 3, they were “bewildered” and Haman was drinking it up. Well, look who's feasting now!

I love that picture of Mordecai all dressed up in royal finery. (I guess he was a Penn State fan with his blue and white? Turns out Mordecai was the next coach of the Nittany Lions!)

Actually these are the same royal colors as were on display at the banquets in the first chapter. Chapter 8 rhymes with Chapter 1, as well!

And it rhymes with chapter 6 when Mordecai was paraded around town by his enemy. That was probably just this same morning! And it seemed like a dream. But now it’s Mordecai’s every day reality.

Church, that’s what the new creation is going to be like. The new heavens and the new earth? It’s going to feel like a dream every single day forever.

Remember: Every bad thing must come to an end.

Or, let me put it this way. Point number two.

Where is God? He’s right here:

#2. WORKING ALL THINGS TO GOOD ENDS.

The book of Esther is shaping up to be a comedy. In the classic literary sense. It isn’t just funny, it has a happy ending. A deliriously happy ending!

I mean, just listen to verse 16 again. “For the Jews it was a time of happiness and joy, gladness and honor.” 

And that word for “happiness” can be translated “light!” The ESV says, “The Jews had light and gladness and joy and honor.”

That’s what we’re headed towards, brothers and sisters! “Light and gladness and joy and honor” forever and ever and ever.

“His dominion is an everlasting dominion that will not pass away, and his kingdom is one that will never be destroyed” (Daniel 7:14).

“Light and gladness and joy and honor” forever and ever and ever. Our Lord is working everything towards that end. The Bible says, “And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose” (Rom. 8:28).

That doesn’t mean that everything is good. It means that one day everything will be good. And then it will be good forever. And that means that we can rejoice right now.

I think Mordecai and the Jews were singing Psalm 30 those days:
“You turned my wailing into dancing; 
you removed my sackcloth and clothed me with joy,
that my heart may sing to you and not be silent. 
O LORD my God, I will give you thanks forever.” 
- King David in Psalm 30:11-12

And we can sing that song today.

Now, think about this:

Have they been saved yet?

No, their salvation has just been announced. They are still many months away from the thirteenth day of Adar. But just hearing of this decree is enough to send them into jubilant celebration!

How much more should we celebrate on this side of the Cross and the Empty Tomb?! It’s true that the fullness of the kingdom has not yet come. But our King has come and is coming again.

And just knowing that should make every day full of “happiness and joy, gladness and honor” for you and me.

The Lord is working all things to a good end. Including our salvation. Because, think about this, if this decree works, the bloodline of the Messiah will be safe. If Haman had succeeded in wiping out all of the Jews, then the Christ would not have come the first time. There would be no Christmas. And there would be no Good Friday. And no Resurrection Sunday. And no glorious kingdom to come. But if this second decree does what it’s designed to do, then everything still on track. 

And not just for the Jews! But also for any Gentiles who come to faith. Apparently, that happened even then. Look at the last sentence of verse 17 before we go to the table.

“And many people of other nationalities became Jews because fear of the Jews had seized them.”

Now, I’m sure that many of these people were just jumping on the bandwagon. They were fair-weather fans who saw how the wind had shifted towards the Jews, so they said, “Oh yeah, I’m one of them.” Maybe even to get authorization to kill their neighbors next year!

But some of them were like Rahab or like Ruth. Or like the Roman Centurion or Lydia or Simon the Tanner. They saw that God was working for the good of His people, and they wanted to be a part of that. So they came in.

Where is God in Esther chapter 8? He’s right here:

#3. TURNING HIS ENEMIES INTO HIS FAMILY.

And He’s still doing that today for Gentiles like you and me. And does it through the Cross.

The Bible says, “God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8).

And that great loves turns us from enemy into family. The Bible says, “How great is the love the Father has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God! And that is what we are!” (1 John 3:1).


***

Messages in this Series:

01. The King Gave a Banquet - Esther 1:1-22
02. “Hadassah” - Esther 2:1-23
03. "Bewildered" - Esther 3:1-15
04. "Who Knows?" - Esther 4:1-17
05. "What Is Your Request?" - Esther 5:1-14
06. "That Night the King Could Not Sleep" - Esther 6:1-14
07. "Queen Esther's Banquet" - Esther 7:1-10

Advent Candle #2: “Joy Of Every Longing Heart”

LEFC Family Advent Readings: “Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus”
Haggai 2:6-7 :: December 7, 2025
Week #2: “Joy Of Every Longing Heart”

“Advent” means “coming.” Christmas is coming. Jesus has come and is coming again.

This year, during the Advent Season, we are anticipating the arrival of our Lord by meditating on the biblical truth embedded in the vintage carol, “Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus.” 

Our first candle was a candle of freedom.

[LIGHT FIRST CANDLE AGAIN.]

When the Messiah comes, He will release us from our fears and sins. No more worry, dread, or fright. No more wickedness, iniquity, or evil. We will find our rest in Him. How joyful we will be to be free!

[LIGHT SECOND CANDLE.]

Our second candle is a candle of joy. The carol, a prayer to the long-awaited Messiah, goes on to describe Him to Himself like this:

“Israel's strength and consolation
Hope of all the earth Thou art
Dear desire of every nation
Joy of every longing heart”
The name “desire of every nation” comes from the Old Testament book of Haggai who prophesied:

[READ HAGGAI 2:6-7]

The LORD promised to bring upheaval–a great shaking of all things–which will surely happen. But He also promised that the “desire of all nations will come,” which is the Lord Jesus Christ! 

The peoples of the earth may not realize it now, but they all want Jesus to come. Not just Israel, but all nations. He is the true fulfillment of all of their longings. If they only could understand that He is what they have been chasing with their lives! Only Jesus can satisfy. 

Jesus is our only hope, and when He returns, He will fill the world with His glory and His people with unending joy.

Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus!


Photo by Jonas Von Werne

Sunday, November 30, 2025

“Queen Esther’s Banquet” [Matt's Messages]

“Queen Esther’s Banquet”
Where Is God? - The Tale of Queen Esther
Lanse Evangelical Free Church
November 30, 2025 :: Esther 7:1-10  

We have finally reached “Queen Esther’s Banquet.”

It’s actually Queen Esther’s Second Banquet, isn’t it? Because she put one on in chapter 5, as well. But this is the one that everything in this story has been driving towards. This is the banquet where Queen Esther is planning to reveal her big secret and to plead for her life and for the survival of her people.

Queen Esther has a secret and that is that she is a Jew. Very few people know this. You and I know this, but Xerxes I the King of Persia also known as Ahasuerus (to whom Esther is married!) does not know this about her. 

You and I know this, and the Jews in the city of Susa in the fifth century BC (who have been fasting for her three whole days and nights) know this, but their archenemy, Haman (boo/hiss) does not know this.

We know that Esther has another name, Hadassah, but most people in the kingdom only know her Persian name, Esther, the Star Queen. Because her cousin Mordecai who raised her ever since her parents died had told her to keep her Jewish identity a secret...until now. But now things are desperate. Now it seems that it’s time to speak up and speak out and speak for her people, the Jews.


Because the Jews are in danger. Mordecai has angered the Grand Vizier Haman by refusing to fall before him in honor. And Haman was so angry that he conspired to kill, not just Mordecai but all of Mordecai’s people throughout the Persian kingdom–from India to Ethiopia which included all of Israel.

Haman slyly manipulated Xerxes into authorizing the extermination of the Jews on a single day nearly a year from now, the 13th day of Adar, which was chosen “at random” by casting the pur, which was like rolling the dice. Haman offered Xerxes ten thousand talents of silver for the royal treasury to get this done. Probably from taking the Jew’s stuff after killing them. Something like two thirds of the kingdom’s incoming budget for the genocide of the Jews.

Xerxes had hardly paid attention to the details and thoughtlessly gave over his royal ring for Haman to authorize the decree “to destroy, kill and annihilate all the Jews–young and old, women and little children–on a single day” (Esther 3:13).

Things had become desperate now for the Jewish people. They were all in danger. And so Mordecai, grieving in sackcloth and ashes, had urged Esther to use whatever influence she had with her husband the king to try to stop this murder of all of her kinsmen throughout the world.

Who knows? Maybe, just maybe, Esther had been elevated to this royal position for such a time as this. For such a time as Queen Esther’s Banquet.

This banquet was Esther’s idea of how to persuade King Xerxes to spare her people. Esther knows how much her man loves a banquet. He gave two of them in chapter 1. It’s how she ended up being the queen! One of the king’s banquets lasted half of a year! Ahasuerus loves to party hardy!

But how to get him there? That was the first problem. Because Esther wasn’t allowed to just walk up to him and talk to him. She had to be invited, and she hadn’t been invited for thirty days. Esther had not been the flavor of the month. But she decided to go anyway, and if she died, well, then she died. But she was going to do what was needed, what was right, no matter what.

And the king had...welcomed her into his presence  (whew!), and asked her what she wanted. What was her request?

Esther requested...his presence at a banquet. Every banquet (every mishteh) in this book (and there are like ten of them!) is consequential.

Esther invited the king and the enemy Haman to a banquet in chapter 5 where they ate and drank, and where the king asked her a second time what Esther really wanted. And she said, “I’ll tell you (and Haman) tomorrow at banquet number two.”

And that’s where we are in chapter 7, “Queen Esther’s (Second) Banquet.”

But before we got there, there was this whole chapter 6 thing!

What a week these people are having!!!

Because just yesterday on the way home from the first banquet Haman had seen Mordecai who was still refusing to fall down in honor before him and didn’t even seem scared by him. Mordecai just stared at Haman as he went by. And that had so steamed up Haman that he decided that night to have a gallows built (probably a giant wooden pole for impaling someone) that was 50 cubits high which translates to 75 feet tall! The tallest thing in the city of Susa, taller than the palace itself. Ridiculously high, a skyscraper of death to make an example of Mordecai.

And Haman was going to ask the king for permission to kill Mordecai on these gallows that day. Not waiting for next year’s Jewish genocide. But today, right before Queen Esther’s Banquet.

Do you remember this? For some of you this might be the first time you’ve heard this story.


I wonder why?! So many things happening at once, all moving towards this crucial day.

The king could not sleep, so he made his servants read to him from the chronicles of his reign, and they just so happened (wink, wink) to read about a time a few years back when Mordecai had thwarted a plot to assassinate this king. Almost everybody had forgotten about it until that sleepless night.

And they realized that Mordecai had never been honored for saving the king’s life, and so he decided to do something about it right then and there. Remember this?

He decided to ask Haman, “What should be done for the man the king delights to honor?” Thinking Mordecai. But Haman, thinking Haman, suggested a royal robe, a royal horse, and a royal parade. And the king said, “Yeah, do that for Mordecai the Jew.”

One of, if not the, funniest chapter(s) in the whole Bible! Keagan just read it to us. Haman has to lead Mordecai around town on a royal horse in a royal robe and say to everyone, “This is what is done for the man the king delights to honor!”

And, all of a sudden, Haman’s plans seem to go sideways. Haman goes home in grief from that moment, and his family and friends all tell him that he’s doomed. “You will fall.” And the king’s servants come and grab him to get to Queen Esther’s Banquet on time.

Do you feel how desperate this banquet is? How precarious this situation has become? Everybody is on edge!

The king has not slept in over 24 hours. How does that make you feel? Rough, right? Hard to make good decisions when you haven’t slept. Emotions are raw. It’s easy to get angry when you’re tired. And Xerxes isn’t known for controlling his emotions in the first place.

And Haman has just had to honor his enemy all over town and been told by his closest friends that he himself is going down. He was filled with grief, and he’s probably nervous and anxious, like a trapped animal.

And Esther? How does she feel at this banquet? It doesn’t say, but I would assume that she is scared to death. Maybe she’s heard the wild story about what happened to cousin Mordecai this morning on the horse. That would be encouraging. Maybe she hasn’t heard. We don’t know. Regardless, she didn’t know what was going to happen next.

This is a very precarious situation. Esther is laying a table for two very dangerous men. One is her sworn enemy (even if he doesn’t know it!), and he may have some terrible trick up his sleeve. He may be cornered, but he’s still dangerous.

And the other man is unpredictable and unreliable. We have seen over and over again that Xerxes is not a good man. And she has been basically lying to him for their whole marriage. Keeping her deepest identity secret.

But Esther has gotten these two dangerous men to her banquet, and she’s going to try her dead-level best to make a difference for her people.

Esther chapter 7, verse 1.

By the way, let’s do this with the name of Haman this time. As the Jews have done for millennia, we have been drowning out the name of Haman with noises like boos and hisses at times as we read this tale.

Let’s do it in verse 1 and verse 6 and verse 10 today. The beginning, the middle, and the end of chapter 7. I’ll remind you. 

And here’s your first reminder. Let’s read verse 1.

“So the king and Haman went to dine with Queen Esther, and as they were drinking wine on that second day, the king again asked, ‘Queen Esther, what is your petition? It will be given you. What is your request? Even up to half the kingdom, it will be granted’” (vv.1-2).

That’s the third time that he’s asked. He might not ask again.

He knows that something is up. He knows the Esther has more on her mind than food and wine. He doesn’t know what it is, but he knows there is something. She’s gotten all dressed up in all of her royal robes. She has laid out quite a spread yesterday and today. Turkey, mashed potatoes, gravy, cranberry relish. (Oh, no, wait that was us on Thursday.) We don’t know what food was on her table, but it was the best of the best. She had pulled out all of stops for two days.

And the best wine. And they’re all laughing (maybe nervously?) and enjoying themselves. Maybe Haman is beginning to relax a little. Maybe his day is going to turn around again. Maybe he can still get Mordecai dead by bedtime if he plays his cards right. He’s obviously still in the king’s good graces and Esther’s, because here he is the only other guest at Queen Esther’s Banquet!

And the king wants to know, “What is your request? I will grant it. I want to be seen as incredibly generous. Just say the word.”

Everything in her story has been leading up to this moment. This is the “such a time.” And Esther does not chicken out. She does not suggest a third banquet. She clears her throat and courageously pleads. Verse 3.

“Then Queen Esther answered, ‘If I have found favor with you, O king, and if it pleases your majesty, grant me my life–this is my petition. And spare my people–this is my request. For I and my people have been sold for destruction and slaughter and annihilation. If we had merely been sold as male and female slaves, I would have kept quiet, because no such distress would justify disturbing the king’” (vv.3-4).

I have three things I want to point out in Esther chapter 7–three things we can clearly see and learn from at Queen Esther’s Banquet–and here’s the first one:

#1. TRUE COURAGE.

I don’t know if I could have done what she did. I would hope I could, but I could also see myself chicken out.

“Let me get back to you on that, King. I’ll send you an email. I didn’t think about what it would be like to say it to your face. Or to say it in front of him.”

No. She just goes right to it. “Grant me my life...And spare my people. I’m a Jew, and the Jews are in trouble, and you’re the only one that can save us.”

Now, it’s amazing how careful and wise she is in how she does it. Esther is teaching a master-class here in diplomacy and persuasion. She starts with two “ifs.” “IF I have found favor with you, O king, and IF it pleases your majesty...” She isn’t demanding here. She’s building off of their relationship. She has always found favor with him up to till now. And she is careful to couch things in a way that appeals to his best interest. She says that she wouldn’t bring it up if it wasn’t so desperate for them and so consequential for him. 

There’s a little bit of ambiguity in verse 4. It could be understood to mean that she is pointing out that if they weren’t killed, they could be put to better economic use than just eliminating them. As it is, he’s going to lose a giant ongoing workforce if this plan goes through. And, of course, they will all die–including his wife Queen Esther.

Notice that she doesn’t accuse him. She could, right? She could say, “You’ve been duped and really messed up my life, Ahasuerus!”

No. She doesn’t say, “You have sold my people. She says, “I and my people have been sold for destruction and slaughter and annihilation...” Those are the very words of the order that was sent out in chapter 3, verse 13. But she doesn’t name him here directly.

She does directly ask for him to spare her and her people. Esther comes out and clearly identifies with her people. 

True courage. 

She doesn’t know how this will go. I can imagine a situation where the king says, “You are a Jew?! Get lost. Take your things and move to the back of the harem. This is the last time I will ever see your face. You and Vashti can hang out from now on. You lied to me.”

I can imagine a situation where Haman says, “Oh, you’re a Jew? King Xerxes, she’s part of the problem around here. She’s part of that group I was telling you about last week. She’s right that they are on the schedule to die. That’s a solution, not a problem.” And the men agree together, and that’s it. 

She doesn’t know what’s going to happen when she speaks up. She may die. But if she dies, she dies. She speaks up anyway. That’s true courage.

She could have tried to hide. Maybe just ask for an exception! “You know, O kingy-poo, you had that order about destruction, slaughter, and annihilation? That doesn’t apply to little old me, does it? There’s an exception for queens, right?” No, she stands with her people and intercedes for them. It’s one for all and all for one.

Notice that true courage is not something that we are only called to do once, and then we’re done. Esther had to take her life in her hands in her hands yesterday. And she has to take her life in her hands today. She had be courageous yesterday, and she had to be courageous today.

And our Lord is calling you and me to be courageous, too.

He is calling us to bear witness to Him. To tell others that we are Christians that we belong to His people, too.

He is calling us to share the gospel, the good news of Jesus’ sacrificial death and victorious resurrection and how that saves us from our sins.

He is calling us to use what influence we have, however small or however large, to intercede for others and their good.

To speak up, even in a dangerous world.

In Matthew chapter 10, our Lord Jesus told His followers, “I am sending you out like sheep among wolves. Therefore be as shrewd as snakes and as innocent as doves” (Matthew 10:16).

That sounds like Esther to me. She is so shrewd with how she used beauty, hospitality, and persuasion to make her case as good as she possibly could. But she doesn’t manipulate or lie to get there. Innocent as a dove. But she does go out among the wolves! She knows that she’s vulnerable. She’s a sheep among the wolves, but there she goes. And so should we!

Where are you being called to be courageous?
Where are you being called to stick out your neck?
Where are you being called to speak up and speak out and speak for others that need you?

Esther shows us how.

She had one shot, and she took her shot...and it hit the target! Verse 5.

“King Xerxes asked Queen Esther, ‘Who is he? Where is the man who has dared to do such a thing?’”

Woah! That sleepless man is angry! And he’s not angry at her. He’s acutely felt the injustice correctly. This thing is bad, really bad. He roars, “Who is he? Give us a name. Who has dared to do such a thing to my wife and her people?”

And we’re thinking, “Can you be this clueless? You don’t see your part in all this?”

But that’s not where Esther goes. She points the finger, perhaps with her whole arm shaking, at someone else in the room. Look at verse 6 and get ready to drown out his name. Verse 6.

“Esther said, ‘The adversary and enemy is this vile Haman.’ Then Haman was terrified before the king and queen.”

That took so much courage! To face her enemy? To say that he is her adversary and the enemy of the Jews? To name him. “This vile Haman.” That took so much courage. 

And Haman has no courage. He’s filled with an intense fear and has no courage to deal with it.

Can you feel how much emotion is in this room?

Haman is terrified. Xerxes is infuriated! Verse 7.

“The king got up in a rage, left his wine and went out into the palace garden.”

He can’t stand this. He has to think. He has to think about what he’s going to do. 

Maybe it’s dawning on Xerxes that maybe he shares some of the fault here. He’s allowed Haman to put him in this situation. And he’s going to lose face either way. Xerxes never thinks that he’s the problem. He’s so mad at Haman for getting him into this. What’s he going to do? He’s pacing out in the garden, grunting, groaning, maybe throwing things.

And where’s Haman? Haman should not have stayed in that room. He’s not supposed to be alone with a member of the king’s harem. He should have left at that point, but if he leaves, he can’t do anything directly about his situation. The king didn’t want him to follow him, and you can’t enter the king’s presence without being summoned. Look at verse 7.

“But Haman, realizing that the king had already decided his fate, stayed behind to beg Queen Esther for his life.”

How is that for irony?! Maybe this is the funniest chapter in the Bible?! The darkest humor. The enemy of the Jews who wants to kill all of the Jews is going to get on knees before a Jewish woman who is his queen and beg for his life. V.8

“Just as the king returned from the palace garden to the banquet hall, Haman was falling on the couch where Esther was reclining. [Please, please, please. Help me, please. Mercy!] The king exclaimed, ‘Will he even molest the queen while she is with me in the house?’ As soon as the word left the king's mouth, they covered Haman's face.”

I don’t know if Ahasuerus actually believed that Haman was trying to assault Esther at that moment, maybe he did. Maybe he saw this is a convenient way out, of solving his problem of saving face. Accuse Haman of sexual assault, and we don’t have to into all of that stuff about the royal ring and all that. Or maybe he was just filled with rage and seeing red.

He sees Haman falling. The very thing that Mordecai would not do, “fall” before Haman? The very thing that Zeresh said that Haman would do “fall?” That’s exactly what Haman is doing. Falling before Esther and falling in the eyes of the king. And then his face is covered by the servants. Like he’s not even there anymore. He’s condemned. It’s over for Haman.

And that’s when we hear from Harbona. Harbona was one of the servants who was sent to bring Vashti to the king’s banquet in chapter 1. He’s been hanging around in the background wondering which way the wind was going to blow. It’s obvious now, and so Harbona pipes up with a helpful piece of information. Verse 9.

“Then Harbona, one of the eunuchs attending the king, said, ‘A gallows seventy-five feet high stands by Haman's house. He had it made for Mordecai, who spoke up to help the king.’ The king said, ‘Hang him on it!’” 

Verse 10. Last time to drown out his name today.

“So they hanged Haman on the gallows he had prepared for Mordecai. Then the king's fury subsided” (vv.9-10).

The second thing we clearly see at Queen Esther’s (second) Banquet is:

#2. POETIC JUSTICE.

Which is true justice. The punishment here perfectly fits the crime.

Yes, Haman is executed for a crime he did not commit. He wasn’t attempting rape. But he was attempting genocide. And he dies for it. And he dies upon the very instrument of torture that he had wanted to kill an innocent man upon.

Harbona said, “He had it made for Mordecai who spoke up to help the king.” And the king said, “Hang him on it!” 

He was impaled in his own front yard. At the top of the highest point in the city.

Solomon says in Proverbs 26:27, “Whoever digs a pit will fall into it; if someone rolls a stone, it will roll back on them” (Proverbs 26:27, NIV).

We’ve all seen this happen from time to time. But we’ve all also wondered if it would happen from time to time. Because we all see a lot of injustice in the world. People digging a pit and pushing other people into it. That’s how Haman had gotten where he was. That’s how Xerxes had gotten where he was!

But now Haman has received poetic justice, and we are told that there is even more poetic justice on the way.

“Be sure your sins will find you out.”

Remember what we learned this summer about justice from 2 Thessalonians?

Paul wrote that persecuted church, “God is just: He will pay back trouble to those who trouble you and give relief to you who are troubled, and to us as well. This will happen when the Lord Jesus is revealed from heaven in blazing fire with his powerful angels.

He will punish those who do not know God and do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus. They will be punished with everlasting destruction and shut out from the presence of the Lord and from the majesty of his power on the day he comes to be glorified in his holy people and to be marveled at among all those who have believed. This includes you, because you believed our testimony to you” (2 Thessalonians 1:6-10).

Perfect justice is on the way. It will perfectly fit the crime.

And we can rejoice in that. Because that means that everything that is wrong will be made right. Like said last week, we are living in a comedy. We are living in a story with a happy ending for all of God’s true people. 

All bad things must come to an end.

King Jesus is going to bring perfect poetic justice in His forever kingdom. We just have to wait.

But that should also scare you if you are not yet one of God’s true people. If you are living like Haman, living for yourself, your pleasures, your agenda, your happiness, your kingdom, then you can expect poetic justice to roll back on you. Repent now while you still can. 

Haman’s story is a cautionary tale. It’s just a matter of time.

And one last thing that we can see and learn from at Queen Esther’s Banquet?

#3. HIDDEN PROVIDENCE.

Where is God? That’s been the title of this series all along. Where is God at Queen Esther’s Banquet?

Well, He’s never mentioned. He’s never named. But I don’t think, at this point in the story, we can miss seeing signs of His  presence. I don’t think we can miss seeing his handiwork in how the story is playing out.

How in the world did Hadassah get to be Queen Esther? How in the world did Queen Esther get the King and Haman to this precarious banquet? For such a time as this. How in the world did this unlikely story come about? How in the world was Esther still standing and not Haman at the end of chapter 7? 

What are the chances? What is there is no such thing a chance?

How in the world did Haman and Mordecai end up switching places? He may be hidden, but the Lord is clearly sovereignly ruling all things–what we call “providence.”

Now, we’re going to stop here and pick it up again in chapter 8, Lord-willing. 

Haman is dead. The king’s anger has subsided. But not everything is resolved. The fate of the Jews is not yet fully decided.

Because when the Persian king makes a law, it cannot be revoked or repealed. And that’s a problem. Because there is a law on the books that says that the Jews must be eradicated in eleven months. Even though Haman won’t be there to see it! The clock is still ticking down, down, down.

It feels like the tide has turned, but maybe not? Or maybe, just maybe, the hidden hand of providence will show up again in ways we cannot predict and maybe cannot even see until it’s all over.

But think about this.

Mordecai was saved because his enemy Haman took his place on the wooden pole. You and I are saved because our enemy Jesus took our place on the wooden pole.

The Bible says, “...God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners [still enemies!], Christ died for us” (Rom. 5:8).

He took our place, willingly.

“God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God” (2 Corinthians 5:21).

Jesus “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us, for it is written: ‘Cursed is everyone who is hung on a pole’” (Galatians 3:13, NIV).

Haman was cursed, but he deserved it. 
We were cursed, and we deserved it.
But King Jesus took our curse, and He didn’t deserve it.

And all who put their trust in Him will be redeemed.

I hope that includes you.


***

Messages in this Series:

01. The King Gave a Banquet - Esther 1:1-22
02. “Hadassah” - Esther 2:1-23
03. "Bewildered" - Esther 3:1-15
04. "Who Knows?" - Esther 4:1-17
05. "What Is Your Request?" - Esther 5:1-14
06. "That Night the King Could Not Sleep" - Esther 6:1-14

Advent Candle #1: “From Our Fears and Sins Release Us”

LEFC Family Advent Readings: “Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus”
Isaiah 61:1-3 :: November 30, 2025
Week #1: “From Our Fears and Sins Release Us”

“Advent” means “coming.” Christmas is coming. Jesus has come and is coming again.
During this year’s Advent Season, we will anticipate the arrival of our Lord by reflecting on the scriptural truth captured in the classic carol, “Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus.” It begins with this plaintive cry:

“Come, Thou long-expected Jesus
Born to set Thy people free
From our fears and sins release us
Let us find our rest in Thee”

[LIGHT FIRST CANDLE.]

Our first candle is candle of freedom.

This song by Charles Wesley, first published in 1774, expresses intense longing for the Messiah to come and bring true freedom–freedom not simply from earthly captivity but from all fear and sin.

Imagine a life unshackled by worry, concern, anxiety, dread, and fright!

Imagine a world unfettered by wickedness, iniquity, and evil in all its forms!

The Prophet Isaiah spoke of One who would one day bring such freedom. He wrote:

[READ ISAIAH 61:1-3.] 

Many centuries later, after the Lord Jesus had been born and grew into manhood, one Sabbath day, he read that prophecy of Isaiah in a synagogue and then dramatically proclaimed, “Today this scripture is fulfilled in your hearing” (Luke 4:16-21).

The long-anticipated Messiah had come to release His people from our fears and sins, and one day soon, our sins and fears will be gone forever, and we will find our rest in Him.

Come, Thou Long-Expected Jesus!


Photo by Jonas Von Werne

Sunday, November 23, 2025

“That Night the King Could Not Sleep” [Matt's Messages]

“That Night the King Could Not Sleep”
Where Is God? - The Tale of Queen Esther
Lanse Evangelical Free Church
November 23, 2025 :: Esther 6:1-14  

Timing is everything.

In so many areas of life, so much comes down to timing. What happened when. How fast something unfolded. What came first. What came last. What happened at just the right time...or at just the wrong time!

Timing is so important. Especially in storytelling. Right? Especially in comedy. Have you ever told a joke that just fell flat because you got the timing wrong? I’ve done that up here! 

The storytelling in Esther chapter 6 is all about timing. And when you really get it, you see that it’s comedic timing.

Esther chapter 6 is, perhaps, the funniest chapter in the whole Bible, depending on your sense of humor. I know that most audiences just laugh and laugh when they get it for the first time...and for all the times after that! And it all comes down to timing.


Now, nothing was funny at the end of chapter 5. Because, speaking of timing, there were two clocks ticking down towards  death for God’s people. One was ticking more slowly, but it was the bigger clock. All of the Jews in the world were slated for genocide in just eleven months.

Haman, the enemy of the Jews, had manipulated the Persian King Xerxes (also known as Ashasuerus) to authorize the extermination of all of the Jews in the Persian Kingdom of the fifth century BC because one of the Jews, a man named Mordecai, had refused to honor Haman.

Mordecai was a low level civil servant in the king’s city of Susa. His enemy Haman had risen to the top spot in that kingdom, just below the king. As high a non-royal person could go. Like a prime minister.

But Haman was not content with that position, especially because Mordecai would not bow in honor to him. So Haman had cast the “pur,” he rolled the dice, and randomly chose the 13th day of Adar in about a year to [this was the wording of the irrevocable decree he got the king’s ring to authorize to] “...destroy, kill and annihilate all the Jews–young and old, women and little children–on a single day” (Est. 3:13).

And the big clock was ticking down.

There is one person who may be close enough to the king to do something about this wicked plan. Amazingly enough, it is Mordecai’s own cousin whom he had raised, a beautiful orphaned Jewish girl named Hadassah, and her Persian name was Esther.

Amazingly enough, Esther had been chosen to be the queen! She had pleased the king over all the other girls taken into his harem and been chosen for the top spot. 

Nobody knew, even apparently her husband, that Esther was a Jew. She has been keeping it secret because Mordecai told her to. But now, Mordecai has asked her to take her life in her hands and ask the king to save her and her people.  

Maybe, just maybe, she had been raised to this position for such a time as this! Timing is so important!

Did she do it? Not yet. First, she fasted and asked all the Jews to fast with her. For three days! No food or water! And then she went and broke the law. This is what we read about last week in chapter 5. 

Esther robed herself in courage and royal dignity and wisdom. And she approached the king without being summoned–which unless the king extended his golden scepter meant death. But she had decided that if she died, she died. But she was going to do what was right. And she did.

And...big relief...the king extended his golden scepter and asked her what was up. What did she want? And what did she say?

She said, “I want you to come to lunch with me. How about a banquet? Me, and you and Haman.” And that pleased the king because he loves banquets. Oh boy, does he love banquets! And then when they were at her banquet, he said, “Ok. Now what was it you were going to ask? What is your request?” And she said, “I’ll tell you tomorrow at the next banquet.”

She’s teasing him! She’s pulling him along. He loves this. Esther has great timing!

Probably tomorrow she’s going to ask him to do something to save the Jews. (Unless she invites him to another banquet! She just might have a third one up her sleeve.)

But that’s when the second clock started ticking down. Because Haman saw Mordecai on his way home from Banquet #1, and he was filled with rage again because Mordecai still would not honor him. And Haman poured out his anger and pride and hate at home, and his “friends” and wife there egged him on to do something about it right then and there. They said, “Don’t wait for next year. Kill Mordecai tomorrow. Build a gallows, a killing machine that towers above all of the buildings in this city and ask the king in the morning to execute Mordecai on it tomorrow before Banquet #2.

Timing is everything. Esther may have dodged death today, but little did she or her cousin know, Mordecai was headed for death tomorrow. The carpenters had been hammering all night long. The second clock is ticking down towards death, and it’s not months, it’s hours, it’s minutes.

But here’s where it gets funny! Because the very next thing that happens is that king passes a sleepless night. First words of chapter 6, verse 1. Our title for today:

“That Night the King Could Not Sleep”


That night (there’s timing for you!) the king could not sleep. The Hebrew is even funnier. It says something like “the sleep of the king fled.”  The Christian Standard Bible says, “Sleep escaped the king.”

Ever felt that way? Sleep got away from you. Tossing and turning. Warm side of the pillow. Cool side of the pillow. Warm side of the pillow. Cool side of the pillow. Look at the clock. Stare at the ceiling. “I don’t think I’m going to sleep.” Talk about timing. Have you ever had a big day planned, and the night before is the night that you just can’t sleep?

It doesn’t say why he couldn’t sleep. Maybe this happened to him often.

Maybe it was all that rich banquet food he ate. I know I can’t sleep if I eat too much. Maybe he was worried about something like “What was Esther going to ask tomorrow?” Or when would his army ever defeat the Greeks? Maybe he was excited about something. “I can’t wait to see Esther tomorrow and find out what she has planned for our banquet!” Too keyed up to sleep. Or maybe there’s this sound of hammering in the distance that is keeping him awake. “What’s all that construction noise?”

It doesn’t say why. It just says that it just so happened (wink, wink) that “That night (of all nights!) the king could not sleep.” We laugh, but he didn’t think it was funny. The most powerful man in the world, and he can’t even get himself to get some rest.

What do you do when you can’t sleep? Do you count sheep? Here’s what Xerxes did: 

He decided to listen to a podcast. Or something like it. He turned on C-Span. Look again at verse 1. 

“That night the king could not sleep; so he ordered the book of the chronicles, the record of his reign, to be brought in and read to him.”

To me that sounds about as exciting as watching paint dry.

He calls in his night staff, and says, “Read to me from the record of my reign.” Maybe he wants to bore himself to sleep. Or maybe if he has to be awake, he wants to hear stories about how great he is and how great his kingdom has been. And be reminded of all of the great things he’s done or have been done for him and his glory. So they are reading to him from these history books. And it just so happened (wink, wink, that verse 2):

“It was found recorded there that Mordecai had exposed Bigthana and Teresh, two of the king's officers who guarded the doorway, who had conspired to assassinate King Xerxes.”

Do you remember that story? It might have been 4 or 5 years ago. That was way back in chapter 2 soon after Esther had become queen. 

What are the chances that Xerxes would have had this story read to him on the very night before Haman would ask for Mordecai’s head? Timing!

Now, this is very important to the king. He puts his reader on pause, and he asks a question. Verse 3.

“‘What honor and recognition has Mordecai received for this?’ the king asked. ‘Nothing has been done for him,’ his attendants answered.”

And that’s correct. We heard about that back in chapter 2. They wrote it down, but then nothing happened. As far as we know, the king has never met Mordecai. He’s just some guy who works on the first floor. Works out by the door. It sure doesn’t seem like the king knows hardly anything about him–especially Mordecai’s real connection to his wife. 

But he’s been reminded of that day that he saved his life through his wife. And it’s important for a Persian king to reward that kind of service. Because if people know that they will be rewarded for exposing a threat to the king, they will exposes more threats to the king. And that will keep him  safe and will show him to be generous. And this king loves to seem generous!

“‘What honor and recognition has Mordecai received for this?’ ...  ‘Nothing has been done for him...”

“Oh, that’s not right! We’ve got to fix this now.”

And it’s apparently reached morning. It’s tomorrow already. He hasn’t slept, but now he’s on a mission. And he’s headed for a collision. Timing is everything.

Speaking of timing, let’s do this with the name of Haman today. Let’s drown out his name the first time he’s mentioned as we read this chapter and the last time. So here in verse 4 and then again in verse 14. I’ll remind you.

Xerxes wants advice. He never does anything without getting advice which can be a good idea if you have good advisers. He’s got some of the worst.

He want some advice on what to do to honor Mordecai who once saved his life. Who should he asked? How about Mordecai’s worst enemy? Verse 4.  [Remember: Boo and Hiss for Haman!]

“The king said, ‘Who is in the court?’ Now Haman had just entered the outer court of the palace to speak to the king about hanging Mordecai on the gallows he had erected for him."

He can hardly wait! This is the day that Mordecai dies! He’s there first thing to ask. Verse 5.

"His attendants answered, ‘Haman is standing in the court.’ ‘Bring him in,’ the king ordered. When Haman entered, the king asked him, ‘What should be done for the man the king delights to honor?’”
 
Do you feel it? Do you feel the timing? It just so happened (wink, wink) that Haman was on hand to take this question.

And the king doesn’t say who he’s talking about! Which just sets things up for a classic case of comedic misunderstanding. Like a sitcom where everybody is assuming something different and talking past each other. And it just gets funnier and funnier!

The king doesn’t give Haman a chance to open his mouth. He doesn’t say good morning. He just launches in with, “What should be done for the man the king delights to honor?”

And who does Haman think he means? Himself, right? Haman is a narcissist who is completely full of himself. He can’t think of anybody else. And he’s always been honored before.

In fact, he’s always been successful at manipulating this king before. Haman assumes that he can do it again. Verse 6.

“Now Haman thought to himself, ‘Who is there that the king would rather honor than me?’ So he answered the king, ‘For the man the king delights to honor, have them bring a royal robe the king has worn and a horse the king has ridden, one with a royal crest placed on its head. Then let the robe and horse be entrusted to one of the king's most noble princes. Let them robe the man the king delights to honor, and lead him on the horse through the city streets, proclaiming before him, 'This is what is done for the man the king delights to honor!'”

I almost titled this sermon “The Man the King Delights to Honor” because he repeats it over and over and over again.

Haman doesn’t ask for much, does he? I would have asked for cash, but he’s already loaded. What he wants is to be king for the day. He wants to wear the king’s clothes and ride the king’s horse and be given a king’s parade. He wants everything but the king’s wife!

And I think he wants Mordecai to see it. He’s now happy to wait for Mordecai to hang until after Mordecai sees Haman paraded around town as “the man the king delights to honor.”

Haman craves glory for himself. He is so proud. So proud he doesn’t realize what he’s done. Timing is everything. Verse 10.

“‘Go at once,’ the king commanded Haman. ‘Get the robe and the horse and do just as you have suggested for Mordecai the Jew, who sits at the king's gate. Do not neglect anything you have recommended.’”

I don’t know if the king has an idea of the rivalry between these two guys. It’s possible that as he heard what Haman thought should be done, he picked up that Haman thought it was all about him, and he enjoyed playing this practical joke on Haman. That’s possible. It sure doesn’t seem like he knows the beef between these two. He just says, “That’s a great idea. Do that! Robe, horse, parade. Mordecai the Jew. Go! Now! Timing is everything.”

Can you imagine the look on Haman’s face? I see him opening his mouth. And then closing it. And then turning on his heel and swallowing hard and gritting his teeth and doing everything just like the king said. Because you don’t disobey this king. He doesn’t get to say why he came early. He has to honor his enemy. V.11

“So Haman got the robe and the horse. He robed Mordecai, and led him on horseback through the city streets, proclaiming before him, ‘This is what is done for the man the king delights to honor!’”

Can you imagine what this was like for Mordecai? He probably didn’t know about the gallows, but when Haman showed up at his house, he must have thought this was it! And he is forced to take off his sackcloth and put on a robe that King Ahasuerus has worn! And get up on a horse that King Ahasuerus has ridden. This horse has some kind of royal crest on his head. It’s like the horse has a crown! And his enemy, the enemy of his people, is leading the horse around town and shouting, “This is what is done for the man the king delights to honor! This is what is done for the man the king delights to honor! This is what is done for the man the king delights to honor!”

I can’t imagine what he must have been feeling. All we’re told is that he got dropped off back at work. But we are told what Haman was feeling. V.12

“Afterward Mordecai returned to the king's gate. But Haman rushed home, with his head covered in grief, [The tables have been turned. Look who is mourning now...] and told Zeresh his wife and all his friends everything that had happened to him. His advisers and his wife Zeresh said to him, ‘Since Mordecai, before whom your downfall has started, is of Jewish origin, you cannot stand against him–you will surely come to ruin!’”

That’s not what they said yesterday! Yesterday, he was on top of the world, and they were riding his coattails. But now, they say, “It’s tough to be you. You know you can’t win against the Jews.”

And, speaking of timing, Haman doesn’t have time to come up with a plan. Look at verse 14 and remember to drown out his name. Verse 14.

“While they were still talking with him, the king's eunuchs arrived and hurried Haman away to the banquet Esther had prepared.”

This isn’t going so well for him. All of a sudden, Haman is finding out that he’s not in control of his life after all. He’s rushed away to the second banquet that Esther had prepared.

Which we will read about next Sunday. Yep, it’s another cliffhanger. Because there is enough stuff in this chapter for us to think about more deeply today.

What can we learn from that night that the king could not sleep?

Let’s start by asking ourselves this question:

Who is the hero of Esther chapter 6?

It’s obviously a very funny story and has a happy ending...so far. Mordecai has dodged the bullet so far, but the big clock is still ticking down. His people are still scheduled for annihilation. We don’t know what’s going to happened at this second banquet. They don’t know. We don’t know.

But chapter 6 was very funny and very happy. 

Who made that happen?  

It wasn’t Esther, right? She didn’t do anything in chapter 6. She didn’t even start anything that then played out in chapter 6. She’s doing her part. She’s been courageous and prepared these banquets, but she’s hardly even mentioned in this chapter.

Is it Mordecai? Did he save the day? No. He’s pretty passive in this chapter. He goes for quite a ride! But it all happens to him. It’s not stuff he’s doing. He’s not the hero.

It sure isn’t Haman!

And I don’t think it’s Xerxes either. I mean, he does something right. He decides to fix something that was wrong and give credit where credit was due. But he’s not sweeping in to save Mordecai’s life. He doesn’t even know Mordecai was in danger.

Who’s the hero?

Nobody...that is named. But it sure feels like Somebody is moving things around in this story, doesn’t it? Timing is everything.

There sure are a lot of coincidences in this story.

How many times in re-telling it did I said, “It just so happened that...” How is that the king would be robbed of sleep that night? How is that the king would have read to him about when Mordecai saved his life that night? How is that Haman would have walked into the court at that very moment? How is that they would have talked past each other in that way? What are the chances?

What if there is no such thing as chance? Who could be doing all of that?

Someone who has not been named. Someone else is driving this story. It sure seems like the Author of this Story is the hero who is making it all happen.

I have three points for us to consider to apply Esther chapter 6 to our lives, and here’s the first one. They are all things for which we can be eternally grateful this Thanksgiving. 

#1. SOMEONE IS WORKING WHEN WE ARE NOT LOOKING.

Someone–this book does not say His name, but He’s very important to the story nonetheless–is working when we are not looking. 

He’s working in all of the details of our lives, no matter how seemingly insignificant. 

He’s working in our sleepless nights.
He’s working in our random meetings.
He’s working in our misunderstandings and when we’re talking past each other.
He’s working in the smallest of details to accomplish His grand plan.

Do you believe that? I do.

That’s something to be grateful for on Thursday when you’re having the turkey. Be thankful for (I’ll say His name, God’s) providence. God so orders the world that He uses every single thing that happens to accomplish His purposes. 

That doesn’t make everything good. Sleepless nights are not always good. You don’t have to pretend they are. But God is always good, and He’s working every single sleepless night for our good! Even when we can’t see it. Especially when we can’t see it.

He is working when we are not looking. [I got that phrase from Nick Boonstra. I’m loving his sermon series on the Tale of Queen Esther.] And we don’t have to see His hand or even His fingerprints to know that they are there.

Often, we’ll only know in hindsight. Looking back. Looking back in your life, what are some of the super small things that made a big impact when you look back on them?

I think about the time I met Heather Joy. Her maiden name was Lundeen. My last name was Mitchell. We just so happened to be put in the same orientation group at Moody Bible Institute. Our last names just so happened to be close together in the American alphabet. And we just so happened to be at Moody as freshman at the same time. 

Did we know that day that Someone was working towards our marriage and our family and our ministry here in Pennsylvania? No. We were not looking. (I mean, I was looking! And I liked what I saw. But I had no idea.)

How about you? Looking back can you see some ways that Someone was working when you weren’t looking?

How about how you came to know Jesus as your Savior? What all had to come together for that to happen? What “just so happened” so that today you are saved? If today you are saved.

I think that this is the turning point of the Book of Esther. It feels like it. Even the Persians feel it (v.13)! Even Haman’s evil wife feels it! Someone is working when we’re not looking. He’s working all the time and in every thing that happens, big or small. 

That might be an even greater miracle than all the miracles we read about in the Book of Daniel! Because this is every single thing in the world in history being worked together into achieving God’s grand plan!

He’s doing it on His own timing. Talk about timing being everything. He doesn’t do it on our timing. But His timing is perfect. Down to the smallest thing. Down to the sleepless nights and silliest misunderstandings. Someone is working even when we are not looking. And here’s what He’s doing:

#2. SOMEONE IS OPPOSING THE PROUD BUT GIVING GRACE TO THE HUMBLE.

Haman is so proud, and he’s going down.

It seemed like he was never going down. His trajectory was just up, and up, and up. And it didn’t matter whom he trampled on to get there. All he cares about is himself. He’s the only person he can imagine that king might want to honor.

Think about that. And ask yourself if that’s been you.

I know it’s been me. I have to regularly remind myself, “It’s not about you, Matt.”

It’s not about you. Stop thinking just about yourself and focus on others. Humble yourself and God will lift you up. The humble are the ones that the King delights to honor! But if you keep making everything about yourself, then you will find that Someone is opposing you. Someone is going to stop you, and you don’t want this unnamed Person as your enemy.

Haman would have done much better if he had known and taken heed to Proverbs 25:6&7.

“Do not exalt yourself in the king's presence, and do not claim a place among great men; it is better for him to say to you, ‘Come up here,’ than for him to humiliate you before a nobleman.”

Or 1 Peter 5:5, “God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble.”

God is in the business of reversing things. Making everything right. He does it in his own perfect timing. Not on our timing. But He’s doing it. Haman was finding that out the hard way. God is going to settle all accounts. He’s going to bring perfect justice. Just like Mordecai was finally rewarded for his service to his king, we know that our King will one day reward all faithful service to Him. Justice will be done and will be seen to be done.

This story we’re living in is a not a tragedy. It’s a comedy. 

A comedy, in the classic literary sense, is a story that turns out to have a happy ending.

Lots of bad things can happen in a comedy, but the ending is always one of joy.

Church, we are a living in a comedy! I’ve read the end of the story, and our Hero wins! Remember: All bad things must come to an end! And this little chapter gives us just a hint of that. That’s something we can be give thanks for on Thursday. We living in a comedy, not a tragedy.

And one other thing that Someone is doing when we’re not looking...

#3. SOMEONE IS KEEPING ALL OF HIS PROMISES.

You know Who I mean! 

Did you notice why Haman’s wife and friends say that Haman is going down? Was it because Mordecai was such a great guy? Was that what they emphasized?

No. If you still have your Bible open, look at verse 13. It’s the thing that keeps getting mentioned over and over about Mordecai. It’s not that he’s a hero or an example or even really strong-willed and defiant. Verse 13.

“Since Mordecai, before whom your downfall has started [they expect it to continue!], is of Jewish origin, you cannot stand against him–you will surely come to ruin!’”

Now, they could be wrong. They are not prophets. But they have this sense that the Jews were protected. They have this sense, maybe they’ve heard some things about Daniel and his friends over in Babylon fifty years ago. Or maybe they’ve heard ancient prophecies from the Bible like the Eastern prophet Balaam’s in Numbers 24 about how if you curse these people you will be cursed.

Or the promises given to their ancestor Father Abraham. Promises of land, offspring, and blessing no matter what. Promises that the Promise Maker is going to keep.

Not on our timetable! He’s going to do it on His own schedule.

Timing is everything, and His timing is inscrutable and unimprovable.

So He’s going to do it. He’s going to keep every one of His promises. Including the promise to send a Messiah, a Savior who saves His people, not just from death but from their sins and eternal death. And He promises to allow that Messiah to suffer and die for His people’s sins, but then to be raised to life and given the name that is above every name. So that at the name of Jesus every knee will bow and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord.

That’s what’s going to happen to the Man the heavenly king delights to honor! 

And we can count on it. Someone is keeping all of His promises, every single one, and we just need to trust in them and in Him.

And give thanks for His faithfulness forever!


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Messages in this Series:

01. The King Gave a Banquet - Esther 1:1-22
02. “Hadassah” - Esther 2:1-23
03. "Bewildered" - Esther 3:1-15
04. "Who Knows?" - Esther 4:1-17
05. "What Is Your Request?" - Esther 5:1-14