
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
For Such a Time as This
The Bible and Historians like the Greek Historian Herodotus, and the Jewish Midrash give us details to one of the greatest stories ever told. A story about risk. A story about the power of a woman’s influence. A story about the power of one man’s courage. A story that warns of the dangers of restricting religious freedom and mingling church and state.... A story for such a time as this…
Our story begins on the night of the overthrow of Babylon. King Belshazzar is having a party, everyone is drunk, and in fiery letters written on the wall everyone is terrified to hear from Daniel the prophet that the Kingdom of Babylon has been weighed in the balance…and will be overthrown. It has failed it’s calling, and it is the fault of the king who should have known better and not lowered himself to a drunken festival to the downfall of his empire. At the same time, the Medo-Persian army has diverted the river Euphrates and is marching under the wall to overthrow the metropolis of the greatest empire the world had known. Belshazzar the king is slain. Terror seizes everyone and all are running for their lives. Darius, the future king of this empire, and soon to be a friend of Daniel the prophet, sees something that catches his eye and……………………………………that’s the beginning of our story. Fast forward – where we pick up our story in Esther Chapter 1:1
Xerxes the Great
Verses 3-5
There was drinking of wine and reveling. It was similar to that last night in Babylon at Belshazzar’s feast with a thousand of his lords.
Esther 1:10, 11 - When the heart of the king was drunk with wine, he commanded ... to bring Vashti the queen before the king with the crown royal, to shew the people and the princes her beauty: for she was fair to look upon.
Vashti
According to the Midrash – The ancient Jewish commentary on the Hebrew Scriptures – Vashti was the daughter of King Belshazzar. Great granddaughter of Nebuchadnezzar. Taken captive by King Darius the night of the overthrow, he took pity on her and eventually had her marry his son – Xerxes/Ahasueras. Vashti’s name means (The Beautiful – The Best)
Harriet Beecher Stowe called Vashti's disobedience the "first stand for woman's rights.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton wrote that Vashti "added new glory to [her] day and generation...by her disobedience; for 'Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God.'"
Ellen White states - When this command came from the king, Vashti did not carry out his orders, because she knew that wine had been freely used, and that Ahasuerus was under the influence of the intoxicating liquor. For her husband's sake as well as her own, she decided not to leave her position at the head of the women of the court.
Xerxes commanded her to appear before his half-drunken company, wearing only her crown and she refused to be humiliated like that.
The men around Xerxes argued this would set a terrible precedent. She hadn’t just wronged him but this would alter the state of society. It would be a power given to woman that would be to her injury (Manuscript 29, 1911)
So Xerxes banished Queen Vashti (Esther 1:3).
There is no queen in the empire…what now?
Hadassah was an orphan – of the royal line of Saul. Her parents had both died when she was a baby. She was raised by her cousin Mordecai as his own child. She was simple-hearted and unassuming, requiring little and demanding nothing. SDP 171.2
Mordecai called her Esther to hide her lineage – and at the age of 16 she went to the palace. Like Vashti, she is also known for her beauty.
Xerxes marries Esther (Ishtar – goddess of love) (Esther 2:16), when he is 40. She is believed to be around 16.
Soon after Esther is crowned queen, Mordecai gets intel of a plot to assassinate the king. He tells Esther and she relays this to the king. 13 years later Xerxes would finally be assassinated while on the throne.
All seemed well in the kingdom…but a few years go by and then everything changes in just a few days.
Haman, a wealthy influential politician and businessman becomes second in command in the government. He begins to hate Mordecai because Mordecai won’t bow down to him when he passes by. He finds out Mordecai is a Jew. So he gets a law passed in the government to discriminate and persecute people based on religious beliefs. He wants to rid the land of all of these Sabbath keepers.
Esther 3:9 - If it please the king, issue a decree that they be destroyed, and I will give 10,000 large sacks of silver to the government administrators to be deposited in the royal treasury."
Xerxes loved money and it’s that love of money that is the root of all evil…
A death decree to destroy those who keep Sabbath and rid the land of them. Why? Because…haven’t you heard? They are troublers of the people!
This is story about the danger of mingling of religion and state affairs.
The remnant of Israel remained in a foreign land. But John on Patmos saw another moment of the remnant of Israel under attack and declared, in Revelation 12:17 - “The dragon was wroth with the woman, and went to make war with the remnant of her seed, which keep the commandments of God, and have the testimony of Jesus Christ.”
For about forty years mercy had been extended to Israel, and that people had turned a deaf ear to all pleas to return home. Forty years has often been called the allotted time for a generation to settle its destiny either for or against the truth. Moses was forty years in the wilderness, unlearning the things of Egypt, and being taught in the things of God; Israel wandered forty years in the wilderness, when only eleven days were necessary to make the journey from the Red Sea to the border of Canaan; forty days Christ endured severe temptation as a figure of the time before the destruction of Jerusalem; forty years sealed the fate of the Reformation in Germany; and it was forty years from the preaching of the sealing message until the time of the loud cry. SDP 172.2
Esther, in the king’s palace, was ignorant of the decree. She hears that Mordecai is in sackcloth mourning at the King’s gate.
"There comes a time when silence is betrayal."
Banquet - Chapter 7
Chapter 8 - Onward
Angels that excel in strength had been commissioned by God to protect His people while they “stood for their lives.” Esther 9:2, 16. PK 602.2
Mordecai is us. Haman is Lucifer. Was next to the throne and will be replaced by you and I.
APPENDIX
Xerxes was a cruel, arrogant man, and his character is shown not only in his dealing with the Hebrew race, but with other peoples as well. Not content with the extent of territory under his control, he mustered an immense army-over five million, historians like Herodotus state-in attempts to subdue Greece. Defeat and disaster accompanied the effort, however, and he returned unto his own kingdom. SDP 176.1
4.9
108108 ratings
For Such a Time as This
The Bible and Historians like the Greek Historian Herodotus, and the Jewish Midrash give us details to one of the greatest stories ever told. A story about risk. A story about the power of a woman’s influence. A story about the power of one man’s courage. A story that warns of the dangers of restricting religious freedom and mingling church and state.... A story for such a time as this…
Our story begins on the night of the overthrow of Babylon. King Belshazzar is having a party, everyone is drunk, and in fiery letters written on the wall everyone is terrified to hear from Daniel the prophet that the Kingdom of Babylon has been weighed in the balance…and will be overthrown. It has failed it’s calling, and it is the fault of the king who should have known better and not lowered himself to a drunken festival to the downfall of his empire. At the same time, the Medo-Persian army has diverted the river Euphrates and is marching under the wall to overthrow the metropolis of the greatest empire the world had known. Belshazzar the king is slain. Terror seizes everyone and all are running for their lives. Darius, the future king of this empire, and soon to be a friend of Daniel the prophet, sees something that catches his eye and……………………………………that’s the beginning of our story. Fast forward – where we pick up our story in Esther Chapter 1:1
Xerxes the Great
Verses 3-5
There was drinking of wine and reveling. It was similar to that last night in Babylon at Belshazzar’s feast with a thousand of his lords.
Esther 1:10, 11 - When the heart of the king was drunk with wine, he commanded ... to bring Vashti the queen before the king with the crown royal, to shew the people and the princes her beauty: for she was fair to look upon.
Vashti
According to the Midrash – The ancient Jewish commentary on the Hebrew Scriptures – Vashti was the daughter of King Belshazzar. Great granddaughter of Nebuchadnezzar. Taken captive by King Darius the night of the overthrow, he took pity on her and eventually had her marry his son – Xerxes/Ahasueras. Vashti’s name means (The Beautiful – The Best)
Harriet Beecher Stowe called Vashti's disobedience the "first stand for woman's rights.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton wrote that Vashti "added new glory to [her] day and generation...by her disobedience; for 'Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God.'"
Ellen White states - When this command came from the king, Vashti did not carry out his orders, because she knew that wine had been freely used, and that Ahasuerus was under the influence of the intoxicating liquor. For her husband's sake as well as her own, she decided not to leave her position at the head of the women of the court.
Xerxes commanded her to appear before his half-drunken company, wearing only her crown and she refused to be humiliated like that.
The men around Xerxes argued this would set a terrible precedent. She hadn’t just wronged him but this would alter the state of society. It would be a power given to woman that would be to her injury (Manuscript 29, 1911)
So Xerxes banished Queen Vashti (Esther 1:3).
There is no queen in the empire…what now?
Hadassah was an orphan – of the royal line of Saul. Her parents had both died when she was a baby. She was raised by her cousin Mordecai as his own child. She was simple-hearted and unassuming, requiring little and demanding nothing. SDP 171.2
Mordecai called her Esther to hide her lineage – and at the age of 16 she went to the palace. Like Vashti, she is also known for her beauty.
Xerxes marries Esther (Ishtar – goddess of love) (Esther 2:16), when he is 40. She is believed to be around 16.
Soon after Esther is crowned queen, Mordecai gets intel of a plot to assassinate the king. He tells Esther and she relays this to the king. 13 years later Xerxes would finally be assassinated while on the throne.
All seemed well in the kingdom…but a few years go by and then everything changes in just a few days.
Haman, a wealthy influential politician and businessman becomes second in command in the government. He begins to hate Mordecai because Mordecai won’t bow down to him when he passes by. He finds out Mordecai is a Jew. So he gets a law passed in the government to discriminate and persecute people based on religious beliefs. He wants to rid the land of all of these Sabbath keepers.
Esther 3:9 - If it please the king, issue a decree that they be destroyed, and I will give 10,000 large sacks of silver to the government administrators to be deposited in the royal treasury."
Xerxes loved money and it’s that love of money that is the root of all evil…
A death decree to destroy those who keep Sabbath and rid the land of them. Why? Because…haven’t you heard? They are troublers of the people!
This is story about the danger of mingling of religion and state affairs.
The remnant of Israel remained in a foreign land. But John on Patmos saw another moment of the remnant of Israel under attack and declared, in Revelation 12:17 - “The dragon was wroth with the woman, and went to make war with the remnant of her seed, which keep the commandments of God, and have the testimony of Jesus Christ.”
For about forty years mercy had been extended to Israel, and that people had turned a deaf ear to all pleas to return home. Forty years has often been called the allotted time for a generation to settle its destiny either for or against the truth. Moses was forty years in the wilderness, unlearning the things of Egypt, and being taught in the things of God; Israel wandered forty years in the wilderness, when only eleven days were necessary to make the journey from the Red Sea to the border of Canaan; forty days Christ endured severe temptation as a figure of the time before the destruction of Jerusalem; forty years sealed the fate of the Reformation in Germany; and it was forty years from the preaching of the sealing message until the time of the loud cry. SDP 172.2
Esther, in the king’s palace, was ignorant of the decree. She hears that Mordecai is in sackcloth mourning at the King’s gate.
"There comes a time when silence is betrayal."
Banquet - Chapter 7
Chapter 8 - Onward
Angels that excel in strength had been commissioned by God to protect His people while they “stood for their lives.” Esther 9:2, 16. PK 602.2
Mordecai is us. Haman is Lucifer. Was next to the throne and will be replaced by you and I.
APPENDIX
Xerxes was a cruel, arrogant man, and his character is shown not only in his dealing with the Hebrew race, but with other peoples as well. Not content with the extent of territory under his control, he mustered an immense army-over five million, historians like Herodotus state-in attempts to subdue Greece. Defeat and disaster accompanied the effort, however, and he returned unto his own kingdom. SDP 176.1
87 Listeners
774 Listeners