Esther: Daring Faith for Such a Time as This Sample
Esther’s Hebrew name is Hadassah and means “myrtle.” Oftentimes, Israelite women in the Old Testament were given names of plants, so Hadassah is not unusual.1 In Isaiah 41:19 and 55:13, God promised the myrtle would grow in the wilderness, replacing thorns and briers. The symbolism in these prophecies foreshadows God’s forgiveness and acceptance of His people. Jews today still carry the myrtle in processions at the Feast of Tabernacles, signifying peace and thanksgiving.2 (I suddenly have the urge to find myrtle-print wallpaper for my guest bath. Apparently, I’ve been in the book of Esther a wee bit long.)
Esther’s possession of two names, each from different cultures and backgrounds, “implies a person’s moving between two worlds.”3 The name Hadassah anchored the queen to God’s promises to Israel; the name Esther allowed her to move inconspicuously about the culture in which she found herself. This tension—feeling as though you embody too much of the culture you were born into for the one you’re living in and vice-versa—isn’t just the plight of foreigners; it’s the status of the believer.
Yet Esther 2:9 speaks of the word hesed, meaning God’s favor or kindness. It’s an important biblical word that often expresses God’s covenant love for His people. This same word is used throughout the Old Testament, notably in two similar and significant stories where God’s people find themselves foreigners in faraway lands.
In Joseph’s and Daniel’s stories, we can readily see both their courageous obedience and God’s unmistakable hand of hesed or favor on their lives. However, in Esther’s story, the favor she receives can’t be directly connected to any faith act on her part, nor is God explicitly mentioned.
What I want you to see today is that both Esther and Mordecai appear to have somewhat assimilated into Persian culture. Esther was a Persian, as far as anyone was concerned. However, the lack of an explicit stand for her faith doesn’t mean her heart wasn’t there.
At the same time, we can still note the differences between Esther and people like Joseph and Daniel. As Bible students, we easily expect God’s hesed to show up for the overtly faithful and courageous. We don’t as often look for it to be poured out on the vulnerable, the scared, and perhaps even the weak in faith. It turns out that complicated isn’t too much for God’s hesed.
Let’s fast-forward about five hundred years to a message Jesus gave His disciples early in His ministry. In Matthew 5:13-16, Jesus calls his followers to be salt and light:
You are the salt of the earth. But if the salt should lose its taste, how can it be made salty? It’s no longer good for anything but to be thrown out and trampled under people’s feet. You are the light of the world. A city situated on a hill cannot be hidden. No one lights a lamp and puts it under a basket, but rather on a lampstand, and it gives light for all who are in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father in heaven.
In antiquity, salt was used to heal and cleanse, but one of its main purposes was to preserve meat by slowing down decay. Followers of Christ are to be people who push back the decay in our world. At the same time, we are to dispel the darkness with the light of the gospel. Salt is defensive, and light is offensive, but both are distinct from their surroundings!
Mordecai and Esther’s decision for her to blend into the Persian culture and to conceal her Jewish identity in the harem was complicated, at the very least. It’s unlikely any of us will ever face anything close. Today, our call is much clearer. We are to openly bear witness to Christ, to spread the good news of His gospel even when it costs us.
Much like Christ followers today, Israel was to be set apart from the world. They were to be a distinct people for God’s renown. No matter where they found themselves living, God’s people were to infiltrate and impact their surrounding culture, not in spite of their different way of life but because of it. Neither biblical accounts nor history tell us much about what religious life looked like for the Jewish population in Susa. Yet, Esther’s account tells us that God had not forgotten His people. Today, we can bear witness to a Jewish woman named Esther, in a faraway fortress, whom God is about to call out from among her peers in an unmistakable fashion. May He do the same for us.
Read Esther 2:8-11 and consider how God might be asking you to live set apart for his glory.
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1. Jon D. Levenson, Esther: A Commentary (United States: Presbyterian Publishing Corporation, 1997), 58.
2. Joyce G. Baldwin, Esther: An Introduction and Commentary, vol. 12, Tyndale Old Testament Commentaries (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1984), 66.
3. Karen H. Jobes, Esther, The NIV Application Commentary (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1999), 98.
Scripture
About this Plan
In this six-day reading plan by Kelly Minter, you’ll dive into the daring faith modeled by Esther and her cousin Mordecai—a faith rooted in God's goodness, lived out through extraordinary circumstances, and used to change the world. Although our time looks different from Esther’s, our God is just as active and faithful today, and He has called you for such a time as this.
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