Esther 4
4:1 a Mordecai’s dramatic response showed extreme grief and mourning (see 2 Sam 1:11 b; Ezra 9 c; Jon 3:5-9 d).4:2 e no one was allowed: The king did not want to hear all the sorry stories of misfortune and people pleading for mercy.
4:3 f great mourning among the Jews: In these reports of lamenting, God’s name is not mentioned, but the lamenting and fasting implies crying out in prayer for God to intervene and save his people (Exod 2:23-25 g; Ezra 9:5-15 h; Dan 9:1-19 i).
4:8 j A copy of the decree with the king’s seal would prove to Esther the seriousness of the situation.
• to beg for mercy: Mordecai gave Esther no reasons to present to the king, only an appeal to the king’s mercy and Esther’s influence on him on behalf of her own people.
4:11 k anyone who appears ... without being invited is doomed to die: Access to the king was strictly controlled by his guards to prevent unwanted guests from wasting the king’s time with petty requests. Since these were the official rules of the court, the danger to Esther’s life was enormous. Apparently she ruled out requesting an audience with the king through a messenger, possibly because she would have to tell the messenger why she wanted to talk to the king.
• has not called for me to come to him for thirty days: Esther had no guarantee of the king’s favorable response.
Summary for Esth 4:13-14: 4:13-14 l Don’t think ... you will escape: Mordecai did not back down and did not excuse her because of the danger, and he reminded her that it would be more dangerous for her to say nothing to the king.
• deliverance and relief for the Jews will arise from some other place: Mordecai knew God’s promises and realized that God would not allow his chosen people to be annihilated (see Gen 12:3 m; 22:18 n; 28:14 o; Isa 60:1-5 p).
• perhaps you were made queen for just such a time as this: Esther’s rise to power at this precise time was not just a lucky chance of fate—her position as Xerxes’ favored wife and queen was a role that God had given her to influence history for the Jewish people.
4:16 q fast for me: Esther was convinced, but she wanted as many Jews as possible to pray that God would intervene to save her life.
• Do not eat or drink for three days, night or day: A total fast without any food or water often lasted only one day (Lev 16:29-31 r; Judg 20:26 s). The three-day length was consistent with the seriousness of the situation and the absolute need for God’s intervention.
• though it is against the law, I will go in to see the king: In spite of the danger, she determined that she must act for the sake of her people.
• If I must die, I must die: She, like Mordecai, was a person of character who would do what was right in spite of personal danger.
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