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Texts -- Esther 7:2-10 (NET)

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7:2 On the second day of the banquet of wine the king asked Esther , “What is your request , Queen Esther ? It shall be granted to you. And what is your petition ? Ask up to half the kingdom , and it shall be done !” 7:3 Queen Esther replied , “If I have met with your approval , O king , and if the king is so inclined , grant me my life as my request , and my people as my petition . 7:4 For we have been sold – both I and my people – to destruction and to slaughter and to annihilation ! If we had simply been sold as male and female slaves , I would have remained silent , for such distress would not have been sufficient for troubling the king .” 7:5 Then King Ahasuerus responded to Queen Esther , “Who is this individual? Where is this person to be found who is presumptuous enough to act in this way ?” 7:6 Esther replied , “The oppressor and enemy is this evil Haman !” Then Haman became terrified in the presence of the king and queen . 7:7 In rage the king arose from the banquet of wine and withdrew to the palace garden . Meanwhile, Haman stood to beg Queen Esther for his life , for he realized that the king had now determined a catastrophic end for him. 7:8 When the king returned from the palace garden to the banquet of wine , Haman was throwing himself down on the couch where Esther was lying. The king exclaimed , “Will he also attempt to rape the queen while I am still in the building !” As these words left the king’s mouth , they covered Haman’s face . 7:9 Harbona , one of the king’s eunuchs , said , “Indeed , there is the gallows that Haman made for Mordecai , who spoke out in the king’s behalf. It stands near Haman’s home and is seventy-five feet high .” The king said , “Hang him on it!” 7:10 So they hanged Haman on the very gallows that he had prepared for Mordecai . The king’s rage then abated .

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Expository Notes on the Bible (Constable)

  • Evidently Darius also saw the Jerusalem temple as a monument to his own success. He instructed Tattenai to allow the Jewish governor, Zerubbabel, and his people to proceed unobstructed. Darius seems to have viewed Zerubbabel ...
  • I. God's preparations 1:1-2:20A. Vashti deposed ch. 11. The king's feast 1:1-92. The queen's dismissal 1:10-22B. Esther elevated 2:1-201. The plan to replace Vashti 2:1-42. Esther's selection 2:5-113. The choice of Esther as ...
  • This chapter records the providential circumstances whereby Esther was able to rise to her influential position with the Persian king."Though no mention is made of God's providence, it nevertheless plays a prominent part, and...
  • We know no details concerning the identities of the assassins or the reasons they hated Ahasuerus. Extra-biblical sources have not yet clarified these matters, though the commentators love to speculate. Mordecai's position in...
  • Perhaps Haman did not mention the Jews by name since Ahasuerus' predecessors, Cyrus and Darius I (Hystaspes), had issued proclamations favorable to them (Ezra 1:1-4; 6:3-5, 8-12). In any case his failure to mention them by na...
  • Chapters 5-7 carry us to the climax of our story. They show how God providentially preserved and protected His people.
  • Here we have another remarkable example of how God controls the hearts of kings (v. 2; Prov. 21:1; cf. Gen. 39-41; Ezra 1:1-4; Neh. 2; Dan. 2; 3; 4; 5; Acts 2:23). "To half of the kingdom"(v. 3) is hyperbole and means, "I wil...
  • "Here the early bird is gotten by the worm."85Haman's pride preceded his fall (v. 6; cf. Prov. 16:18). He wanted to appear as much like the king himself as possible in the honors he recommended for the person he thought would...
  • This banquet probably took place in the afternoon since Haman had already led Mordecai around Susa on a horse that day and since Haman died later that day.Esther was in a very dangerous position. She not only now identified h...
  • The fact that his enemy sat in his presence at that very moment evidently made the king pause before issuing his obvious verdict. He wanted to think about it for a moment and walked out into his garden to do so. Upon returnin...
  • 6:19-20 Evidently spending a night in the lions' den was the minimum that the law required because early the next morning Darius set out to free Daniel if he might have survived. Uncertain about the prophet's fate the king ca...
  • 2:6-7 The Lord called His people to flee from the land of the north (cf. Jer. 3:18; 16:15; 23:8; 31:8) where He had scattered them as the four winds (cf. Isa. 43:5-6; 49:12). Most of the Israelite exiles had gone into captivi...
  • 14:1-2 "At that time"is again a loose connective not intended to communicate chronological sequence necessarily. Herod Antipas lived primarily at Tiberias on the west shore of Lake Galilee.579Word about Jesus' ministry reache...
  • John heard praise of God in heaven that interrupted his narration of the outpouring of the bowls of wrath briefly.16:5 The "angel of the waters"evidently refers to the angel responsible for the sea and fresh water, the superi...
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