
Text -- Esther 1:4 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Est 1:4
Wesley: Est 1:4 - -- Making every day a magnificent feast, either for all his princes, or for some of them, who might come to the feast successively, as the king ordered t...
Making every day a magnificent feast, either for all his princes, or for some of them, who might come to the feast successively, as the king ordered them to do. The Persian feasts are much celebrated in authors, for their length and luxury.
Clarke -> Est 1:4
Clarke: Est 1:4 - -- The riches of his glorious kingdom - Luxury was the characteristic of the Eastern monarchs, and particularly of the Persians. In their feasts, which...
The riches of his glorious kingdom - Luxury was the characteristic of the Eastern monarchs, and particularly of the Persians. In their feasts, which were superb and of long continuance, they made a general exhibition of their wealth, grandeur, etc., and received the highest encomiums from their poets and flatterers. Their ostentation on such occasions passed into a proverb: hence Horace: -
Persicos odi, puer, apparatus
Displicent nexae philyra coronae
Mitte sectari, rosa quo locoru
Sera moretur
I tell thee, boy, that I detes
The grandeur of a Persian feast
Nor for me the linden’ s rin
Shall the flowery chaplet bind
Then search not where the curious ros
Beyond his season loitering grows
Francis.
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TSK -> Est 1:4
TSK: Est 1:4 - -- When he : Isa 39:2; Eze 28:5; Dan 4:30
the riches : Psa 76:1-4, Psa 145:5, Psa 145:12, Psa 145:13; Dan 2:37-44, Dan 7:9-14; Mat 4:8, Mat 6:13; Rom 9:2...
When he : Isa 39:2; Eze 28:5; Dan 4:30
the riches : Psa 76:1-4, Psa 145:5, Psa 145:12, Psa 145:13; Dan 2:37-44, Dan 7:9-14; Mat 4:8, Mat 6:13; Rom 9:23; Eph 1:18; Col 1:27; Rev 4:11
excellent : 1Ch 29:11, 1Ch 29:12, 1Ch 29:25; Job 40:10; Psa 21:5, Psa 45:3, Psa 93:1; Dan 4:36, Dan 5:18; 2Pe 1:16, 2Pe 1:17

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Poole -> Est 1:4
Poole: Est 1:4 - -- Making every day a magnificent feast, either for all his princes, or for some of them, who might come to the feast successively, as the king ordered...
Making every day a magnificent feast, either for all his princes, or for some of them, who might come to the feast successively, as the king ordered them to do. The Persian feasts are much celebrated in authors for their length and luxury.
Haydock -> Est 1:4
Haydock: Est 1:4 - -- Days, or a full half year, according to their reckoning. Nabuchodonosor, after his victory over Arphaxad, (Judith i.) feasted 120 days; Dionysius of...
Days, or a full half year, according to their reckoning. Nabuchodonosor, after his victory over Arphaxad, (Judith i.) feasted 120 days; Dionysius of Syrachuse, 90; (Aristotle) Solomon seven; (3 Kings viii. 63.) and David three; when he was recognized by all Israel, 1 Paralipomenon xii. 39. The Gaul, Ariamnes, gave a fest to all his countrymen for a whole year. (Atheneus iv. 13.) ---
The Roman emperors sometimes treated all the citizens of Rome, and Alexander did the like to 9000 of his chief officers for one day. But the magnificence of Assuerus surpasses all the rest. The Persians were famous on this account. ---
Persicos odi, puer, apparatus. (Horace i. Ode 38.) (Calmet)
Gill -> Est 1:4
Gill: Est 1:4 - -- When he showed the riches of his glorious kingdom,.... Xerxes was the fourth king of the Persian monarchy, and was "far richer than all" that went bef...
When he showed the riches of his glorious kingdom,.... Xerxes was the fourth king of the Persian monarchy, and was "far richer than all" that went before him, all their riches coming into his hands, Dan 11:2, and now that prophecy began to be fulfilled, "that by his strength, through his riches, he should stir up all against the realm of Grecia"; which he began to do in the third year of his reign, and for which these his nobles might be called together, as to have their advice, so to animate them to come in the more readily into the expedition, by showing them the riches he was possessed of; for to none of the kings of Persia does this largeness of riches better belong than to Xerxes:
and the honour of his excellent majesty; the grandeur he lived in, the pomp and splendour of his court; he was the most grand and magnificent of all the kings of the Medes and Persians i:
and this he did many days, even an hundred and fourscore days; to which seven more being added, as in the following verse, it made one hundred and eighty seven, the space of full six months; though some think the feast did not last so long, only seven days, and that the one hundred and eighty days were spent in preparing for it; but the Persian feasts were very long, large, and sumptuous. Dr. Frye k says, this custom of keeping an annual feast one hundred and eighty days still continues in Persia. Cheus l, a Chinese emperor, used frequently to make a feast which lasted one hundred and twenty days; though it cannot be well thought that the same individual persons here were feasted so long, but, when one company was sufficiently treated, they removed and made way for another; and so it continued successively such a number of days as here related, which was six months, or half a year; a year then in use consisting of three hundred and sixty days, as was common with the Jews, and other nations, and so the Persians m.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Est 1:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Est 1:1-22 - --1 Ahasuerus makes royal feasts.10 Vashti, sent for, refuses to come.13 Ahasuerus, by the counsel of Memucan, puts away Vashti, and makes the decree of...
MHCC -> Est 1:1-9
MHCC: Est 1:1-9 - --The pride of Ahasuerus's heart rising with the grandeur of his kingdom, he made an extravagant feast. This was vain glory. Better is a dinner of herbs...
Matthew Henry -> Est 1:1-9
Matthew Henry: Est 1:1-9 - -- Which of the kings of Persia this Ahasuerus was the learned are not agreed. Mordecai is said to have been one of those that were carried captive f...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Est 1:1-8
Keil-Delitzsch: Est 1:1-8 - --
The banquet. Est 1:1-3 mark a period. משׁתּה עשׂה , which belongs to ויהי , does not follow till Est 1:3, andeven then the statement c...
Constable -> Est 1:1-22; Est 1:1-9
Constable: Est 1:1-22 - --A. Vashti Deposed ch. 1
This chapter records the providential circumstances whereby Esther was able to r...
