
Text -- Esther 3:13 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Est 3:12-15
JFB: Est 3:12-15 - -- The government secretaries were employed in making out the proclamation authorizing a universal massacre of the Jews on one day. It was translated int...
The government secretaries were employed in making out the proclamation authorizing a universal massacre of the Jews on one day. It was translated into the dialects of all the people throughout the vast empire, and swift messengers were sent to carry it into all the provinces. On the day appointed, all Jews were to be put to death and their property confiscated; doubtless, the means by which Haman hoped to pay his stipulated tribute into the royal treasury. To us it appears unaccountable how any sane monarch could have given his consent to the extirpation of a numerous class of his subjects. But such acts of frenzied barbarity have, alas! been not rarely authorized by careless and voluptuous despots, who have allowed their ears to be engrossed and their policy directed by haughty and selfish minions, who had their own passions to gratify, their own ends to serve.
Clarke: Est 3:13 - -- To destroy, so kill, and to cause to perish - To put the whole of them to death in any manner, or by every way and means
To destroy, so kill, and to cause to perish - To put the whole of them to death in any manner, or by every way and means

Clarke: Est 3:13 - -- Take the spoil of them for a prey - Thus, whoever killed a Jew had his property for his trouble! And thus the hand of every man was armed against th...
Take the spoil of them for a prey - Thus, whoever killed a Jew had his property for his trouble! And thus the hand of every man was armed against this miserable people. Both in the Greek version and in the Latin the copy of this order is introduced at length, expressing "the king’ s desire to have all his dominions in quiet and prosperity; but that he is informed that this cannot be expected, while a certain detestable people are disseminated through all his provinces, who not only are not subject to the laws, but endeavor to change them; and that nothing less than their utter extermination will secure the peace and prosperity of the empire; and therefore he orders that they be all destroyed, both male and female, young and old,"etc.
Defender -> Est 3:13
Defender: Est 3:13 - -- Exactly eleven months earlier, on the day before the Passover, this command had been given (compare Exo 12:6), thus giving the Jews adequate time to p...
Exactly eleven months earlier, on the day before the Passover, this command had been given (compare Exo 12:6), thus giving the Jews adequate time to prepare their defense. The date for Haman's intended genocide had been set by the casting of lots. God, however, determines how the lot will fall (Pro 16:33), and He ordained that the date would be almost a year away. This day was adopted later by the Jews as the date for their annual feast of Purim (meaning "lots") (Est 9:26-32)."
TSK -> Est 3:13
TSK: Est 3:13 - -- by posts : Est 8:10, Est 8:14; 2Ch 30:6; Job 9:25; Jer 51:31; Rom 3:15
both young : 1Sa 15:3, 1Sa 22:19
in one day : Est 8:12-14; Jam 2:13
the spoil :...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Est 3:13
Barnes: Est 3:13 - -- Present, the Jews keep three days - the 13th, the 14th, and the 15th of Adar - as connected with "the Feast of Purim;"but they make the 13th a fast,...
Present, the Jews keep three days - the 13th, the 14th, and the 15th of Adar - as connected with "the Feast of Purim;"but they make the 13th a fast, commemorative of the fast of Esther Est 4:16, and keep the feast itself on the 14th and 15th of Adar.
Poole -> Est 3:13
Poole: Est 3:13 - -- Which was to oblige them to the greater severity and readiness, to execute this edict for their own advantage.
Which was to oblige them to the greater severity and readiness, to execute this edict for their own advantage.
Haydock -> Est 3:13
Haydock: Est 3:13 - -- Messengers. Literally, "runners." (Haydock) ---
Posts were first established in Persia, and were the admiration of other nations, though nothing c...
Messengers. Literally, "runners." (Haydock) ---
Posts were first established in Persia, and were the admiration of other nations, though nothing compared with ours, as they were not regular, nor for the people. They called these messengers Astandæ, or Angari, Matthew v. 41. Darius Condomanus was one of these postilions, before he came to the crown. (Calmet) ---
At first the kings had people stationed on eminences, at a convenient distance, to make themselves heard, when they had to communicate some public news. (Diod. xix. p. 680.) ---
Cyrus afterwards appointed horsemen, to succeed each other. (Xenophon, Cyrop. viii.) ---
Cæsar made some regulations on this head, which were perfected by Augustus and Adrian; but being neglected, Charlemagne strove to restore them: yet it is thought that the posts were not established, in France, till the reign of Louis XI. (Calmet)
Gill -> Est 3:13
Gill: Est 3:13 - -- And the letters were sent by post into all the king's provinces,.... Or by the runners x; by which it seems as if these letters were carried by runnin...
And the letters were sent by post into all the king's provinces,.... Or by the runners x; by which it seems as if these letters were carried by running footmen, men swift of foot; or rather they were running horses, on which men rode post with letters, and which the Persians called Angari; a scheme invented by Cyrus, for the quick dispatch of letters from place to place, by fixing horses and men to ride them at a proper distance, to receive letters one from another, and who rode night and day y, as our mail men do now; and nothing could be swifter, or done with greater speed; neither snow, nor rain, nor heat, nor night, could stop their course, we are told z: the purport of these letters was:
to destroy, to kill, and to cause to perish, all Jews, both young and old, little children and women, in one day, even upon the thirteenth day of the twelfth month, which is the month Adar; see Est 3:7. The orders were to destroy, by any means whatsoever, all the Jews, of every age and sex, all in one day, in all the provinces which are here named, that they might be cut off with one blow: and to take the spoil of them for a prey; to be their own booty; which was proposed to engage them in this barbarous work, to encourage them in it to use the greater severity and dispatch.

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