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Text -- Esther 2:1-8 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Est 2:3 - -- Of all the women, both virgins and concubines: only the virgins he himself took care of, as requiring more care and caution, and the concubines be com...
Of all the women, both virgins and concubines: only the virgins he himself took care of, as requiring more care and caution, and the concubines be committed to Shaashgaz, Est 2:14, his deputy.
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Wesley: Est 2:3 - -- That is, to cleanse them from all impurities, to perfume, and adorn, and every way prepare them for the king: for the legal purification of the Jews h...
That is, to cleanse them from all impurities, to perfume, and adorn, and every way prepare them for the king: for the legal purification of the Jews he never regarded.
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Wesley: Est 2:7 - -- Hadassah was her Hebrew name before her marriage; and she was called Esther by the king after it.
Hadassah was her Hebrew name before her marriage; and she was called Esther by the king after it.
JFB: Est 2:1-3 - -- On recovering from the violent excitement of his revelry and rage, the king was pierced with poignant regret for the unmerited treatment he had given ...
On recovering from the violent excitement of his revelry and rage, the king was pierced with poignant regret for the unmerited treatment he had given to his beautiful and dignified queen. But, according to the law, which made the word of a Persian king irrevocable, she could not be restored. His counsellors, for their own sake, were solicitous to remove his disquietude, and hastened to recommend the adoption of all suitable means for gratifying their royal master with another consort of equal or superior attractions to those of his divorced queen. In the despotic countries of the East the custom obtains that when an order is sent to a family for a young damsel to repair to the royal palace, the parents, however unwilling, dare not refuse the honor for their daughter; and although they know that when she is once in the royal harem, they will never see her again, they are obliged to yield a silent and passive compliance. On the occasion referred to, a general search was commanded to be made for the greatest beauties throughout the empire, in the hope that, from their ranks, the disconsolate monarch might select one for the honor of succeeding to the royal honors of Vashti. The damsels, on arrival at the palace, were placed under the custody of "Hege, the king's chamberlain, keeper of the women," that is, the chief eunuch, usually a repulsive old man, on whom the court ladies are very dependent, and whose favor they are always desirous to secure.
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JFB: Est 2:5 - -- Mordecai held some office about the court. But his "sitting at the king's gate" (Est 2:21) does not necessarily imply that he was in the humble condit...
Mordecai held some office about the court. But his "sitting at the king's gate" (Est 2:21) does not necessarily imply that he was in the humble condition of a porter; for, according to an institute of Cyrus, all state officers were required to wait in the outer courts till they were summoned into the presence chamber. He might, therefore, have been a person of some official dignity. This man had an orphan cousin, born during the exile, under his care, who being distinguished by great personal beauty, was one of the young damsels taken into the royal harem on this occasion. She had the good fortune at once to gain the good will of the chief eunuch [Est 2:9]. Her sweet and amiable appearance made her a favorite with all who looked upon her (Est 2:15, last clause). Her Hebrew name (Est 2:7) was Hadassah, that is, "myrtle," which, on her introduction into the royal harem, was changed to Esther, that is, the star Venus, indicating beauty and good fortune [GESENIUS].
Clarke: Est 2:2 - -- Let there be fair young virgins sought for the king - This was the usual way in which the harem or seraglio was furnished: the finest women in the l...
Let there be fair young virgins sought for the king - This was the usual way in which the harem or seraglio was furnished: the finest women in the land, whether of high or low birth, were sought out, and brought to the harem. They all became the king’ s concubines: but one was raised, as chief wife or sultana, to the throne; and her issue was specially entitled to inherit.
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Clarke: Est 2:3 - -- Hege the king’ s chamberlain - הגא סריס המלך Hege seris hammelech , "Hege, the king’ s eunuch;"so the Septuagint, Vulgate, Tar...
Hege the king’ s chamberlain -
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Clarke: Est 2:3 - -- Let their things for purification be given them - תמרקיהן tamrukeyhen , their cosmetics. What these were we are told in Est 2:12; oil of myr...
Let their things for purification be given them -
Instead of the oil or myrrh, the Targum says it was the oil of unripe olives which caused the hair to fall off, and rendered the skin delicate.
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Clarke: Est 2:5 - -- Whose name was Mordecai - The Targum says, "He was the son of Jair, the son of Shimea, the son of Gera, the son of Kish."And "this was the same Shim...
Whose name was Mordecai - The Targum says, "He was the son of Jair, the son of Shimea, the son of Gera, the son of Kish."And "this was the same Shimea that cursed David; and whom David forbade Joab to slay because he saw, in the spirit of prophecy, that he was to be the predecessor of Esther and Mordecai; but when he became old, and incapable of having children, David ordered Solomon to put him to death.
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Clarke: Est 2:7 - -- He brought up Hadassah - הדשה hadassah signifies a myrtle in Chaldee: this was probably her first or Babylonish name. When she came to the Pe...
He brought up Hadassah -
Defender: Est 2:1 - -- The succeeding account was probably at least two years "after these things," for the king and all his officers embarked on their projected invasion of...
The succeeding account was probably at least two years "after these things," for the king and all his officers embarked on their projected invasion of Greece immediately following the great assemblage. As history shows, however, the great fleet of King Xerxes (Ahasuerus) suffered bitter defeats at the naval battles of Thermophylae and Salamis, and returned home sadder and wiser. According to the Greek historian Herodotus, the king went back to comfort himself with his harem. At this time, he "remembered Vashti" and proceeded with his comforting mission of examining many "young virgins" (Est 2:2) from all parts of his kingdom to find a new queen."
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Defender: Est 2:5 - -- Mordecai, Esther's uncle, or possibly older cousin, who raised her as his own daughter after her parents died, may have been a descendant of the fathe...
Mordecai, Esther's uncle, or possibly older cousin, who raised her as his own daughter after her parents died, may have been a descendant of the father of Saul, Israel's first king (compare 1Sa 9:1). However, if so, the genealogy in this verse is quite abbreviated. Alternatively, the Kish and Shimei mentioned in this verse may have been different men than those who lived in David's day, though of the same tribe."
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TSK: Est 2:3 - -- in all the provinces : Est 1:1, Est 1:2
that they may gather : This was the usual way in which the harem, or seraglio , was furnished; the finest wo...
in all the provinces : Est 1:1, Est 1:2
that they may gather : This was the usual way in which the harem, or
the custody : Heb. the hand
Hege : Est 2:8, Hegai
the king’ s chamberlain :
their things : Est 2:12-14; Isa 3:18-23
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TSK: Est 2:4 - -- let the maiden : Mat 20:16, Mat 22:14
the thing : Est 1:21, Est 3:9, Est 3:10; 2Sa 13:4-6, 2Sa 16:21-23, 2Sa 17:4; Mat 14:6
let the maiden : Mat 20:16, Mat 22:14
the thing : Est 1:21, Est 3:9, Est 3:10; 2Sa 13:4-6, 2Sa 16:21-23, 2Sa 17:4; Mat 14:6
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TSK: Est 2:5 - -- Shushan : Est 2:3, Est 1:2, Est 5:1
a certain Jew : Est 3:2-6, Est 10:3
the son of Shimei : 1Sa 9:1; 2Sa 16:5
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TSK: Est 2:6 - -- Jeconiah : 2Ki 24:6, 2Ki 24:14, 2Ki 24:15; 2Ch 36:9, 2Ch 36:10, 2Ch 36:20, Jeboiachin, Jer 22:24, Jer 22:28, Coniah, Jer 24:1
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TSK: Est 2:7 - -- brought up : Heb. nourished, Eph 6:4
Hadassah : Dan 1:6, Dan 1:7
his uncle’ s : Est 2:15; Jer 32:7-12
fair and beautiful : Heb. fair of form and ...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Est 2:1 - -- These events must belong to the time between the great assembly held at Susa in Xerxes’ third year (483 B.C.), and the departure of the monarc...
These events must belong to the time between the great assembly held at Susa in Xerxes’ third year (483 B.C.), and the departure of the monarch on his expedition against Greece in his fifth year, 481 B.C.
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Barnes: Est 2:3 - -- The house of the women - i. e. the "gynaeceon,"or "haram"- always an essential part of an Oriental palace (Compare 1Ki 7:8). In the Persian pal...
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Barnes: Est 2:5 - -- Mordecai, the eunuch Est 2:7, Est 2:11, has been conjectured to be the same as Matacas, who, according to Ctesias, was the most powerful of the eunu...
Mordecai, the eunuch Est 2:7, Est 2:11, has been conjectured to be the same as Matacas, who, according to Ctesias, was the most powerful of the eunuchs during the latter portion of the reign of Xerxes. Mordecai’ s line of descent is traced from a certain Kish, carried off by Nebuchadnezzar in 598 B.C. - the year of Jeconiah’ s captivity - who was his great-grandfather. The four generations, Kish, Shimei, Jair, Mordecai, correspond to the known generations in other cases, for example:
High priests | kings of Persia | Royal stock of Judah |
Seraiah | Cambyses | Jeconiah |
Jozadak | Cyrus | Salathiel |
Jeshua | Darius | Zerubbabel |
Joiakim | Xerxes | Hananiah |
The age of Mordecai at the accession of Xerxes may probably have been about 30 or 40; that of Esther, his first cousin, about 20.
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Barnes: Est 2:7 - -- Hadassah, הדסה hădassâh from הדס hădas ("myrtle") would seem to have been the Hebrew, and Esther the Persian, name of the...
Hadassah,
Poole: Est 2:1 - -- He remembered Vashti with grief and shame that in his wine and rage he had so severely punished, and so irrevocably rejected, so beautiful and desir...
He remembered Vashti with grief and shame that in his wine and rage he had so severely punished, and so irrevocably rejected, so beautiful and desirable a person, and that for so small a provocation, to which she was easily led by the modesty of her sex, and by the laws and customs of Persia.
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Poole: Est 2:2 - -- The king’ s servants for their own interests, were obliged to quiet the king’ s mind, and procure him another amiable consort.
The king’ s servants for their own interests, were obliged to quiet the king’ s mind, and procure him another amiable consort.
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Poole: Est 2:3 - -- Keeper of the women either,
1. Of the virgins, who are oft called women , as here, Est 2:11,12 , and elsewhere. So it is a synecdoche. Or,
2. Of a...
Keeper of the women either,
1. Of the virgins, who are oft called women , as here, Est 2:11,12 , and elsewhere. So it is a synecdoche. Or,
2. Of all the women, both virgins and concubines; only the virgins he himself took care of, as requiring more care and caution, and the concubines he committed to Shaashgaz, Est 2:14 , his deputy.
For purification i.e. to cleanse them from all impurities and indecencies, to anoint, and perfume, and adorn, and every way prepare them for the king’ s presence and service; for the legal purifications of the Jews he never regarded.
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Poole: Est 2:6 - -- Who had been carried away: this may be referred either,
1. To Kish, Mordecai’ s grandfather last mentioned; or,
2. To Mordecai, who was then c...
Who had been carried away: this may be referred either,
1. To Kish, Mordecai’ s grandfather last mentioned; or,
2. To Mordecai, who was then carried away, either,
1. In the loins of his parents, in which sense Levi is said to be tithed in Abraham , Heb 7 ; and as those persons named Ezr 2 are said to have been carried away by Nebuchadnezzar, Ezr 2:1 , which is not true of the most of them in their own persons, but only as in their fathers’ loins. Or,
2. In his own person; and then indeed he was a man of more than ordinary years. But of that See Poole "Est 1:1" .
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Poole: Est 2:7 - -- That is, Esther; Hadassah was her Hebrew name before her marriage, and she was called Esther by the king after it.
That is, Esther; Hadassah was her Hebrew name before her marriage, and she was called Esther by the king after it.
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Poole: Est 2:8 - -- Esther was brought or taken , and that by force, as that word oft signifies. So great was the power and tyranny of the Persian kings, that they coul...
Esther was brought or taken , and that by force, as that word oft signifies. So great was the power and tyranny of the Persian kings, that they could and did take what persons they liked to their own use.
Haydock: Est 2:1 - -- Bagathan, or Bagatha and Thara, chap. xii. 1. One of the chief counsellors was called Bagatha. (Haydock) ---
But these two were porters, (Calmet) ...
Bagathan, or Bagatha and Thara, chap. xii. 1. One of the chief counsellors was called Bagatha. (Haydock) ---
But these two were porters, (Calmet) or guards, of the king, (Septuagint; Grotius) or of the treasury. (Vatable) ---
Some Greek copies and the Chaldean insinuate that they were displeased at the advancement of Mardochai. The latter supposes that they meant also to poison Esther. (Calmet) ---
It appears that they wished to make Aman king, (Menochius) and the detection was always resented by him, chap. xii. 6. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Est 2:1 - -- Suffered. He began to repent. The Persians used to deliberate when warm with wine: but their decrees were not ratified till they had examined them ...
Suffered. He began to repent. The Persians used to deliberate when warm with wine: but their decrees were not ratified till they had examined them again the next day. (Herodotus i. 133.) ---
This was not the case here; the king divorced his wife without any delay. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint intimate that he presently lost thoughts of her. "He no longer remembered Vasthi with any affection, reflecting what she had said, and how he had condemned her." (Haydock) ---
But the Alexandrian copy agrees with the Hebrew. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Est 2:2 - -- Beautiful. Thus Abisag was brought to David, 3 Kings i. 2. The Turkish emperors select women from all their dominion, without distinction of noble ...
Beautiful. Thus Abisag was brought to David, 3 Kings i. 2. The Turkish emperors select women from all their dominion, without distinction of noble or ignoble; as all are their slaves.
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Haydock: Est 2:3 - -- House. Distinct from the palace, ver. 14. ---
Women's. Hebrew, "things for rubbing, (Calmet) or purification;" (Haydock) such as perfumes, but ...
House. Distinct from the palace, ver. 14. ---
Women's. Hebrew, "things for rubbing, (Calmet) or purification;" (Haydock) such as perfumes, but not clothes.
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Haydock: Est 2:5 - -- Jew. He was of the tribe of Benjamin. But all went by this name, after the captivity. Mardochai had probably returned from Jerusalem, seeing thing...
Jew. He was of the tribe of Benjamin. But all went by this name, after the captivity. Mardochai had probably returned from Jerusalem, seeing things were unfinished there, 1 Esdras ii. 2. (Calmet) ---
Semei, who cursed David. (Chaldean) ---
Cis. The head of the royal family of Saul; whence authors have concluded that he and Esther were of royal blood, (Calmet) and descendants of Miphiboseth. (Tirinus)
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Haydock: Est 2:6 - -- Who. This may refer to Cis, the great-grandfather of Mardochai, if we postpone this history till the latter end of the Persian monarchy. (Du Hamel)...
Who. This may refer to Cis, the great-grandfather of Mardochai, if we postpone this history till the latter end of the Persian monarchy. (Du Hamel) ---
But it more naturally applies to Mardochai himself, who (chap. xi. 4.; Tirinus) was led captive 80 years before, being then perhaps 10 years old, so that he would now be only 90; an age when many are fit for great things. (Calmet) (Cicero, de Senect.) ---
He might even have been an infant when taken, and of course would not be much above 80 when he came into such favour. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Est 2:7 - -- Brothers. Josephus, ([Antiquities?] xi. 6.) the old Latin version of the Syriac, Abenezra, &c., suppose that Mardochai was uncle to Esther. But the...
Brothers. Josephus, ([Antiquities?] xi. 6.) the old Latin version of the Syriac, Abenezra, &c., suppose that Mardochai was uncle to Esther. But the Hebrew, Syriac, Greek, and Chaldean assert that he was only her cousin. Septuagint, "daughter of Aminadab, (or rather Abihail, ver. 15.) his father's brother, and her name was Esther; and after her parents were dead, he educated her for a wife;" Greek: eis gunaika, as some Rabbins also maintain, believing she was an heiress. Yet other Greek copies, Hebrew, &c., read, "he educated her as a daughter, Greek: thugatera: for the damsel was very beautiful." He had probably adopted her. (Calmet) ---
Edissa. Hebrew hadassa, (Haydock) or hadassah, signified "of myrtle." (Menochius) ---
Esther, "a sheep." (Calmet)
Gill: Est 2:1 - -- After these things, when the wrath of King Ahasuerus was appeased,.... Which went off with his wine, and so was quickly after, a few days at most, unl...
After these things, when the wrath of King Ahasuerus was appeased,.... Which went off with his wine, and so was quickly after, a few days at most, unless this can be understood as after the expedition of Xerxes into Greece, from whence he returned to Shushan, in the seventh year of his reign; and if he is the Ahasuerus here meant, he married Esther that year, Est 2:16 and it seems certain, that after his expedition he gave himself up to his amours, and in his way to Sardis he fell in love with his brother's wife, and then with his daughter b:
he remembered Vashti; her beauty, and was grieved, as Jarchi observes, that she was removed from him; and so Josephus says c, that he passionately loved her, and could not bear parting with her, and therefore was grieved that he had brought himself into such difficulties: the Targumists carry it further, and say that he was wroth with those that advised him to it, and ordered them to be put to death, and that they were:
and what she had done; that it was a trivial thing, and not deserving of such a sentence as he had passed upon her; that it was not done from contempt of him, but from modesty, and a strict regard to the laws of the Persians:
and what was decreed against her; that she should come no more before him, but be divorced from him; the thought of which gave him great pain and uneasiness.
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Gill: Est 2:2 - -- Then said the king's servants that ministered unto him,.... Fearing that, if Vashti should be restored, vengeance would be taken on them; or however t...
Then said the king's servants that ministered unto him,.... Fearing that, if Vashti should be restored, vengeance would be taken on them; or however to remove the grief and melancholy of the king, they gave the following advice:
let there be fair young virgins sought for the king; that he might enjoy them, and choose one of them, the most agreeable to him, and put her in the room of Vashti.
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Gill: Est 2:3 - -- And let the king appoint officers in all the provinces of his kingdom,.... Who best knew where beautiful virgins might be found in their respective pr...
And let the king appoint officers in all the provinces of his kingdom,.... Who best knew where beautiful virgins might be found in their respective provinces, in which they dwelt:
that they may gather together all the fair young virgins unto Shushan the palace; the metropolis of the kingdom, where was the royal palace:
to the house of the women, unto the custody of Hege the king's chamberlain, the keeper of the women; in which house it seems were two apartments, one for the virgins before they were introduced to the king, the other for them when they were become his concubines, which had a keeper also; but this Hege seems to have been over the whole house, Est 2:14. It was not only usual with the eastern people, as with the Turks now, for great personages to have keepers of their wives and concubines, but with the Romans also d:
and let their things for purification be given them; such as oil of myrrh, spices, &c. to remove all impurity and ill scent from them, and make them look smooth and beautiful.
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Gill: Est 2:4 - -- And let the maiden which pleaseth the king be queen instead of Vashti,.... Have the royal estate, that was taken from Vashti, given to her, the crown ...
And let the maiden which pleaseth the king be queen instead of Vashti,.... Have the royal estate, that was taken from Vashti, given to her, the crown royal set on her head, &c.
and the thing pleased the king, and he did so; appointed officers in all his provinces to seek out the most beautiful virgins, and bring them to his palace; so with the Chinese now, the king never marries with any of his kindred, though ever so remote; but there is sought throughout his kingdom a damsel of twelve or fourteen years, of perfect beauty, good natural parts, and well inclined to virtue; whence, for the most part, the queen is the daughter of some artisan; and in their history e, mention is made of one that was the daughter of a mason.
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Gill: Est 2:5 - -- Now in Shushan the palace was a certain Jew,.... Not one of the tribe of Judah, for he was afterwards called a Benjaminite; but was so called, because...
Now in Shushan the palace was a certain Jew,.... Not one of the tribe of Judah, for he was afterwards called a Benjaminite; but was so called, because he was of the kingdom of Judah, which consisted of both tribes. Jarchi says, all that were carried captive with the kings of Judah were called Jews among the nations, though of another tribe:
whose name was Mordecai, the son of Jair, the son of Shimei, the son of Kish, a Benjamite; who was among those that came with Zerubbabel from Babylon to Jerusalem, and returned to Persia again, Ezr 2:2, though some think this was another Mordecai; See Gill on Ezr 2:2, who descended not from Kish, the father of Saul, but a later and more obscure person.
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Gill: Est 2:6 - -- Who had been carried away from Jerusalem,.... Which, according to some f, is to be connected, not with Mordecai, but with Kish, his great-grandfather;...
Who had been carried away from Jerusalem,.... Which, according to some f, is to be connected, not with Mordecai, but with Kish, his great-grandfather; and indeed otherwise Mordecai must be now a very old man, and Esther his first cousin, they being brothers' children, must be at an age, one would think, not to be reckoned among young virgins, and not be so amiable as she is represented; and indeed, according to the former Targum, she was seventy five years of age, which is not credible; and yet this, and more she must be, to be equal to Mordecai, if he was carried captive, as follows:
with the captivity which had been carried away with Jeconiah king of Judah, whom Nebuchadnezzar the king of Babylon had carried away; which was eleven years before the destruction of Jerusalem, for so long Zedekiah reigned after that captivity of Jeconiah: hence Sir John Marsham g makes this affair of Esther to be within the time of the Babylonish captivity, and places Ahasuerus her husband between Darius the Mede and Cyrus, contrary to history and Scripture, see Dan 6:28.
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Gill: Est 2:7 - -- And he brought up Hadassah (that is Esther) his uncle's daughter,.... Her Hebrew name was Hadassah, which signifies a myrtle, to which the Israelites,...
And he brought up Hadassah (that is Esther) his uncle's daughter,.... Her Hebrew name was Hadassah, which signifies a myrtle, to which the Israelites, and good men among them, are sometimes compared, Zec 1:8. Her Persian name was Esther, which some derive from "satar", to hide, because hidden in the house of Mordecai, so the former Targum, and by his advice concealed her kindred: or rather she was so called by Ahasuerus, when married to him, this word signifying in the Persian language a "star" h and so the latter Targum says she was called by the name of the star of Venus, which in Greek is
for she had neither father nor mother; according to the former Targum, her father died and left her mother with child of her, and her mother died as soon as she was delivered of her:
and the maid was fair and beautiful; which was both the reason why she was taken and brought into the king's house, and why Mordecai took so much care of her:
whom Mordecai, when her father and mother were dead, took for his own daughter; loved her, and brought her up as if she had been his daughter, and called her so, as the Targum. The Rabbins, as Jarchi and Aben Ezra observe, say, he took her in order to make her his wife; and so the Septuagint render it; though perhaps no more may be intended by that version than that he brought her up to woman's estate. Josephus n calls him her uncle; and so the Vulgate Latin version, his brother's daughter; but both are mistaken.
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Gill: Est 2:8 - -- So it came to pass, when the king's commandment and decree was heard,.... In the several provinces of his kingdom:
and when many maidens were gathe...
So it came to pass, when the king's commandment and decree was heard,.... In the several provinces of his kingdom:
and when many maidens were gathered unto Shushan the palace, to the custody of Hegai; Josephus o says, there were gathered to the number of four hundred:
that Esther was brought also unto the king's house, to the custody of Hegai, the keeper of the women: by force, as Aben Ezra and the former Targum, and so the word is sometimes used.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: Est 2:4 Heb “the matter was good in the eyes of the king.” Cf. TEV “The king thought this was good advice.”
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NET Notes: Est 2:5 Mordecai is a pagan name that reflects the name of the Babylonian deity Marduk. Probably many Jews of the period had two names, one for secular use an...
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NET Notes: Est 2:6 Jeconiah is an alternative name for Jehoiachin. A number of modern English versions use the latter name to avoid confusion (e.g., NIV, NCV, TEV, NLT).
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NET Notes: Est 2:7 Heb “had taken her to him.” The Hebrew verb לָקַח (laqakh, “to take”) describes Mordecai adoptin...
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Geneva Bible: Est 2:1 After these things, when the wrath of king Ahasuerus was appeased, he ( a ) remembered Vashti, and what she had done, and what was decreed ( b ) again...
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Geneva Bible: Est 2:3 And let the king appoint officers in all the provinces of his kingdom, that they may gather together all the fair young virgins unto Shushan the palac...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Est 2:1-23
TSK Synopsis: Est 2:1-23 - --1 Out of the choice of virgins a queen is to be chosen.5 Mordecai the nursing father of Esther.8 Esther preferred before the rest.12 The manner of pur...
MHCC -> Est 2:1-20
MHCC: Est 2:1-20 - --We see to what absurd practices those came, who were destitute of Divine revelation, and what need there was of the gospel of Christ, to purify men fr...
Matthew Henry -> Est 2:1-20
Matthew Henry: Est 2:1-20 - -- How God put down one that was high and mighty from her seat we read in the chapter before, and are now to be told how he exalted one of low degree, ...
Keil-Delitzsch: Est 2:1-4 - --
When, after these things, the wrath of King Ahashverosh was laid ( שׁך , from שׁכך , to be sunk, spoken of wrath to be laid), he remembered V...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Est 2:5-7 - --
Before relating how this matter was carried into execution, the historianintroduces us to the two persons who play the chief parts in the followingn...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Est 2:8-9 - --
When, then, the king's commandment and decree was heard, i.e.,proclaimed throughout the kingdom, and many maidens gathered togetherin Susa, Esther a...
Constable: Est 2:1-20 - --B. Esther Elevated 2:1-20
The fact that God placed Esther in a position so she could deliver her people ...
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Constable: Est 2:1-4 - --1. The plan to replace Vashti 2:1-4
Ahasuerus had second thoughts about having deposed Vashti (v...
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Constable: Est 2:5-11 - --2. Esther's selection 2:5-11
Evidently it was Kish, Mordecai's great-grandfather, who went into ...
Guzik -> Est 2:1-23
Guzik: Est 2:1-23 - --Esther 2 - Esther Is Chosen Queen
A. The gathering together of a harem for King Ahasuerus.
1. (1-4) A search is made for a replacement for Queen Vas...
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expand allCommentary -- Other
Critics Ask: Est 2:1 ESTHER 2:1-18 —How could Esther participate in a pagan beauty contest? PROBLEM: It is evident that Esther was selected by God as His instrument...
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Critics Ask: Est 2:2 ESTHER 2:1-18 —How could Esther participate in a pagan beauty contest? PROBLEM: It is evident that Esther was selected by God as His instrument...
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Critics Ask: Est 2:3 ESTHER 2:1-18 —How could Esther participate in a pagan beauty contest? PROBLEM: It is evident that Esther was selected by God as His instrument...
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Critics Ask: Est 2:4 ESTHER 2:1-18 —How could Esther participate in a pagan beauty contest? PROBLEM: It is evident that Esther was selected by God as His instrument...
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Critics Ask: Est 2:5 ESTHER 2:1-18 —How could Esther participate in a pagan beauty contest? PROBLEM: It is evident that Esther was selected by God as His instrument...
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Critics Ask: Est 2:6 ESTHER 2:1-18 —How could Esther participate in a pagan beauty contest? PROBLEM: It is evident that Esther was selected by God as His instrument...
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Critics Ask: Est 2:7 ESTHER 2:1-18 —How could Esther participate in a pagan beauty contest? PROBLEM: It is evident that Esther was selected by God as His instrument...
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