
Text -- Esther 9:1-30 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Est 9:2 - -- Their enemies, though they did take up arms against them, yet were easily conquered and destroyed by them.
Their enemies, though they did take up arms against them, yet were easily conquered and destroyed by them.

Wesley: Est 9:6 - -- Whom they knew to be such as would watch all opportunities to destroy them; which also they might possibly now attempt to do.
Whom they knew to be such as would watch all opportunities to destroy them; which also they might possibly now attempt to do.

Wesley: Est 9:10 - -- _Because they would leave it to their children, that it might appear what they did was not done out of malice, or covetousness, but out of mere necess...
_Because they would leave it to their children, that it might appear what they did was not done out of malice, or covetousness, but out of mere necessity, and by that great law of self - preservation.

Wesley: Est 9:12 - -- In which doubtless many more were slain. So that I have fully granted thy petition. And yet, if thou hast any thing farther to ask, I am ready to gran...
In which doubtless many more were slain. So that I have fully granted thy petition. And yet, if thou hast any thing farther to ask, I am ready to grant it.

Wesley: Est 9:13 - -- _To kill their implacable enemies. For it is not improbable that the greatest and worst of them had hidden themselves for that day; after which, the c...
_To kill their implacable enemies. For it is not improbable that the greatest and worst of them had hidden themselves for that day; after which, the commission granted to the Jews being expired, they confidently returned to their homes.

Wesley: Est 9:13 - -- They were slain before; now let their bodies be hanged on their father's gallows, for their greater infamy, and the terror of all others who shall pre...
They were slain before; now let their bodies be hanged on their father's gallows, for their greater infamy, and the terror of all others who shall presume to abuse the king in like manner, or to persuade him to execute such cruelties upon his subjects.

Wesley: Est 9:26 - -- This Persian word signifies a lot, because Haman had by lot determined this time to be the time of the Jews destruction.
This Persian word signifies a lot, because Haman had by lot determined this time to be the time of the Jews destruction.

Wesley: Est 9:27 - -- Gentile Proselytes; who were obliged to submit to other of the Jewish laws, and therefore to this also; the rather because they enjoyed the benefit of...
Gentile Proselytes; who were obliged to submit to other of the Jewish laws, and therefore to this also; the rather because they enjoyed the benefit of this day's deliverance; without which the Jewish nation and religion had been in a great measure, if not wholly, extinct.

Wesley: Est 9:27 - -- According to that writing which was drawn up by Mordecai, and afterwards confirmed by the consent of the Jews.
According to that writing which was drawn up by Mordecai, and afterwards confirmed by the consent of the Jews.

Wesley: Est 9:29 - -- The former letter, Est 9:20, did only recommend but this enjoins the observation of this solemnity: because this was not only Mordecai's act, but the ...
The former letter, Est 9:20, did only recommend but this enjoins the observation of this solemnity: because this was not only Mordecai's act, but the act of all the Jews, binding themselves and posterity.

With peace, friendship and kindness to his brethren, and truth, sincerity.
JFB: Est 9:1 - -- This was the day which Haman's superstitious advisers had led him to select as the most fortunate for the execution of his exterminating scheme agains...
This was the day which Haman's superstitious advisers had led him to select as the most fortunate for the execution of his exterminating scheme against the Jews [Est 3:7].

JFB: Est 9:2 - -- The tables were now turned in their favor; and though their enemies made their long meditated attack, the Jews were not only at liberty to act on the ...
The tables were now turned in their favor; and though their enemies made their long meditated attack, the Jews were not only at liberty to act on the defensive, but through the powerful influence enlisted on their side at court together with the blessing of God, they were everywhere victorious.

JFB: Est 9:2 - -- This impression arose not alone from the consciousness of the all-powerful vizier being their countryman, but from the hand of God appearing so visibl...
This impression arose not alone from the consciousness of the all-powerful vizier being their countryman, but from the hand of God appearing so visibly interposed to effect their strange and unexpected deliverance.|| 12840||1||12||0||@Thus the Jews smote all their enemies==--The effect of the two antagonistic decrees was, in the meantime, to raise a fierce and bloody war between the Jews and their enemies throughout the Persian empire; but through the dread of Esther and Mordecai, the provincial governors universally favored their cause, so that their enemies fell in great numbers.

JFB: Est 9:13 - -- Their enemies adroitly concealing themselves for the first day might have returned on the next, when they imagined that the privilege of the Jews was ...
Their enemies adroitly concealing themselves for the first day might have returned on the next, when they imagined that the privilege of the Jews was expired; so that that people would have been surprised and slain. The extension of the decree to another day at the queen's special desire has exposed her to the charge of being actuated by a cruel and vindictive disposition. But her conduct in making this request is capable of full vindication, on the ground (1) that Haman's sons having taken a prominent part in avenging their father's fall, and having been previously slain in the melee, the order for the exposure of their dead bodies on the gallows was only intended to brand them with public infamy for their malice and hatred to the Jews; and (2) the anti-Jewish party having, in all probability, been instigated through the arts or influence of Haman to acts of spiteful and wanton oppression, the existing state of feeling among the natives required some vigorous and decisive measure to prevent the outbreak of future aggressions. The very circumstances of their slaying 800 eight hundred Jews in the immediate vicinity of the court (v. 6, 15) is a proof of the daring energy and deep-rooted malice by which multidues were actuated against the Jews. To order an extension, therefore, of the permissive edict to the Jews to defend themselves, was perhaps no more than affording an opportunity for their enemies to be publicly known. Though it led to so awful a slaughter of seventy-five thousand of their enemies, there is reason to believe that these were chiefly Amalekites, in the fall of whom on this occasion, the prophecies (Exo 17:14, 16; Deu 25:19) against that doomed race were accomplished.

JFB: Est 9:19 - -- The princes and people of the East not only invite their friends to feasts, but it is their custom to send a portion of the banquet to those who canno...
The princes and people of the East not only invite their friends to feasts, but it is their custom to send a portion of the banquet to those who cannot well come to it, especially their relations, and those who are detained at home in a state of sorrow or distress.

JFB: Est 9:20 - -- Commentators are not agreed what is particularly meant by "these things"; whether the letters following, or an account of these marvellous events to b...
Commentators are not agreed what is particularly meant by "these things"; whether the letters following, or an account of these marvellous events to be preserved in the families of the Jewish people, and transmitted from one generation to another.

JFB: Est 9:26 - -- "Pur," in the Persian language, signifies "lot"; and the feast of Purim, or lots, has a reference to the time having been pitched upon by Haman throug...
"Pur," in the Persian language, signifies "lot"; and the feast of Purim, or lots, has a reference to the time having been pitched upon by Haman through the decision of the lot. In consequence of the signal national deliverance which divine providence gave them from the infamous machinations of Haman, Mordecai ordered the Jews to commemorate that event by an anniversary festival, which was to last for two days, in accordance with the two days' war of defense they had to maintain. There was a slight difference in the time of this festival; for the Jews in the provinces, having defended themselves against their enemies on the thirteenth, devoted the fourteenth to festivity; whereas their brethren in Shushan, having extended that work over two days, did not observe their thanksgiving feast till the fifteenth. But this was remedied by authority, which fixed the fourteenth and fifteenth of Adar. It became a season of sunny memories to the universal body of the Jews; and, by the letters of Mordecai, dispersed through all parts of the Persian empire, it was established as an annual feast, the celebration of which is kept up still. On both days of the feast, the modern Jews read over the Megillah or Book of Esther in their synagogues. The copy read must not be printed, but written on vellum in the form of a roll; and the names of the ten sons of Haman are written on it a peculiar manner, being ranged, they say, like so many bodies on a gibbet. The reader must pronounce all these names in one breath. Whenever Haman's name is pronounced, they make a terrible noise in the synagogue. Some drum with their feet on the floor, and the boys have mallets with which they knock and make a noise. They prepare themselves for their carnival by a previous fast, which should continue three days, in imitation of Esther's; but they have mostly reduced it to one day [JENNINGS, Jewish Antiquities].
Clarke: Est 9:1 - -- Now in the twelfth month - What a number of providences, and none of them apparently of an extraordinary nature, concurred to preserve a people so s...
Now in the twelfth month - What a number of providences, and none of them apparently of an extraordinary nature, concurred to preserve a people so signally, and to all human appearance so inevitably, doomed to destruction! None are ever too low for God to lift up, or too high for God to cast down. Must not these heathens have observed that the uncontrollable hand of an Almighty Being had worked in behalf of the Jews? And must not this have had a powerful tendency to discredit the idolatry of the country?

Clarke: Est 9:3 - -- And all the rulers of the provinces - Mordecai being raised to the highest confidence of the king, and to have authority over the whole realm, these...
And all the rulers of the provinces - Mordecai being raised to the highest confidence of the king, and to have authority over the whole realm, these officers assisted the Jews, no doubt, with the troops under their command, to overthrow those who availed themselves of the former decree to molest the Jews. For it does not appear that the Jews slew any person who did not rise up to destroy them. See Est 9:5.

Clarke: Est 9:6 - -- And in Shushan - It is strange that in this city, where the king’ s mind must have been so well known, there should be found five hundred perso...
And in Shushan - It is strange that in this city, where the king’ s mind must have been so well known, there should be found five hundred persons to rise up in hostility against those whom they knew the king befriended!

Clarke: Est 9:10 - -- The ten sons of Haman - Their names are given above. And it is remarked here, and in Est 9:16, where the account is given of the number slain in the...
The ten sons of Haman - Their names are given above. And it is remarked here, and in Est 9:16, where the account is given of the number slain in the provinces, that the Jews laid no hands on the spoil. They stood for their lives, and gave full proof that they sought their own personal safety, and not the property of their enemies, though the decree in their favor gave them authority to take the property of all those who were their adversaries, Est 8:11.

Clarke: Est 9:13 - -- Let Haman’ s ten sons be hanged - They had been slain the preceding day, and now she requests that they may be exposed on posts or gibbets, as ...
Let Haman’ s ten sons be hanged - They had been slain the preceding day, and now she requests that they may be exposed on posts or gibbets, as a terror to those who sought the destruction of the Jews.

Clarke: Est 9:15 - -- And slew three hundred men - Esther had probably been informed by Mordecai that there were still many enemies of the Jews who sought their destructi...
And slew three hundred men - Esther had probably been informed by Mordecai that there were still many enemies of the Jews who sought their destruction, who had escaped the preceding day; and, therefore, begs that this second day be added to the former permission. This being accordingly granted, they found three hundred more, in all eight hundred. And thus Susa was purged of all their enemies.

Clarke: Est 9:18 - -- The Jews - assembled - on the thirteenth - and on the fourteenth - These two days they were employed in slaying their enemies; and they rested on th...
The Jews - assembled - on the thirteenth - and on the fourteenth - These two days they were employed in slaying their enemies; and they rested on the fifteenth.

Clarke: Est 9:19 - -- The Jews of the villages - They joined that to the preceding day, and made it a day of festivity, and of sending portions to each other; that is, th...
The Jews of the villages - They joined that to the preceding day, and made it a day of festivity, and of sending portions to each other; that is, the rich sent portions of the sacrifices slain on this occasion to the poor, that they also might be enabled to make the day a day of festivity; that as the sorrow was general, so also might the joy be
It is worthy of remark that the ancient Itala or Ante-hieronymian version of this book omits the whole of these nineteen verses. Query, Were they originally in this book?

Clarke: Est 9:20 - -- Mordecai wrote these things - It has been supposed that thus far that part of the book of Esther, which was written by Mordecai extends: what follow...
Mordecai wrote these things - It has been supposed that thus far that part of the book of Esther, which was written by Mordecai extends: what follows to the end, was probably added either by Ezra, or the men of the Great Synagogue; though what is said here may refer only to the letters sent by Mordecai to the Jews of the provinces. From this to the end of the chapter is nothing else than a recapitulation of the chief heads of the preceding history, and an account of the appointment of an annual feast, called the feast of Purim, in commemoration of their providential deliverance from the malice of Haman.

Clarke: Est 9:23 - -- The Jews undertook to do as they had begun - They had already kept the fifteenth day, and some of them in the country the fourteenth also, as a day ...
The Jews undertook to do as they had begun - They had already kept the fifteenth day, and some of them in the country the fourteenth also, as a day of rejoicing: Mordecai wrote to them to bind themselves and their successors, and all their proselytes, to celebrate this as an annual feast throughout all their generations; and this they undertook to do. And it has been observed among them, in all places of their dispersion, from that day to the present time, without any interruption.

Clarke: Est 9:26 - -- They called these days Purim - That is from pari , the lot; because, as we have seen, Haman cast lots to find what month, and what day of the month,...
They called these days Purim - That is from

Clarke: Est 9:26 - -- And of that which they had seen - The first letter to which this second refers, must be that sent by Mordecai himself. See Est 9:20.
And of that which they had seen - The first letter to which this second refers, must be that sent by Mordecai himself. See Est 9:20.

Clarke: Est 9:29 - -- Esther - wrote with all authority - Esther and Mordecai had the king’ s license so to do: and their own authority was great and extensive.
Esther - wrote with all authority - Esther and Mordecai had the king’ s license so to do: and their own authority was great and extensive.
Defender -> Est 9:3
Defender: Est 9:3 - -- Two contradictory, but irrevocable, decrees had been issued, one sponsored by Haman, bent on annihilating the Jews, the other sponsored by Mordecai, a...
Two contradictory, but irrevocable, decrees had been issued, one sponsored by Haman, bent on annihilating the Jews, the other sponsored by Mordecai, authorizing protection for the Jews and destruction of those who would attack them. The Persian military was thus faced with choosing which decree to help implement. Since Mordecai had now become second to the king in place of Haman (Est 8:2; Est 10:3), most decided the wisest choice would be to favor Esther, Mordecai, and the Jews. One tradition relates that it was only the Amalekites, or Agagites, of the same lineage of Haman, who actually tried to slay the Jews as Haman had planned."
TSK: Est 9:1 - -- am 3552, bc 452
in the twelfth : Est 3:7, Est 3:13, Est 8:12
hoped : Act 12:11
though it was turned : Deu 32:36; 2Sa 22:41; Psa 30:11; Isa 14:1, Isa 1...

TSK: Est 9:2 - -- gathered : Est 9:10, Est 9:16, Est 8:11
as sought : Deu 2:30; Jos 11:20; Psa 71:13, Psa 71:24; Isa 8:9
the fear : Est 8:17; Gen 35:5; Exo 23:27; Jos 2...

TSK: Est 9:3 - -- the rulers : Est 3:12, Est 8:9; Ezr 8:36; Dan 3:2, Dan 6:1, Dan 6:2
officers of the king : Heb. those which did the business that belonged to the king...

TSK: Est 9:4 - -- was great : Psa 18:43
his fame : Jos 6:27; 1Sa 2:30; 1Ch 14:17; Zep 3:19; Mat 4:24
waxed : 2Sa 3:1; 1Ch 11:9; Psa 1:3; Pro 4:18; Isa 9:7

TSK: Est 9:5 - -- smote : Psa 18:34-40, Psa 18:47, Psa 18:48, Psa 20:7, Psa 20:8, Psa 149:6-9; 2Th 1:6
the stroke : Jer 18:21
what they would : Heb. according to their ...
smote : Psa 18:34-40, Psa 18:47, Psa 18:48, Psa 20:7, Psa 20:8, Psa 149:6-9; 2Th 1:6
the stroke : Jer 18:21
what they would : Heb. according to their will, The Chaldee paraphrast says that none appeared against the Jews but Amalekites only, who were infatuated, and had their hearts hardened, as Pharaoh’ s against Israel, to take up arms to their own destruction. Some had such an inveterate, implacable malice against the Jews, that Haman’ s fall and Mordecai’ s advancement, instead of convincing, seemed only to exasperate them the more. How have the most dreadful scourges ravaged a country, and yet the inhabitants are unmindful of the Almighty Disposer of events, and that the cause of his righteous displeasure is their continual provocation! Forty years long was he grieved with one generation, who learned not his ways, although daily fed and clothed by a miracle.

TSK: Est 9:10 - -- ten sons : Est 5:11; Exo 20:5; Job 18:18, Job 18:19, Job 27:13-15; Psa 21:10, Psa 109:12, Psa 109:13
enemy : Est 3:1, Est 7:4, Est 7:6; Exo 17:16
but ...
ten sons : Est 5:11; Exo 20:5; Job 18:18, Job 18:19, Job 27:13-15; Psa 21:10, Psa 109:12, Psa 109:13
enemy : Est 3:1, Est 7:4, Est 7:6; Exo 17:16
but on the spoil : It does not appear that the Jews slew any person who did not rise up to destroy themcaps1 . tcaps0 hey stood for their lives; and gave full proof that they sought their own personal safety, and not the property of their enemiescaps1 . tcaps0 hough the decree in their favour gave them authority to take the property of all their adversaries. Est 9:15, Est 9:16; Est 8:11; Gen 14:23; Rom 12:17; Phi 4:8

TSK: Est 9:13 - -- If it please the king : Esther had probably been informed by Mordecai, that there were still many enemies of the Jews who sought their destruction, wh...
If it please the king : Esther had probably been informed by Mordecai, that there were still many enemies of the Jews who sought their destruction, who had escaped the preceding day; and therefore begged that the second day might be added to the former permission; and that the sons of Haman, who had already been slain, might be suspended on gibbets, as a terror to those who sought the destruction of the Jews.
according unto : Est 8:11
let Haman’ s ten sons be hanged : Heb. let men hang Haman’ s ten sons, Deu 21:23; 2Sa 21:6, 2Sa 21:9; Gal 3:13

TSK: Est 9:15 - -- gathered themselves : Est 9:2, Est 9:13, Est 8:11; Psa 118:7-12
but on the prey : Est 9:10, Est 9:16; 1Th 5:22; Heb 13:5




TSK: Est 9:19 - -- gladness : Est 9:22, Est 8:17; Deu 16:11, Deu 16:14; Neh 8:10-12; Psa 118:11-16; Luk 11:41; Rev 11:10
sending portions : The eastern princes and peopl...
gladness : Est 9:22, Est 8:17; Deu 16:11, Deu 16:14; Neh 8:10-12; Psa 118:11-16; Luk 11:41; Rev 11:10
sending portions : The eastern princes and people not only invite their friends to feasts, but it is their custom to send a portion of the banquet to those that cannot well attend, especially their relations, and those in a state of mourning. Thus, when the Grand Emir found that it incommoded M. D’ Arvieux to eat with him, he desired him to take his own time for eating, and sent him from his kitchen what he liked best.

TSK: Est 9:20 - -- Mordecai : That is, as the words imply, the history contained in this book; and not merely the letters afterwards mentioned, as some understand it.
wr...
Mordecai : That is, as the words imply, the history contained in this book; and not merely the letters afterwards mentioned, as some understand it.
wrote these : Exo 17:14; Deu 31:19-22; 1Ch 16:12; Psa 124:1-3, Psa 145:4-12; 2Co 1:10, 2Co 1:11

TSK: Est 9:22 - -- the days : Est 3:12, Est 3:13; Exo 13:3-8; Psa 103:2; Isa 12:1, Isa 12:2, Isa 14:3
from sorrow : Psa 30:11; Mat 5:4; Joh 16:20-22
sending portions : E...
the days : Est 3:12, Est 3:13; Exo 13:3-8; Psa 103:2; Isa 12:1, Isa 12:2, Isa 14:3
from sorrow : Psa 30:11; Mat 5:4; Joh 16:20-22
sending portions : Est 9:19; Neh 8:10-12; Luk 11:41; Act 2:44-46; Gal 2:10

TSK: Est 9:24 - -- the enemy : Est 9:10, Est 3:5-13
Pur : The word pur seems to be derived either from the Persian bahr and bar , a part, portion, lot, or pari ...
the enemy : Est 9:10, Est 3:5-13
Pur : The word
consume : Heb. crush

TSK: Est 9:25 - -- when Esther came : Heb. when she came, Est 9:13, Est 9:14, Est 7:5-10, Est 8:1-14
return : Psa 7:16, Psa 109:17, Psa 109:18, Psa 140:9, Psa 141:10; Ma...
when Esther came : Heb. when she came, Est 9:13, Est 9:14, Est 7:5-10, Est 8:1-14
return : Psa 7:16, Psa 109:17, Psa 109:18, Psa 140:9, Psa 141:10; Mat 21:44


TSK: Est 9:27 - -- and upon their seed : Deu 5:3, Deu 29:14, Deu 29:15; Jos 9:15; 1Sa 30:25; 2Sa 21:1, 2Sa 21:2
all such : Est 8:17; Isa 56:3, Isa 56:6; Zec 2:11, Zec 8:...

TSK: Est 9:28 - -- remembered : Exo 12:17; Psa 78:5-7, Psa 103:2
fail : Heb. pass
the memorial : Exo 13:8, Exo 13:9; Jos 4:7; Zec 6:14
perish from their seed : Heb. be e...

TSK: Est 9:29 - -- the daughter of Abihail : Est 3:15
authority : Heb. strength
confirm : Est 9:20, Est 8:10

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Est 9:3 - -- All the rulers ... helped the Jews - i. e. the Persians, who formed the standing army which kept the Empire in subjection, and were at the disp...
All the rulers ... helped the Jews - i. e. the Persians, who formed the standing army which kept the Empire in subjection, and were at the disposal of the various governors of provinces, took the Jews’ side. The enemies of the Jews (e. g. Est 9:16) were almost entirely to be found among the idolatrous people of the subject nations, for whose lives neither the Persians generally, nor their monarchs, cared greatly.

Barnes: Est 9:6 - -- By "Shushan the palace (or the fort),"is probably meant the whole of the upper town, which occupied an area of more than 100 acres, and contained ma...
By "Shushan the palace (or the fort),"is probably meant the whole of the upper town, which occupied an area of more than 100 acres, and contained many residences besides the actual palace. The Jews would not have ventured to shed blood within the palace-precincts.

Barnes: Est 9:7-10 - -- Most of these names are Persian, and readily traceable to Old Persian roots. Est 9:10 On the spoil laid they not their hand - As they mig...
Most of these names are Persian, and readily traceable to Old Persian roots.
On the spoil laid they not their hand - As they might have done (see the margin reference).

Barnes: Est 9:15 - -- Shushan - Here probably the lower town, which lay east of the upper one, and was of about the same size (compare the Est 9:6 note).
Shushan - Here probably the lower town, which lay east of the upper one, and was of about the same size (compare the Est 9:6 note).

Barnes: Est 9:16 - -- Seventy and five thousand - The Septuagint gives the number as 15,000; and this amount seems more in proportion to the 800 slain in Susa.
Seventy and five thousand - The Septuagint gives the number as 15,000; and this amount seems more in proportion to the 800 slain in Susa.

Barnes: Est 9:19 - -- The Jews of the villages ... - Rather, "the Jews of the country districts, that dwelt in the country towns,"as distinguished from those who dwe...
The Jews of the villages ... - Rather, "the Jews of the country districts, that dwelt in the country towns,"as distinguished from those who dwelt in the metropolis.

Barnes: Est 9:29 - -- This second letter of Purim - Mordecai’ s first letter Est 9:20 was to some extent tentative, a recommendation. The Jews generally having ...
Poole: Est 9:2 - -- No man could withstand them their enemies, though they did and were allowed to take up arms against them, yet were easily conquered and destroyed by ...
No man could withstand them their enemies, though they did and were allowed to take up arms against them, yet were easily conquered and destroyed by the Jews.
The fear of them who had such potent friends at court, and so great a God on their side, who by such unusual and prodigious methods (whereof doubtless they had been particularly informed) had brought about such a mighty and unexpected deliverance.

Poole: Est 9:3 - -- And officers of the king Heb. and all them that did the king’ s business , i.e. not only the chief persons designed by the foregoing words, but...
And officers of the king Heb. and all them that did the king’ s business , i.e. not only the chief persons designed by the foregoing words, but all his other ministers or officers, of what quality soever.

Poole: Est 9:4 - -- Mordecai was great i.e. the greatest in place, and power, and favour with the king, both for his near relation to his beloved queen, and for his good...
Mordecai was great i.e. the greatest in place, and power, and favour with the king, both for his near relation to his beloved queen, and for his good service done to him in preserving his life and managing his affairs, and for those excellent abilities and virtues which he discovered in him, and especially by the disposition of the heart-ruling God.

Poole: Est 9:6 - -- In Shushan the palace i.e. in the city so called, as was noted before, Est 1:2 ; it not being probable either that they would make such a slaughter i...
In Shushan the palace i.e. in the city so called, as was noted before, Est 1:2 ; it not being probable either that they would make such a slaughter in the king’ s palace, or that they would be suffered so to do.
Five hundred men whom by long experience they knew to be their constant and inveterate enemies, and such as would watch all opportunities to destroy them; which also they might possibly now attempt to do. Part of them also might be friends and allies of Haman, and therefore the avowed enemies of Mordecai.

Poole: Est 9:10 - -- Either because they were desirous it should come into the king’ s treasury; or because they would leave it to their children, that it might app...
Either because they were desirous it should come into the king’ s treasury; or because they would leave it to their children, that it might appear that what they did that day was not done out of malice to their persons and families, or covetousness of their estates, but out of mere necessity, and by that great and approved law of self-preservation, and that they were ready to mix mercy with judgment and would not deal with their enemies so ill as it was apparent that their enemies intended to do against them.

Possibly with evil design to incense thee king against the Jews.

Poole: Est 9:12 - -- What have they done in the rest of the king’ s provinces? in which doubtless many more were slain. So that I have fully granted thy petition. An...
What have they done in the rest of the king’ s provinces? in which doubtless many more were slain. So that I have fully granted thy petition. And yet, if thou hast any thing further to ask, I am here ready to grant it.

Poole: Est 9:13 - -- According to this day’ s decree i.e. to kill their implacable enemies. For it is not improbable that the greatest and worst of them had politicl...
According to this day’ s decree i.e. to kill their implacable enemies. For it is not improbable that the greatest and worst of them had politicly withdrawn or hidden themselves for that day; after which, the commission granted to the Jews being expired, they confidently returned to their homes, where they were taken and slain by virtue of this private and unexpected decree.
Haman’ s sons were slain before; now let their bodies be hanged upon their father’ s gallows, for their greater infamy, and the terror of all others who shall presume to abuse the king in like manner, or to persuade him to execute such cruelties upon his own subjects. This custom of hanging up the bodies of malefactors after their death was frequent among the Jews, and Persians also, as is well known.

Poole: Est 9:17 - -- On the thirteenth day: this belongs not to the feast, but to the work done before it. The meaning is, This they did, i.e. they slew their foes, as wa...
On the thirteenth day: this belongs not to the feast, but to the work done before it. The meaning is, This they did, i.e. they slew their foes, as was now said, Est 9:16 , upon the thirteenth day.

Poole: Est 9:19 - -- Therefore to wit, because they did their whole work upon the thirteenth day, as was noted Est 9:17 , to which this manifestly relates, the 18th verse...
Therefore to wit, because they did their whole work upon the thirteenth day, as was noted Est 9:17 , to which this manifestly relates, the 18th verse coming in as it were by way of parenthesis.
In the unwalled towns Heb. in the cities of the villages , i.e. in the lesser cities and villages, which are here opposed to the great city Shushan, and those who dwelt in it.

Poole: Est 9:20 - -- Mordecai wrote these things either,
1. The letters here following. But that is distinctly mentioned in the next words. Or,
2. The history of these ...
Mordecai wrote these things either,
1. The letters here following. But that is distinctly mentioned in the next words. Or,
2. The history of these things, which was the ground of the feast; which Mordecai knew very well ought to be had in remembrance, and to be told to their children and posterity, through all ages, according to the many commands of God to that purpose, and the constant practice of the holy men of God in such cases.

Poole: Est 9:21 - -- Because both these days had been set apart this year, the latter at Shushan, the former in other parts; and because that great work of God, which wa...
Because both these days had been set apart this year, the latter at Shushan, the former in other parts; and because that great work of God, which was the ground of this solemnity, had been done both upon the thirteenth and the fourteenth day.

Poole: Est 9:23 - -- Having by this means opportunity to gather themselves together upon any occasion, the chief of them assembled together, and freely and unanimously c...
Having by this means opportunity to gather themselves together upon any occasion, the chief of them assembled together, and freely and unanimously consented to Mordecai’ s desire in this matter, and bound it upon themselves and posterity.

Poole: Est 9:26 - -- i.e. Both for the respect which they justly bore to Mordecai’ s letter, and because they themselves had seen and felt this wonderful work of Go...
i.e. Both for the respect which they justly bore to Mordecai’ s letter, and because they themselves had seen and felt this wonderful work of God on their behalf.

Poole: Est 9:27 - -- All such as joined themselves unto them i.e. Gentile proselytes; who were obliged to submit to other of the Jewish laws, and therefore to this also; ...
All such as joined themselves unto them i.e. Gentile proselytes; who were obliged to submit to other of the Jewish laws, and therefore to this also; the rather, because they enjoyed the benefit of this day’ s deliverance; without which the Jewish nation and religion had been in a great measure, if not wholly, extinct in the world.
According to their writing i.e. according to that writing which was drawn up by Mordecai with Esther’ s consent, Est 9:23,29 , and afterwards confirmed by the consent of all the Jews in the several places.

Poole: Est 9:29 - -- Wrote with all authority: the former letter, Est 9:20 , did only recommend, but this enjoins the observation of this solemnity; because this was not ...
Wrote with all authority: the former letter, Est 9:20 , did only recommend, but this enjoins the observation of this solemnity; because this was not only Mordecai’ s act, who yet had by the king’ s grant a great power and authority over the subjects of that kingdom, and consequently over the Jews, but it was the act of all the Jews, binding themselves and posterity to it, Est 9:27 . Or, with all might , or efficacy, as that word usually signifies; he pressed it with all earnestness and vehemency.

Poole: Est 9:30 - -- Or, even words of peace and truth ; which may respect either,
1. The form of the writing, wherein after the custom he saluted them with hearty wis...
Or, even words of peace and truth ; which may respect either,
1. The form of the writing, wherein after the custom he saluted them with hearty wishes of their true peace or prosperity, or of the continuance of those two great blessings of God,
truth i.e. the true religion; and peace, either among themselves, or with all men, that they might peaceably and quietly enjoy and profess the truth. Or,
2. The manner of his writing, which was
with peace i.e. friendship and kindness to his brethren;
and truth i.e. sincerity; which is the more noted and commended in him, because it is so unusual in such great courtiers as he now was; compare Est 10:3 : or the matter of his writing, which was to direct and persuade them to keep both peace and truth, i.e. both to live peaceably and lovingly both one with another, and with all their neighbours, not insulting over them upon their confidence in Mordecai’ s great power, or upon this late and great success, as men naturally and commonly do, nor giving them any fresh provocations, and yet holding fast the true religion in spite of all the artifices or hostilities of the Gentiles among whom they lived.
Haydock: Est 9:1 - -- As. Hebrew, "(which is the month of Adar) when the king's command and edict drew near to be executed, in that day when the enemies of the Jews hop...
As. Hebrew, "(which is the month of Adar) when the king's command and edict drew near to be executed, in that day when the enemies of the Jews hoped to have power over them, (though it turned out that the Jews had dominion over those who hated them)" (Haydock) ---
To revenge, &c. The Jews, on this occasion, by authority from the king, were made executioners of the public justice, for punishing by death a crime worthy of death, viz., a malicious conspiracy for extripating their whole nation; (Challoner) so inscrutable are the judgments of God, who never wholly abandoned his people! The old Vulgate passes over the first 19 verses, with the 24th, 25th, and 28th. (Calmet) ---
In this whole history we cannot but admire the Providence of God. (Worthington)

Haydock: Est 9:3 - -- Extolled. Protestants, "helped." Septuagint, "the king's secretaries honoured the Jews." (Haydock)
Extolled. Protestants, "helped." Septuagint, "the king's secretaries honoured the Jews." (Haydock)

Haydock: Est 9:6 - -- Sons. It seems as if they had been slain with their father, ver. 10. See chap. vii. 9. (Calmet) ---
Yet, as the contrary would appear from chap. ...
Sons. It seems as if they had been slain with their father, ver. 10. See chap. vii. 9. (Calmet) ---
Yet, as the contrary would appear from chap. xvi. 18, we may suppose that they were at least (Haydock) imprisoned till this time, for a more exemplary punishment, while all the rest of the family perished with Aman. (Serarius) (Salien) (Menochius) ---
These are the kindred, specified nine months before, chap. xvi. (Tirinus) ---
Some Masorets childishly (Haydock) write these ten names one over another, and with greater and lesser letters, to shew that they were hung one above another, and that the guilt of all was not the same, but the youngest son was the most malicious. (Kennicott)

Haydock: Est 9:10 - -- Goods, in any place, (Tirinus) that they might not appear to be actuated by the desire of riches, (Calmet) to fall upon the innocent. How often does...
Goods, in any place, (Tirinus) that they might not appear to be actuated by the desire of riches, (Calmet) to fall upon the innocent. How often does this fatal cause blind Christian conquerors! The sons of Aman were married, and had separate establishments, chap. viii. 1.

Haydock: Est 9:13 - -- Susan. Aman's influence had been the greatest there, and had stirred up many enemies of the Jews, who were to be carefully sought out. (Haydock) --...
Susan. Aman's influence had been the greatest there, and had stirred up many enemies of the Jews, who were to be carefully sought out. (Haydock) ---
If we should consider only the dictates of clemency, we should think that the Jews were too eager in their revenge. But when we reflect, that their enemies had intended to destroy them all, and to seize their effects, we shall allow that they did not exceed the limits of justice, as they acted by royal authority, and abstained from touching any effects of the deceased. (Calmet) ---
In the capital, 800 men fell victims to their fury. But as the citizens of that place were probably the most guilty, we must not imagine that other cities would be treated with the like severity. (Haydock) ---
Gibbets, for a terror to the wicked. (Menochius) ---
This disgrace was not unusual, chap. xvi.18. Polycrates was treated thus. (Herodotus iii. 125.)

Haydock: Est 9:16 - -- Lives. In many cases they would probably be attacked, as Aman's edict was perhaps still in force, as well as that of Mardochai. Hence both parties ...
Lives. In many cases they would probably be attacked, as Aman's edict was perhaps still in force, as well as that of Mardochai. Hence both parties would be upon the watch. (Haydock) ---
Seventy-five. Roman Septuagint has only 15,000. Complutensian, 10,035. (Calmet)

Haydock: Est 9:19 - -- Meats, not only to the poor, but to all their friends, ver. 22., and 2 Esdras viii. 10. (Calmet)
Meats, not only to the poor, but to all their friends, ver. 22., and 2 Esdras viii. 10. (Calmet)

Haydock: Est 9:21 - -- Receive. Protestants, "establish this among them, that they should keep the 14th....yearly," 2 Machabees xv. 37. (Haydock) ---
None were obliged...
Receive. Protestants, "establish this among them, that they should keep the 14th....yearly," 2 Machabees xv. 37. (Haydock) ---
None were obliged to keep more than one of these days, according to their respective dwellings. The 14th was for the provinces, the 15th for the Jews of Susan, ver. 18. (Tirinus) (Calmet) (Worthington) ---
Yet it would seem that both days were enjoined, ver. 27, 28. (Haydock) ---
The Jews still observe, them, as they gratify their vanity and vindictive spirit. The 13th is kept a rigid fast, for all above sixteen, for twenty-four hours, during which they eat nothing. (Calmet) ---
If that day should be a sabbath, or its eve, they fast on the 11th or 12th. (Drusius) ---
The day before the festival they give alms to their poor brethren, enjoining them to consume the whole in making good cheer. Each person must then contribute the half sicle, (Exodus xxx. 13.) which is bestowed on those who undertake a pilgrimage to the land of promise. At night, when the feast commences, they light the lamps, and begin to read the Book of Esther, as soon as the stars appear. They use an old parchment manuscript roll, and, in the five places, the reader shouts with all his might, running over the names of the ten sons of Aman with all haste, to shew that they all died in a moment. Whenever Aman is mentioned, the children beat the benches with mallets; and formerly they used to strike at a stone, on which his name was cut, till it broke, ver. 31. After the lecture, they take a repast at home. Early the next morning they return to the synagogue, and read the account of Amalec from the Pentateuch, and repeat the Book of Esther, with the aforesaid ceremonies. The rest of the day they spend in merriment. Their teachers allow them to drink till they are unable to distinguish the name of Aman from that of Mardochai. (Basnage, vi. 15.) ---
They also change clothes, in contradiction to the law; (Deuteronomy xxii. 5.) and were formerly accustomed to crucify a man of straw, which they burnt with the cross, till Christian emperors put a stop to them; as it was concluded, from their curses, &c., that they had an eye to our Saviour. (Calmet) See chap. v. 14. (Haydock)

Haydock: Est 9:25 - -- And. Hebrew, "But when she came." Septuagint, "and how he came to the king, asking leave to hang Mardochai. But his machinations against the Jews,...
And. Hebrew, "But when she came." Septuagint, "and how he came to the king, asking leave to hang Mardochai. But his machinations against the Jews, turned upon his own head; and so," &c. (Haydock)

Haydock: Est 9:28 - -- Ceremonies. The king also enjoined (chap. xvi. 22.) all his subjects (Tirinus) to keep a day of rejoicing, (Haydock) as the death of Aman was deemed...
Ceremonies. The king also enjoined (chap. xvi. 22.) all his subjects (Tirinus) to keep a day of rejoicing, (Haydock) as the death of Aman was deemed a public benefit. (Calmet)

Haydock: Est 9:29 - -- Second. The first might be the edict, (chap. viii. 9.) or else the provisional establishment of the festival, as it could not have general authority...
Second. The first might be the edict, (chap. viii. 9.) or else the provisional establishment of the festival, as it could not have general authority till it was ratified by the high priest; after which, this second letter was dispatched. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "and queen Esther, daughter of Aminadab, &c.,...wrote all that they had done, and also the confirmation of the epistle of Phrourai." They should say Phurim, as the former word means "guards." Hebrew, "wrote with all authority, to confirm this second letter of Purim;" (Protestants; Haydock) or rather, "this letter, Phurim, of which this is a copy." The Roman Septuagint only add for this and their advice; (Calmet; Ed. Alex.[Alexandrian Edition?], "for their health and counsel.") and Esther established for ever, and wrote as a memorial: My nation," &c. (Haydock)

Haydock: Est 9:30 - -- Peace: receive these glad tidings, and faithfully observe the injunctions. (Calmet)
Peace: receive these glad tidings, and faithfully observe the injunctions. (Calmet)
Gill: Est 9:1 - -- Now in the twelfth month, that is the month Adar, on the thirteenth day of the same,.... Of which see Est 3:13,
when the king's commandment and his...
Now in the twelfth month, that is the month Adar, on the thirteenth day of the same,.... Of which see Est 3:13,
when the king's commandment and his decree drew near to be put in execution; even both his commandments and decrees, the one empowering the enemies of the Jews on that day to destroy them, and the other empowering the Jews to act both defensively and offensively against their enemies:
in the day that the enemies of the Jews hoped to have power over them; by virtue of the first decree of the king; and notwithstanding the second, they might hope to have it because of their superior numbers:
though it was turned to the contrary, that the Jews had rule over them that hated them; it proved the reverse, partly through the second decree in favour of the Jews, and partly through the fear of them that fell upon their enemies; because the court was on their side, and the officers everywhere, and especially their God filled them with courage, and their enemies with terror.

Gill: Est 9:2 - -- The Jews gathered themselves together in their cities, throughout all the provinces of King Ahasuerus,.... Wherever they lived:
to lay hand on such...
The Jews gathered themselves together in their cities, throughout all the provinces of King Ahasuerus,.... Wherever they lived:
to lay hand on such as sought their hurt; who not only threatened them what they would do on this day, but were risen up in arms in quest of them:
and no man could withstand them, for the fear of them fell upon all people; when they understood that Haman was hanged, and Mordecai the Jew advanced, and that the queen herself was a Jew, and that the Jews had the royal grant to act both defensively and offensively; and no doubt but the panic was of God.

Gill: Est 9:3 - -- And all the rulers of the provinces, and the lieutenants, and the deputies, and officers of the king, blessed the Jews,.... Countenanced them and enco...
And all the rulers of the provinces, and the lieutenants, and the deputies, and officers of the king, blessed the Jews,.... Countenanced them and encouraged them, and gave them all assistance in their power; extolled them, as the word signifies, lifted them up, and spoke well of them, or praised them, as the Targum:
because the fear of Mordecai was upon them; he being now chief minister, they might fear, if they took part with the enemies of the Jews against them, they might be turned out of their places.

Gill: Est 9:4 - -- For Mordecai was great in the king's house,.... Not only over Esther's affairs, but was one of the king's counsellors, and was the chief minister of s...
For Mordecai was great in the king's house,.... Not only over Esther's affairs, but was one of the king's counsellors, and was the chief minister of state:
and his fame went out throughout all the provinces; what a favourite he was of the king, as well as a relation of the queen, and how wise and just his administrations were:
for this man Mordecai waxed greater and greater, was more and more in the king's favour, and had offices of honour and trust heaped upon him, and increased both in wealth and power.

Gill: Est 9:5 - -- Thus the Jews smote all their enemies with the stroke of the sword, and slaughter, and destruction,.... Some with swords, and others with clubs, and s...
Thus the Jews smote all their enemies with the stroke of the sword, and slaughter, and destruction,.... Some with swords, and others with clubs, and staves; as the Targum; and such like slaughtering weapons of destruction:
and did what they would unto those that hated them; being then entirely at their will, and under their power.

Gill: Est 9:6 - -- And in Shushan the palace the Jews slew and destroyed five hundred men. Not in the royal palace, where it cannot be thought the Jews had so many enemi...
And in Shushan the palace the Jews slew and destroyed five hundred men. Not in the royal palace, where it cannot be thought the Jews had so many enemies, or such a bloody slaughter of them should be made there; but in the city, where the palace was: and this may seem somewhat wonderful, that there should so many rise there against the Jews, so near the court, now altogether in the interest of the Jews; but these were men no doubt of Haman's faction, and enraged at his disgrace and death, and headed by his ten sons, who took the advantage of the decree to avenge his death; the Targum says, these were princes of the house of Amalek.

Gill: Est 9:7-10 - -- And Parshandatha, and Dalphon, and Aspatha, and Poratha, and Adalia, and Aridatha, and Parmashta, and Arisai, and Aridai, and Vajezatha, the ten sons ...
And Parshandatha, and Dalphon, and Aspatha, and Poratha, and Adalia, and Aridatha, and Parmashta, and Arisai, and Aridai, and Vajezatha, the ten sons of Haman the son of Hammedatha, the enemy of the Jews, slew they,.... Along with the five hundred men, at the head of which they were:
but on the spoil laid they not their hands; though they were allowed by the edict to do it, Est 8:11, but this they did not, that it might appear that they did not take away their lives from a covetous desire of their estates, but purely in self-defence; and they might do this, the more to ingratiate themselves to the king, to whom the goods and estates of those men would be confiscated.

Gill: Est 9:11 - -- On that day the number of those that were slain in Shushan the palace was brought before the king. Either by order of the king, that he might know how...
On that day the number of those that were slain in Shushan the palace was brought before the king. Either by order of the king, that he might know how many enemies the Jews had in the city, and how many of subjects had been slain; or officiously by others, with an intention to irritate the king against the Jews.

Gill: Est 9:12 - -- And the king said unto Esther the queen,.... After the account had been brought in to him:
the Jews have slain and destroyed five hundred men in Sh...
And the king said unto Esther the queen,.... After the account had been brought in to him:
the Jews have slain and destroyed five hundred men in Shushan the palace; the Targum adds, of the seed of Amalek:
and the ten sons of Haman: which very probably were all he had; though the Targum, in Est 9:14, makes mention of seventy sons that Zeresh his wife fled with:
what have they done in the rest of the king's provinces? that could not be said; but it might be concluded, that if so many were slain in Shushan, the number must be great in all the provinces:
now what is thy petition and it shall be granted thee: or "what is thy request further? and it shall be done"; if this was not sufficient and satisfactory, whatever else she should ask for should be granted.

Gill: Est 9:13 - -- Then said Esther, if it please the king,.... For she was all submission to his will:
let it be granted to the Jews which are in Shushan; for no fur...
Then said Esther, if it please the king,.... For she was all submission to his will:
let it be granted to the Jews which are in Shushan; for no further did she desire the grant to be extended:
to do tomorrow also according to this days decree; one Targum makes the request only that they might keep the morrow as a festival, but the other, more rightly, to do according to the decree of this day; which was, to slay as many of their enemies as rose up against them; and whereas many might flee and hide themselves, who were implacable enemies of the Jews, Esther moves for a grant that the decree might be continued for the next day, that these might be found out and slain; in which she sought the glory of divine justice, in their righteous destruction, and the peace of the people of God, and not private revenge, or to indulge malice:
and let Haman's ten sons be hanged upon the gallows; on which their father was; this was deferred, though they were already slain, for their greater reproach, and for a terror to others not to injure the people of God; and it was usual with the Persians to hang persons on a gallows, or fix them to a cross, after they were dead; as Polycrates was by Oroites i, and Bagspates by Parysatis k.

Gill: Est 9:14 - -- And the king commanded it so to be done: and the decree was given at Shushan,.... That the Jews might have leave to seek out and slay the rest of thei...
And the king commanded it so to be done: and the decree was given at Shushan,.... That the Jews might have leave to seek out and slay the rest of their enemies in Shushan, on the fourteenth day, in like manner as they had on the thirteenth:
and they hanged Haman's ten sons; on the same gallows very probably their father was hanged; the Targum gives us the distance between each person hanged thereon.

Gill: Est 9:15 - -- For the Jews that were in Shushan gathered themselves together on the fourteenth day also of the month Adar,.... As they had on the thirteenth:
and...
For the Jews that were in Shushan gathered themselves together on the fourteenth day also of the month Adar,.... As they had on the thirteenth:
and slew three hundred men at Shushan; the Targum adds, of the family of Amalek: but there is no reason to confine it to them; it respects all such as were the enemies of the Jews, and rose up against them; so that the whole number slain in Shushan were eight hundred persons, besides the sons of Human:
but on the prey they laid not their hand; See Gill on Est 9:7.

Gill: Est 9:16 - -- But the other Jews that were in the king's provinces gathered themselves together,.... In a body, in their respective provinces and cities:
and sto...
But the other Jews that were in the king's provinces gathered themselves together,.... In a body, in their respective provinces and cities:
and stood for their lives; defended themselves against those that attacked them:
and had rest from their enemies; that selfsame day; all being destroyed by them, and none daring to appear against them:
and slew of their foes 75,000 men; that is, in all the provinces put together:
but they laid not their hands on the prey; See Gill on Est 9:7.

Gill: Est 9:17 - -- On the thirteenth day of the month Adar,.... This belongs to the preceding verse; and the meaning is, that on this day the Jews gathered together and ...
On the thirteenth day of the month Adar,.... This belongs to the preceding verse; and the meaning is, that on this day the Jews gathered together and slew so many thousand of their enemies as before related:
and on the fourteenth day of the same rested they, and made it a feast of gladness: rejoicing that they were delivered out of the hand of their enemies, who hoped and expected on that day to have made an utter end of them; according to the Jewish canons l, mourning and fasting on this day were forbidden, but feasting and gladness were to be multiplied.

Gill: Est 9:18 - -- But the Jews that were at Shushan assembled together on the thirteenth day thereof, and on the fourteenth day thereof,.... Of the month Adar; that is,...
But the Jews that were at Shushan assembled together on the thirteenth day thereof, and on the fourteenth day thereof,.... Of the month Adar; that is, they gathered together to defend themselves, and destroy their enemies, on both these days, having the decree renewed for the fourteenth as they had for the thirteenth:
and on the fifteenth day of the same they rested, and made it a day of feasting and gladness; as the Jews in the provinces did on the fourteenth.

Gill: Est 9:19 - -- Therefore the Jews of the villages, that dwelt in the unwalled towns, made the fourteenth day of the month Adar a day of gladness and feasting,.... Ja...
Therefore the Jews of the villages, that dwelt in the unwalled towns, made the fourteenth day of the month Adar a day of gladness and feasting,.... Jarchi observes that those in the villages, who are they that do not dwell in walled towns, observed the fourteenth, and they in towns surrounded with walls the fifteenth, as Shushan; and this circumvallation, he says, must be what was from the days of Joshua; according to the Jewish canons, every place that was walled from the days of Joshua the son of Nun, whether in the land of Israel or out of it, though not now walled they read (i.e. the book of Esther) on the fifteenth of Adar, and this is called a walled town; but a place which was not walled in the days of Joshua, though now walled, they read in the fourteenth, and this is called a city; but the city Shushan, though it was not walled in the days of Joshua, they read on the fifteenth, because in it was done a miracle m and each of these was kept as a day of public rejoicing for their great deliverance and freedom from their enemies:
and a good day: as the Jews usually call the several days of the passover, pentecost, and tabernacles:
and of sending portions one to another: expressive of mutual joy, and congratulating one another upon the happiness they shared in; see Rev 11:10, and particularly this may respect sending gifts to the poor, who had not that to rejoice and make merry with others had; see Neh 8:10, though these seem to be distinct from them, Est 9:22.

Gill: Est 9:20 - -- And Mordecai wrote these things,.... The transactions of those two days, and the causes of them, as well as the following letter; some conclude from h...
And Mordecai wrote these things,.... The transactions of those two days, and the causes of them, as well as the following letter; some conclude from hence that he was the penman of the book; and so he might be, but it does not necessarily follow from hence:
and sent letters unto all the Jews that were in all the provinces of the King Ahasuerus, both nigh and far; such as were near the city Shushan, and those that were at the greatest distance from it; these were more especially the things he wrote.

Gill: Est 9:21 - -- To stablish this among them,.... That it might be a settled thing, and annually observed in all future generations, what they had now done:
that th...
To stablish this among them,.... That it might be a settled thing, and annually observed in all future generations, what they had now done:
that they should keep the fourteenth day of the month Adar, and the fifteenth day of the same, yearly; as the former had been observed by the Jews in the provinces, and both by those in Shushan, Est 9:17 as festivals in commemoration of their great deliverance; hence the fourteenth of Adar is called the day of Mordecai, being established by him;"And they ordained all with a common decree in no case to let that day pass without solemnity, but to celebrate the thirtieth day of the twelfth month, which in the Syrian tongue is called Adar, the day before Mardocheus' day.'' (2 Maccabees 15:36)

Gill: Est 9:22 - -- As the days wherein the Jews rested from their enemies,.... Having slain all those that rose up against them, and assaulted them:
and the month whi...
As the days wherein the Jews rested from their enemies,.... Having slain all those that rose up against them, and assaulted them:
and the month which was turned unto them from sorrow to joy, and from mourning unto a good day; for in this month Adar, on the thirteenth day of it, they expected to have been all destroyed, which had occasioned great sorrow and mourning in them; but beyond their expectation, in the same month, and on the selfsame day of the month, they had deliverance and freedom from their enemies; which was matter of joy, and made this day a good day to them:
that they should make them days of feasting and joy; keep both the fourteenth and fifteenth days of the month as festivals, eating and drinking, and making all tokens of joy and gladness, though not in the Bacchanalian way in which they now observe them; for they say n, a man is bound at the feast of Purim to exhilarate or inebriate himself until he does not know the difference between `cursed be Haman' and `blessed be Mordecai:'
and of sending portions one to another; and these now consist of eatables and drinkables; and according to the Jewish canons o, a man must send two gifts to his friend, at least; and they that multiply them are most commendable; and those are sent by men to men, and by women to women, and not on the contrary:
and gifts to the poor; alms money, as the Targum, to purchase food and drink with, nor may they use it to any other purpose; though some say they may do what they will with it p; and a man must not give less than two gifts to the poor; these are called the monies of Purim q.

Gill: Est 9:23 - -- And the Jews undertook to do as they had begun, and as Mordecai had written unto them. They engaged to keep these two days as festivals annually, as t...
And the Jews undertook to do as they had begun, and as Mordecai had written unto them. They engaged to keep these two days as festivals annually, as they had at this time done; not in a religious but in a civil way, not as parts of religious worship, and as additions to and innovations of the law, but by way of commemoration of a civil benefit which they had received; and yet we find in later times that this was scrupled by some as an innovation; for we are told r that there were eighty five elders, and more than thirty of them prophets, who were distressed about this matter, fearing it was an innovation.

Gill: Est 9:24 - -- Because Haman the son of Hammedatha, the Agagite, the enemy of all the Jews, had devised against the Jews to destroy them,.... Had formed a design to ...
Because Haman the son of Hammedatha, the Agagite, the enemy of all the Jews, had devised against the Jews to destroy them,.... Had formed a design to exterminate them from the whole Persian empire in one day:
and had cast Pur, (that is, the lot,) to consume them, and to destroy them; had cast lots to find out what would be the most lucky day in the year for him to do it on, and the most unlucky and unfortunate to the Jews; and, according to the lot, the thirteenth of Adar was pitched upon; this and the following verse give the reasons for observing the above two days as festivals.

Gill: Est 9:25 - -- But when Esther came before the king,.... To request of him her life, and the life of her people:
he commanded by letters, that his wicked device, ...
But when Esther came before the king,.... To request of him her life, and the life of her people:
he commanded by letters, that his wicked device, which he devised against the Jews, should return upon his own head; that whereas his wicked scheme was to destroy all the Jews, the king, by his second letter, gave orders that the Jews should have liberty to defend themselves, and destroy their enemies which rose up against them; and the friends and party of Haman were entirely cut off:
and that he and his sons should be hanged on the gallows; which he had prepared for Mordecai; not that they were ordered to be hanged together, nor were they; Haman was hanged before on the twenty third day of the month, but his sons not till the fourteenth day of the twelfth month; Est 7:10.

Gill: Est 9:26 - -- Wherefore they called these days Purim, after the name of Pur,.... The lot; because of the lots cast by Haman; see Est 3:7,
therefore for all the w...
Wherefore they called these days Purim, after the name of Pur,.... The lot; because of the lots cast by Haman; see Est 3:7,
therefore for all the words of this letter; in obedience to what Mordecai wrote in his letter to the Jews, and because of the things contained in it:
and of that which they had seen concerning this matter; with their own eyes, in the several provinces where their enemies rose up to assault them, but were destroyed by them:
and what had come unto them: by report; as the fall of Haman, and advancement of Mordecai, and the favours shown to Esther and her people; all this belongs to the following verse, containing the reasons of the Jews' appointment and engagement to observe the days of Purim.

Gill: Est 9:27 - -- The Jews ordained, and took upon them, and upon their seed, and upon all such that joined themselves unto them,.... Who became proselytes to their rel...
The Jews ordained, and took upon them, and upon their seed, and upon all such that joined themselves unto them,.... Who became proselytes to their religion; that is, they appointed the above two days as festivals, and engaged for themselves, for their children, and all proselytes, to observe them as such; and one of their canons s runs thus,"all are obliged to read the Megillah (the book of Esther, which they always read on those days), priests, Levites, Nethinims, Israelites, men, women, and proselytes, and servants made free, and they train up little ones to read it:"
so as it should not fail; of being observed, so as no man should transgress it, or pass it over:
that they should keep these two days; the fourteenth and fifteenth of the month Adar or February:
according to their writing; in this book, the book of Esther, which was to be read, as Aben Ezra; written in the Hebrew character, as the Targum; that is, in the Assyrian character, as Jarchi; the square character, as they call it:
and according to their appointed time every year; whether simple or intercalated, as Aben Ezra observes: in an intercalary year the Jews have two Adars, and, though they keep the feast of Purim on the fourteenth of the first Adar, yet not with so much mirth, and call it the lesser Purim; but in the second Adar they observe it with all its ceremonies t; so, in their canon, they do not keep Purim but in Adar that is next to Nisan or March, that redemption might be near redemption; the redemption of Mordecai near the redemption of Moses u.

Gill: Est 9:28 - -- And that these days should be remembered, and kept throughout every generation, every family, every province, and every city,.... And accordingly thes...
And that these days should be remembered, and kept throughout every generation, every family, every province, and every city,.... And accordingly these days are commemorated by them now, and by all their families, and all in their families capable of it; and these words, "every province", and "every city", are used, as Aben Ezra observes, lest a man should think he was not bound to keep this feast where there were no Jews; for, let him be where he may, he is obliged to keep it:
and that these days of Purim should not fail among the Jews; or the observance of them be neglected and cease:
nor the memorial of them perish from their seed; neither the memorial of them, nor of the reason of keeping them; wherefore on those days they read the whole book of Esther, fairly written on a roll of parchment, and are careful that none omit the reading of it; rather, they say w, the reading and learning the law should be omitted, and all commands and service, than the reading this volume, that so all might be acquainted with this wonderful deliverance, and keep it in mind.

Gill: Est 9:29 - -- Then Esther the queen, the daughter of Abihail, and Mordecai the Jew, wrote with all authority,.... Strongly pressing the observance of this festival;...
Then Esther the queen, the daughter of Abihail, and Mordecai the Jew, wrote with all authority,.... Strongly pressing the observance of this festival; before, Mordecai only recommended it, but now the queen gave a sanction to it, and laid her obligation on the Jews to observe it; perhaps some of the Jews were backward to it, or neglected to observe it, and therefore Esther and Mordecai joined in a letter to them, to press them to it; the Jewish chronologer x says, this was written the year following; the former Targum is, they wrote this whole volume, and the strength of the miracle, or set the miraculous deliverance in the strongest light, with this view:
to confirm this second letter of Purim; that it might have its weight and influence upon them, to engage them to keep it, as the latter Targum adds; that when it was an intercalary year, they might not read the Megillah (or book of Esther) in the first Adar, but in the second Adar.

Gill: Est 9:30 - -- And he sent letters unto all the Jews,.... That is, Mordecai did, signed in the queen's name, and his own:
to the hundred twenty and seven province...
And he sent letters unto all the Jews,.... That is, Mordecai did, signed in the queen's name, and his own:
to the hundred twenty and seven provinces of the kingdom of Ahasuerus; among which was Judea, that was become a province, first of the Chaldean, now of the Persian empire, see Ezr 5:8 to whom also these letters were sent, directing and ordering the Jews there to observe these days, who were also concerned in the deliverance wrought:
with words of peace and truth exhorting them to live in peace with one another, and their neighbours, and to constancy in the true religion; or wishing them all peace and prosperity in the most loving and sincere manner.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Est 9:16 For this number much of the Greek MS tradition reads “fifteen thousand.” The Lucianic Greek recension reads “70,100.”

NET Notes: Est 9:25 Heb “his”; the referent (Haman) has been specified in the translation for clarity.


NET Notes: Est 9:30 Heb “peace and truth.” The expression is probably a hendiadys (see the note on 5:10 for an explanation of this figure).
Geneva Bible: Est 9:1 Now in the twelfth month, that [is], the month Adar, on the thirteenth day of the same, when the king's commandment and his decree drew near to be put...

Geneva Bible: Est 9:3 And all the rulers of the provinces, and the lieutenants, and the deputies, and officers of the king, ( b ) helped the Jews; because the fear of Morde...

Geneva Bible: Est 9:5 Thus the Jews smote all their ( c ) enemies with the stroke of the sword, and slaughter, and destruction, and did what they would unto those that hate...

Geneva Bible: Est 9:6 And in Shushan the palace the Jews slew and destroyed ( d ) five hundred men.
( d ) Besides the three hundred that they slew the second day, (Est 9:1...

Geneva Bible: Est 9:10 The ten sons of Haman the son of Hammedatha, the enemy of the Jews, slew they; but ( e ) on the spoil laid they not their hand.
( e ) By which they d...

Geneva Bible: Est 9:13 Then said Esther, If it please the king, let it be granted to the Jews which [are] in Shushan to do to morrow also according ( f ) unto this day's dec...

Geneva Bible: Est 9:16 But the other Jews that [were] in the king's provinces gathered themselves together, and stood for ( g ) their lives, and had rest from their enemies,...

Geneva Bible: Est 9:17 On the ( i ) thirteenth day of the month Adar; and on the fourteenth day of the same rested they, and made it a day of feasting and gladness.
( i ) M...

Geneva Bible: Est 9:19 Therefore the Jews of the villages, that dwelt in the unwalled towns, ( k ) made the fourteenth day of the month Adar [a day of] gladness and feasting...

Geneva Bible: Est 9:20 And Mordecai wrote ( l ) these things, and sent letters unto all the Jews that [were] in all the provinces of the king Ahasuerus, [both] nigh and far,...

Geneva Bible: Est 9:22 As the days wherein the Jews rested from their enemies, and the month which was turned unto them from sorrow to joy, and from mourning into a good day...

Geneva Bible: Est 9:24 Because Haman the son of Hammedatha, the Agagite, the enemy of all the Jews, had devised against the Jews to destroy them, and had ( n ) cast Pur, tha...

Geneva Bible: Est 9:25 But when ( o ) [Esther] came before the king, he commanded by letters that his wicked ( p ) device, which he devised against the Jews, should return u...

Geneva Bible: Est 9:27 The Jews ordained, and took upon them, and upon their seed, and upon all such as joined themselves unto them, so as it should not fail, that they woul...

Geneva Bible: Est 9:30 And he sent the letters unto all the Jews, to the hundred twenty and seven provinces of the kingdom of Ahasuerus, [with] ( r ) words of peace and trut...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Est 9:1-32
TSK Synopsis: Est 9:1-32 - --1 The Jews slay their enemies, with the ten sons of Haman.12 Ahasuerus, at the request of Esther, grants another day of slaughter, and Haman's sons to...
MHCC -> Est 9:1-19; Est 9:20-32
MHCC: Est 9:1-19 - --The enemies of the Jews hoped to have power over them by the former edict. If they had attempted nothing against the people of God, they would not the...

MHCC: Est 9:20-32 - --The observance of the Jewish feasts, is a public declaration of the truth of the Old Testament Scriptures. And as the Old Testament Scriptures are tru...
Matthew Henry -> Est 9:1-19; Est 9:20-32
Matthew Henry: Est 9:1-19 - -- We have here a decisive battle fought between the Jews and their enemies, in which the Jews were victorious. Neither side was surprised; for both ha...

Matthew Henry: Est 9:20-32 - -- We may well imagine how much affected Mordecai and Esther were with the triumphs of the Jews over their enemies, and how they saw the issue of that ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Est 9:1-10; Est 9:11-12; Est 9:13; Est 9:14; Est 9:15-17; Est 9:18-19; Est 9:20-22; Est 9:23; Est 9:24; Est 9:25; Est 9:26-27; Est 9:28; Est 9:29-32
Keil-Delitzsch: Est 9:1-10 - --
The Jews avenged of their enemies. - Est 9:1. In the twelfthmonth, on the thirteenth day of the same - the Jews gathered themselvestogether in thei...

Keil-Delitzsch: Est 9:11-12 - --
When on the same day an account was given to the king of the result of theconflict, and the number of those slain in Susa reported, he announced toQ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Est 9:13 - --
Esther requested: "let it be granted to the Jews which are in Susa to do to-morrow also according to the decree of to-day (i.e., exactly as to-day),...

Keil-Delitzsch: Est 9:14 - --
The king commanded it so to be done. "Then was a decree given at Susa,and they hanged the ten sons of Haman."The decree given in Susa doesnot refer ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Est 9:15-17 - --
On this second day the Jews slew 300 more; comp. Est 9:10. - Est 9:16. The restof the Jews in the provinces, i.e., the Jews in the other parts of th...

Keil-Delitzsch: Est 9:18-19 - --
The Jews in Susa, on the other hand, who were both on the 13th and 14thAdar still fighting against their enemies, and did not rest till the 15th, ma...

Keil-Delitzsch: Est 9:20-22 - --
The feast of Purim instituted by letters from Mordochai and Esther. Est 9:20. Mordochai wrote these things, and sent letters to all the Jews, etc. ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Est 9:23 - --
And the Jews undertook to do as they had begun, and as Mordochai hadwritten to them. They had begun, as Est 9:22 tells us, by keeping both days,and ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Est 9:24 - --
For Haman, the enemy of all the Jews, had devised against the Jews todestroy them (comp. Est 3:1, Est 3:6.), and had cast Pur, that is the lot (see ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Est 9:25 - --
וּבבאהּ , and when it (the matter), not when she, Esther, came before the king, - for Esther is not named in the context, - he commanded by le...

Keil-Delitzsch: Est 9:26-27 - --
Wherefore they called these days Purim after the name Pur. This first על־כּן refers to what precedes and states the reason, resulting from wha...

Keil-Delitzsch: Est 9:28 - --
And that these days should be remembered and kept throughout everygeneration, every family, every province, and every city; and these days ofPurim a...

Keil-Delitzsch: Est 9:29-32 - --
A second letter from Queen Esther and Mordochai to appoint fasting andlamentation on the days of Purim. Est 9:29. And Esther the queen andMordochai ...
Constable: Est 8:1--9:20 - --C. The Jews' Deliverance 8:1-9:19
Even though Haman was dead the Jews were not yet safe. This section of...

Constable: Est 9:1-19 - --5. The Jews' self-defense 9:1-19
The king gave the Jews permission to defend themselves by killi...
