During the meal, the king asked again for the Queen’s request.
Esther then asked, “If I have found favor in your sight, O king, and if it pleases the king, let my life be given me at my petition and my people at my request.”
Her request was to have the law reversed, which called for the extermination of her people that was written under the king’s authority and by Haman.
The law of the Medes and Persians, however, could not be rescinded.
She hoped the king could come up with another option.
Her plea for the reversal of this law was based upon two issues:
She was a Jewess and would be killed if the edict were still in effect.
The edict was not in the best interests of the king.
God, in His providence, turned Mordecai’s death on a tree to be the means of defeating his enemy—Haman.
The king became enraged, feeling betrayed and out-snookered by the prince of the kingdom.
Seeking some solitude to think through his options, the king went out to his garden.
Haman remained alone with Esther to plead his case.
It was forbidden for any man to be alone with any of the king’s wives or concubines.
Groveling for mercy, Haman threw himself across Esther’s royal couch were she lay.
In God’s providence, at that very moment the king re-entered the scene.
Seeing Haman sprawled over the Queen’s couch didn’t set well with the king.
The king’s fury resulted in Haman’s face being covered by servants so the king didn’t have to look upon him again.
One of the king’s eunuchs, perhaps disgruntled with Haman’s pomposity, brought to the king’s attention that “a 75-foot gallows” or “a tree” which Haman built was standing ready in Haman’s garden.
The king needed no advice, only opportunity—“Hang him on it!”
When Haman died on “the tree” the king’s justice had been satisfied and his wrath subsided.
There was a previous event in Israel’s history that adds significance to this event.
As Israel wandered in the wilderness, they spoke not only against Moses but also against the Lord. (Numbers 21:4-9)
The Lord sent fiery serpents into their camp with the sting of death in them.
Many died from the serpent’s bite.
Moses prayed for mercy.
The Lord answered and instructed Moses to make a bronze likeness of the fiery serpent and lift it high on a pole.
When any Israeli was bitten by the serpent, they could look to the bronze serpent and be healed.
Why a bronze serpent and not a bronze lamb?
The pole upon which the bronze serpent hung high represented God’s remedy for death from sin.
When Christ hung on the cross He represented our sin, even as the bronze serpent represented Israel’s sin.
Only when sinners look to the cross does God’s wrath subside and our sin is healed.
Haman hanging on “the tree” that he created is similar to the serpent’s head being crushed on the cross he designed and built to destroy the Christ.
The glory of the cross is Christ becoming our sin and imputing upon sinners His righteousness.
Recognizing the value of consistent reflection upon the Word of God in order to refocus one's mind and heart upon Christ and His Gospel of peace, we provide several reading plans designed to cover the entire Bible in a year.
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