Tuesday, August 02, 2005

COURAGE MEANS USING WHAT GOD HAS GIVEN US FOR GOD'S GOOD


Good day dear friends.

We continue our study of courage and what it means to use what God has given us for God's glory.

Here is our study guide for today:

Tuesday: The reading for today may seem long, but it’s really not. Read Esther 1 and 2. If you’re pressed for time, read only chapter two. This is the story of how Esther, a Jewish girl, comes to be queen of another nation. Her courage is shown in later chapters when her power is that which saves the Jews from death. Courage is that which allows for God to place us even where we don’t want to be, to perhaps later do something for God’s people.

For today I will place the scripture passage at the bottom so you can read it at your leisure.

The first two chapters simply whet your appetite for the whole story. But here's what happens in chapter one. A foreign king, powerful and mighty decides to show off what he has. He decides to host a banguet for all who have served him well. This banquet is set to last six months. Keep in mind this is a different time and a different culture. It will be easy for the men to take one side and the women the other. Let's take God's side for the entire story. Chapter one deals with this big celebration of showing off all that King Xerxes had. And at the end of the six months, he decides to have a week long party. The order at the party was to let the wine flow and for all the guests, himself included, to enjoy the wine. At the end of the party, the king, "high on wine" as the text puts it, decides he wants to show off his queen, Queen Vashti. The queen had her reasons and decides not to show up for this party. This angers the king and the queen falls out of favor with the king. The king, in his anger consults his advisors who recommend the king replacing the queen. You'll have to read towards the end of chapter one to see what I was referring to in men taking one side and women the other.

Chapter two introduces us to the namesake of this book. It is the orphan niece of a Jewish man living in this capital city. The uncle, named Mordacai, sees an opportunity when words get out that the king will hold a beauty pagaent to select a new queen. Forget scholarships and year-long vistis to mall openings and a guest shot on Regis and Kelly, this prize was to become queen of a very powerful nation. An interesting note about this book, the name of God does not appear in it at all; though God's role is clearly implied in all this young woman was able to do for God's people.

God had blessed her with beauty and she would use it to protect and keep alive several people, especially the Jews. But in chapter two, she is used to share information about a plot with the king and saves his life.

Esther had courage to use all her God-given blessings for God's purpose. Courage is the ability to make a decision today not fully or perhaps not even knowing what may lie ahead. Courage tells us to trust God and to walk with God and to let God help us both today and all days. The picture may not be completely clear today of what lies ahead, but with God at our side we can still please and serve God today.

PRAYER: For all You have shared with me, I am thankful. I ask for the courage to say yes to Your calling to serve You and Your purposes for my life. I ask this in Christ Jesus' name. Amen.

Have a great and blessed day!

e.v.

SCRIPTURE RESOURCE:

Esther 1 (The Message): 1 This is the story of something that happened in the time of Xerxes, the Xerxes who ruled from India to Ethiopia - 127 provinces in all. 2 King Xerxes ruled from his royal throne in the palace complex of Susa. 3 In the third year of his reign he gave a banquet for all his officials and ministers. The military brass of Persia and Media were also there, along with the princes and governors of the provinces. 4 For six months he put on exhibit the huge wealth of his empire and its stunningly beautiful royal splendors. 5 At the conclusion of the exhibit, the king threw a weeklong party for everyone living in Susa, the capital - important and unimportant alike. The party was in the garden courtyard of the king's summer house. 6 The courtyard was elaborately decorated with white and blue cotton curtains tied with linen and purple cords to silver rings on marble columns. Silver and gold couches were arranged on a mosaic pavement of porphyry, marble, mother-of-pearl, and colored stones. 7 Drinks were served in gold chalices, each chalice one-of-a-kind. The royal wine flowed freely - a generous king! 8 The guests could drink as much as they liked - king's orders! - with waiters at their elbows to refill the drinks. 9 Meanwhile, Queen Vashti was throwing a separate party for women inside King Xerxes' royal palace.

10 On the seventh day of the party, the king, high on the wine, ordered the seven eunuchs who were his personal servants (Mehuman, Biztha, Harbona, Bigtha, Abagtha, Zethar, and Carcas) 11 to bring him Queen Vashti resplendent in her royal crown. He wanted to show off her beauty to the guests and officials. She was extremely good-looking. 12 But Queen Vashti refused to come, refused the summons delivered by the eunuchs. The king lost his temper. Seething with anger over her insolence, 13 the king called in his counselors, all experts in legal matters. It was the king's practice to consult his expert advisors. 14 Those closest to him were Carshena, Shethar, Admatha, Tarshish, Meres, Marsena, and Memucan, the seven highest-ranking princes of Persia and Media, the inner circle with access to the king's ear. 15 He asked them what legal recourse they had against Queen Vashti for not obeying King Xerxes' summons delivered by the eunuchs. 16 Memucan spoke up in the council of the king and princes: "It's not only the king Queen Vashti has insulted, it's all of us, leaders and people alike in every last one of King Xerxes' provinces. 17 The word's going to get out: 'Did you hear the latest about Queen Vashti? King Xerxes ordered her to be brought before him and she wouldn't do it!' When the women hear it, they'll start treating their husbands with contempt. 18 The day the wives of the Persian and Mede officials get wind of the queen's insolence, they'll be out of control. Is that what we want, a country of angry women who don't know their place? 19 "So, if the king agrees, let him pronounce a royal ruling and have it recorded in the laws of the Persians and Medes so that it cannot be revoked, that Vashti is permanently banned from King Xerxes' presence. And then let the king give her royal position to a woman who knows her place. 20 When the king's ruling becomes public knowledge throughout the kingdom, extensive as it is, every woman, regardless of her social position, will show proper respect to her husband." 21 The king and the princes liked this. The king did what Memucan proposed. 22 He sent bulletins to every part of the kingdom, to each province in its own script, to each people in their own language: "Every man is master of his own house; whatever he says, goes."

Esther 2 (The Message) 1 Later, when King Xerxes' anger had cooled and he was having second thoughts about what Vashti had done and what he had ordered against her, 2 the king's young attendants stepped in and got the ball rolling: "Let's begin a search for beautiful young virgins for the king. 3 Let the king appoint officials in every province of his kingdom to bring every beautiful young virgin to the palace complex of Susa and to the harem run by Hegai, the king's eunuch who oversees the women; he will put them through their beauty treatments. 4 Then let the girl who best pleases the king be made queen in place of Vashti." The king liked this advice and took it. 5 Now there was a Jew who lived in the palace complex in Susa. His name was Mordecai the son of Jair, the son of Shimei, the son of Kish - a Benjaminite. 6 His ancestors had been taken from Jerusalem with the exiles and carried off with King Jehoiachin of Judah by King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon into exile. 7 Mordecai had reared his cousin Hadassah, otherwise known as Esther, since she had no father or mother. The girl had a good figure and a beautiful face. After her parents died, Mordecai had adopted her. 8 When the king's order had been publicly posted, many young girls were brought to the palace complex of Susa and given over to Hegai who was overseer of the women. Esther was among them. 9 Hegai liked Esther and took a special interest in her. Right off he started her beauty treatments, ordered special food, assigned her seven personal maids from the palace, and put her and her maids in the best rooms in the harem. 10 Esther didn't say anything about her family and racial background because Mordecai had told her not to. 11 Every day Mordecai strolled beside the court of the harem to find out how Esther was and get news of what she was doing. 12 Each girl's turn came to go in to King Xerxes after she had completed the twelve months of prescribed beauty treatments - six months' treatment with oil of myrrh followed by six months with perfumes and various cosmetics. 13 When it was time for the girl to go to the king, she was given whatever she wanted to take with her when she left the harem for the king's quarters. 14 She would go there in the evening; in the morning she would return to a second harem overseen by Shaashgaz, the king's eunuch in charge of the concubines. She never again went back to the king unless the king took a special liking to her and asked for her by name. 15 When it was Esther's turn to go to the king (Esther the daughter of Abihail the uncle of Mordecai, who had adopted her as his daughter), she asked for nothing other than what Hegai, the king's eunuch in charge of the harem, had recommended. Esther, just as she was, won the admiration of everyone who saw her. 16 She was taken to King Xerxes in the royal palace in the tenth month, the month of Tebeth, in the seventh year of the king's reign. 17 The king fell in love with Esther far more than with any of his other women or any of the other virgins - he was totally smitten by her. He placed a royal crown on her head and made her queen in place of Vashti. 18 Then the king gave a great banquet for all his nobles and officials - "Esther's Banquet." He proclaimed a holiday for all the provinces and handed out gifts with royal generosity. 19 On one of the occasions when the virgins were being gathered together, Mordecai was sitting at the King's Gate. 20 All this time, Esther had kept her family background and race a secret as Mordecai had ordered; Esther still did what Mordecai told her, just as when she was being raised by him.

21 On this day, with Mordecai sitting at the King's Gate, Bigthana and Teresh, two of the king's eunuchs who guarded the entrance, had it in for the king and were making plans to kill King Xerxes. 22 But Mordecai learned of the plot and told Queen Esther, who then told King Xerxes, giving credit to Mordecai. When the thing was investigated and confirmed as true, the two men were hanged on a gallows. This was all written down in a logbook kept for the king's use.