







It has been observed by many that no Divine Name or Title is found in
the book of Esther. This is the more remarkable, since, in
this short book of only 167 verses, the Median King is mentioned 192
times, his kingdom is referred to 26 times, and his name (*1)
"Ahasuerus" is given 29 times.
Jehovah had declared (Deut. 31:16-18) (*2), that if His People forsook Him, He would hide His face from them. Though the book reveals Him as overruling all, His Name is hidden. It is there for His People to see, not for His enemies to see or hear.
Satan was at work, using Haman to blot out the Nation, as once before he had used Pharaoh for the same purpose (see Ap. 23 and 25). Jehovah's counsel must stand. His promise of Messiah, the coming "Seed" of the woman (Gen. 3:15), must not fail. Therefore He must overrule all for the preservation of His People, and of the line by which that "Seed" was to come into the world.
His working was secret and hidden : hence, the name of
"JEHOVAH" is hidden secretly four times in this book, and the name
"EHYEH" (I am that I am) once. The Massorah (Ap. 30)
has a rubric calling attention to the former fact; and (at least) (*3)
three ancient manuscripts are known in which the Acrostic (*4)
letters in all five cases are written Majuscular (or, larger than the
others) so that they stand out boldly and prominently, showing the four
consonant letters of the mane JeHoVaH. In the Hebrew
,
,
,
, or, as written in
Hebrew from right to left,
,
,
,
. In
English, L, O, R, D. Also the four letters of the fifth
Acrostic,
"EHYH".
A | Backward.
B | Forward.
A | Backward.
B | Forward.
C | Spoken by a Gentile (Memucan).
D | Spoken by an Israelite (Esther).
C | Spoken by a Gentile (Haman).
D | Spoken by and Israelite (the inspired writer).
E | Words concerning a Queen.
F | Words spoken by a Queen.
E | Words spoken by Haman.
F | Words concerning Haman.
"And when the king's decree which he shall make, shall be published throughout all his empire, (for it is great,) all the wives shall give to their husbands honor, both to great and small." The four words we give, 1st, in the Hebrew type (with the Majuscular letters at the beginning of each word); 2nd, with the Transliteration; and 3rd, in English paraphrase, reproducing the sentence in the word LORD with the initial letters backward :--
1 2 3 4
Hi' V
ekal Hannashim Yitt
enu.
1 2 3 4
it and-all the-wives shall-give
"Due Respect Our Ladies
shall give to their husbands, both to great and small."
The four words are :
1 2 3 4
Yabo' Hammelek V
eHaman Hayyom
1 2 3 4
let-come the-king and-Haman this-day
"Let Our Royal Dinner
this day be graced by the king and Haman."
The four words are :
1 2 3 4
zeH 'eynennV shoveH l
eY
1 3 2 4
this availeth nothing to-me
The English may be freely rendered "Yet am I
by the king."
This
was the climax, the end had come. Hence the name is spelt
by the final letters :
1 2 3 4
kY kal
ethaH elayV hara'aH
1 4 2 3
that evil was-determined aginst-him
"I AM."
It is noted in some manuscripts by Majuscular letters, which have Massoretic authority (see Ap. 30). The Acrostic is formed by the final letters, and the name is spelt backward. The king asks "Who is he, and where is he, that durst presume in his heart to do so?" : i.e. to sell for destruction Queen Esther and her People. In saying this he unconsciously gives the name of Him who came down to deliver His People out of the hand of Pharaoh, and had then come down to deliver them again out of the hand of Haman, "the Jews' enemy", who, like Pharaoh, sought to destroy the whole nation (cp. Exodus 2:23-25 with 3:14, 15). The great enemy of the Messiah -- the living Word -- was seeking to destroy all hope of His promised coming (Gen. 3:15), and make void the repeated promise of Jehovah.
Ahasuerus only pointed to human agency, but his words point us to the Satanic agency which was behind it. The Acrostic is in the final letters of his question "Who is he, and where is he?" Only the great "I am that I am" could know that, and could answer that question. Esther and Mordecai knew the human instrument, but none could know who was directing him but the One Who sees the end from the beginning.
The
words forming the Acrostic are
1 2 3 4
hu'E zeH v
e`eY zeH
1 2 3 4
[who is]
he this
[man] and
where [is]
this [man]
We
may English it thus:
Thus was the name of the great "I AM" of Exodus 3:14 presented to the eye, to reveal the fact that He who said of E H Y H "this is My Name for ever, and this is My Memorial unto all generations" (v. 15), was there to remember His People. Here was a "generation" in Persia who experienced the truth and the power of this Name, as a former "generation" had done in Egypt.
The same "I AM" had indeed come down to deliver them from Haman; as He had from Pharaoh, and from the great "enmity" (of Gen. 3:15) which instigated both to accomplish the Satanic design of exterminating the Nation of Israel.
In these five Acrostics we have something far beyond a mere
coincidence; we have design. When we read the denunciation in
Deut. 31:16-18, and see it carried out in Persia, we learn that though
God was not among
His people there, He was for
them. Though He was not acting as Jehovah, "that dwelleth
between the Cherubim," He was "the God of Heaven, ruling and
over-ruling all in the Heaven above and in the Earth beneath" for the
fulfillment of His purposes, and in the deliverance of His
People. Hence, though His name, as well as His presence, is
HIDDEN, yet, it is there, in the Word; and so wonderfully interwoven
that no enemy will ever know how to put it out.
(*2) The Talmud (Kelim 139) says "Where do we get Esther in the Law?" And the answer is "Deut. 31:18, 'and I will surely hide my face'". So here, the outward form of the revelation takes on the form of its inward and spiritual meaning. For the same reason we have the Divine Title "the God of heaven" as characterizing the book Exra-Nehemiah. See note on 2Chron. 36:23.
(*3) How many more there may be will be ascertained only when all the special scrolls of Esther shall be examined.
(*4) Fo 116 r other examples of Acrostics in the Hebrew text, see Ap. 63. vii.
(*5) In the use of these terms, "backward" and "forward" the English reader must bear in mind that Hebrew is read from right to left both in the spelling and wording.