Haman Plans to Kill the Jews

Open Your Bible

Esther 3:1-15, Psalm 68:1-10, Psalm 68:20, Proverbs 16:33

I remember learning to write my first stories in grade school. Character, setting, problem, climax, solution: the formula was right there, on my worksheet, just ready for my imagination to fill it in. My first stories were about pioneers, of course, as I loved Laura Ingalls Wilder. While I never progressed much further as a fiction author, the basic elements of a good story are still embedded in my mind when I read. 

Esther is one of the grandest stories in Scripture. It is the dramatic tale of an orphaned girl, swept up to be queen of all of Persia, then putting her own life at risk to save her people from mass execution at the hand of the king’s evil vizier. And today, in Esther 3, we read about the problem, the complication that leads to rising action. Haman, King Ahasuerus’s evil vizier, commanded all people to bow to him. And they all did—except for Esther’s cousin Mordecai, a Jewish man. “Mordecai would not bow down or pay homage” (Esther 3:2). 

Here’s where the story gets really interesting. All the other Jewish people bowed to Haman, as it was customary to bow to leaders and kings (Scripture is full of such examples, like David bowing to Saul in 1Samuel 24). But Mordecai didn’t, and we don’t really know why. One popular theory from scholars suggests that perhaps it was because Haman was a descendant of Agag (Esther 3:1), and Mordecai of King Saul (v.4), and since Agag and Saul were enemies, their descendants were too (Esther 9:24). 

We don’t fully understand the root of their hatred for one another, but regardless, it was the spark that lit the fire. Haman wanted to punish not just Mordecai, but all the Jewish people in Persia. And so, the punishment far, far outweighed the crime. Haman dismissed an entire people and pursued them to death.

In reading this passage again and again, I recognize that the qualities present in this feud are also present in me. I’m quick to anger, slow to change my mind. I root down into long-held prejudices, and I refuse to stretch the muscles of an empathetic imagination. It’s easier to be prideful and mean, hasty and hurtful—especially when almost every interaction I have these days seems to  take place on a screen. 

The power imbalance between the two led to Haman’s anger materializing into intended mass destruction, and we get to see God work through the brave young Esther to stop the genocide. But this isn’t Esther’s story of heroism, Mordecai’s story of selfless sacrifice, or even Haman’s story of falling from favor and power. It’s all a foretaste of God’s story of sacrifice and redemption.

Hundreds of years later, when Jesus broke into our world as a baby, God was writing the same story. He was writing the story of redemption, of promises kept, of a people who were once not a people becoming one, and of people who did not know mercy receiving mercy (1Peter 2:10). It’s what God offers the prideful Mordecais and the evil Hamans of this world: mercy, belonging, restoration. It’s what Jesus secured in His selfless sacrifice on the cross. And it is ours to receive with repentance and with hope. 

Plan ahead to read Joshua and Mark with us starting February 15Shop the collection now for Digital Study Books for Lent!

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94 thoughts on "Haman Plans to Kill the Jews"

  1. Megan Beach says:

    Thankful for a God who gave it all so we could have it all. I love how this isn’t a story about Esther or any other character. It’s about Jesus. Reminds me how much bigger my life is. It’s not about me—it’s about Jesus through me

  2. Sonia Onyenegecha says:

    ❤️

  3. Nicole Meadows says:

    God always has a plan for His people, whether it’s when Esther is queen, Jesus as our sacrificial lamb, or details of our life. He is faithful and good.

  4. Mariah Montanez says:

    Woww

  5. Sherry Wold says:

    What a story of love for is written into the book of Esther, just like the entire Bible. Even the messiest parts of the bible that aren’t filled with joy and happiness, it is all a grand love story, pointing to God’s love for us and its wrapped into every single word.

  6. Miriam says:

    Humbling to think about how much our actions affect others. It was mentioned that Haman was a descendant from King Agag and that King Saul was commanded to destroy the Amalekites along with Agag but Saul let Agag live and then generations later here is Haman about to destroy the Jews. The disobedience of Saul did not just affect him but generations to come. Also, the actions of Mordecai affected all of the Jews in the fact that they were to be destroyed just because one man did not bow to Haman. I so easily think that my disobedience and failure to listen to God just affects myself but really affects so many others and could potentially affect generations to come.

  7. Jennifer Miller says:

    ♥️

  8. Jill WallenMiller says:

    If anyone is looking for a good romantic Christian fiction… check out The Peasant Queen! It is a retelling of Esther and it is SO SO SOOOOO good!!!!