Day 4

Mordecai Appeals to Esther

from the Esther reading plan


Esther 4:1-17, Genesis 37:33-35, Romans 5:6-11

BY Lore Ferguson Wilbert

A few months after the lockdowns began in March, my husband and I moved from Texas back to my hometown in New York. Moving in the midst of a country-wide shutdown has felt disorienting.  Ordinarily a vibrant college community, my village has felt more like a ghost town these days, with furrowed brows above masked faces (a necessary reality of living through a pandemic) replacing the friendly and welcoming smiles we expected to see. I have wondered, “Why did you move us here now, Lord? Why, in the midst of a season like this are we in yet another transition?”

I left this place a decade ago, which was a decade after a tragedy that tore my family apart. On a rainy April morning, two of my younger brothers left for an errand and only one returned alive. My brother was 14 years old when he died. I was 19. For the next ten years my life felt empty, lifeless, confusing. My entire family fractured, never to join together whole for another holiday, wedding, or reunion. I felt divided even from myself. After ten years of trying to piece myself together again, I left here, and found hope and healing in Christ and therapy and the blessed relief of time. But coming back home has reminded me of all of it again. Even though the Lord has healed and redeemed, I still remember the grief of those days. Coming back in the midst of the pandemic has highlighted those griefs in some ways too. My questions to the Lord increase.

Several months ago, though, through a series of events I could have never foreseen or orchestrated, two young people began to frequent our home. Their grief is similar in some ways to mine, the loss of a young brother suddenly this year. I sat this morning and thought of Esther in the king’s house, likely wondering why. “Why am I here? Why have I been brought to a place where there is the potential for so much pain? Do I think I will be protected from the pangs of grief that are common to all people and particular to me?” 

Mordecai, Esther’s cousin, admonished, “Don’t think that you will escape the fate of all the Jews because you are in the king’s palace” (Esther 4:13), and I hear his echo in my heart too. But perhaps, like Esther, I am here for this time in this place for this reason. For such a time as this? To lend my washer and dryer, my kayaks, my tea, my table, and my tears to two suffering people whose grief cannot be held by them alone.

Pastor and theologian John Piper once wrote, “God is always doing 10,000 things in your life, and you may be aware of three of them.” It helps me to remember this because even in the most grievous moments, I know there is another moment twenty, thirty, fifty years away for which that previous moment prepared me. It doesn’t lessen the grief of twenty years ago, but it gives it meaning today which I could not have foreseen then. It shapes the meaning of today. And this is what Esther must have learned and come to know in these verses. This time, this aching, awful time, is held secure by a God who knows the future, who ordains the steps of His children, and who has prepared a better Esther, a better Savior for all His people to come. 

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Post Comments (110)

110 thoughts on "Mordecai Appeals to Esther"

  1. Kayla Tillson says:

    I lost my aunt who was a Sunday school teacher and who I turned to for all things to do with Christianity so I feel fractured and lost in my faith.

  2. Ashley Cesare says:

    (I accidentally hit send too early!) I meant to say to serve Him and fulfill the purpose he has for our lives! Wishing you rest and peace, sisters!

  3. Ashley Cesare says:

    What stood out to me most in this reading was when Mordecai said to Esther, “And who knows whether you have not come to the kingdom for such a time as this?” I love to think this was a moment where Esther discovered her purpose in the Lord. For a while, she may have questioned why she was granted the title of “Queen” I could only imagine, as I am navigating the purpose of my life as well, that she questioned “What on Earth am I doing here!?” I think Mordecai’s simple statement allowed Esther to see she was placed in her position for a reason and that reason was to save her people, God’s chosen. Wow! What a beautiful message that God uses our lives, places us in environments and positions (even though we may not realize why at first) to serve Him

  4. Lady Di KP-2 says:

    Thank you for your sharing. You’ve touched my heart. We have met at an intersection along life’s journey. Blessings

  5. Austin NWhitney says:

    ❤️

  6. Toya Puckett says:

    I’m sorry about your mom. I lost mine to covid last August and the pain is by far one of the worst. I lost my biological dad 11 weeks after my mom died. I don’t understand the pain and I just basically feel like I go day by day without purpose. One day I will be stronger!

  7. Zipho-zihle Tabata says:

    Recently I lost my mother in a tragic accident. She was a praying woman. She was the strongest person I know. We had faced so many challenges together as a family but none as huge as the death of our mother. I do not yet understand why it had to happen but I find hope in knowing that God had already prepared me for it. There is no better comforting thought than knowing that I do not need to understand why, I need to trust God for deliverance in this grief. Today’s devotion just reminded me that God goes ahead of us and sets His plans on motion to deliver us and make true His promises. Thank you. May God strengthen each and everyone of us and may He give us the courage to recognize when the time comes for us to serve our purpose

  8. Nikki Purwin says:

    I lost a friend of mine to suicide my senior year of high school. I was furious with God and turned away, angry that he took her from me. As I’ve grown up and grieved, I realized there was a purpose greater than me for what has happened. Your testimony and this reading reminded me of mine <3

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