‘Regrets, I have a few’ (now
there is an understatement). Why do I
have those regrets? I have those regrets
because ‘I did it my way’ (not God’s way).
So, you’ve messed up. You’ve got a past. You live in the shadow of shame. You wonder what people would think of you if
they saw behind the smiling face. You’re
frustrated because there is a habitual sin that always seems to get the better
of you. You feel guilty and weak. You have made some very bad decisions.
Why would God bother with someone
like you? What could God ever achieve
through your compromised life? Surely
you have forfeited the opportunity to be of any value to him! Maybe your foolish decisions have ruined
God’s plan for your life!
This morning I want to encourage
you as we look at Esther 2. This chapter
tells us that God can and does use compromising and failed people to achieve
his wonderful purposes.
1.
We compromise by having a foot in both camps
Last week we saw the ridiculous
King Xerxes of Persia get his ego wounded by a wife who would not humiliate
herself for him. So she was banned from
his presence. But he has grown to regret
not having a beautiful queen around the place.
So his personal advisors come up with a plan. ‘Let a search be made of the empire to find
beautiful young virgins for the king.
The one who pleases him most will be made the new queen.’ It’s hardly a hard sell! It’s not surprising that Xerxes is pleased
with the idea.
We are now introduced to the two
main characters of this book—Mordecai and Esther. The first thing that we are told about
Mordecai is that he is a Jew. His family
were taken into exile from Judah to Babylon over seventy years earlier. However, when the Persians had taken over
from the Babylonians as the area’s super-power the then king of Persia had
written a decree saying that the Jews could go back to Jerusalem. So why is Mordecai in Susa? It may be that Mordecai just happened to
think that life in pagan Susa might be easier than joining God’s people in
Jerusalem.
Mordecai had a beautiful young
cousin. She had been orphaned and he had
become a father to her. She was called Hadassah,
but she was also called Esther. Why both
a Jewish name and a pagan name? Could it
be—that like most of us—she had a foot in each camp? Maybe she wanted to be one of God’s people,
but she also wanted to fit in with the Persians. That is certainly true of most of us—we want
to please God but we find ourselves addicted to the approval of everyone.
2.
We
compromise by keeping our Christian identity secret
So we may have reasons to believe
that Mordecai and Esther are compromising followers of God. That impression continues when Esther is
selected for the king’s wife-hunting beauty contest.
Beautiful Esther is brought to
the Xerxes harem, where she is placed under the care of one of his attendants
with whom she finds favour. Yet she does
not reveal that she is a Jew, because Mordecai told her not to. Yes, she is obedient to her father-like
cousin, but was Mordecai’s command right and was she right to follow it?
It all seems very different from
Daniel, who, years earlier, was very open about his faith in God and who prayed
with his windows open when there was a decree to pray to nobody but the
Babylonian king. Aren’t we all guilty of
following Mordecai’s advice at times? We
keep our mouths shut and our heads down.
We keep our faith to ourselves. We
don’t want to stir up trouble for ourselves.
We are scared to reveal that we follow the one true and living God.
Now, I have painted a pretty poor
picture of Mordecai so far, but I do find verse eleven very touching. ‘Every day Mordecai would walk near the
courtyard of the harem to find out about Esther and what was happening to
her’. There are no excuses for his
compromises, but his wrong advice to Esther is certainly borne out of his great
concern for her. Sometimes we are more
concerned that our children fit in than that they grow in godliness.
The picture of Mordecai reminds
me of a story from John Newton, the slave-trader turned Church of England
clergyman. Though Newton and his wife
were unable to have children of their own, they took two nieces from different
families, both who had been orphaned, into their home as their own
daughters. One died, breaking Newton’s
heart. The other went through a time of
terrible mental illness. She was
admitted to Bethlehem Hospital in London (known as Bedlam). The now elderly Newton was not allowed to
visit her. But every day, at a set time,
he would walk the grounds of the hospital with a servant. She would then go to a window and wave her
handkerchief to him and he would wave his back to her. Family love is a beautiful thing, and family
love is what we are to experience in church.
3. Our compromises don’t result in God giving up
on us
While there have been hints of
compromise in the story so far, what happens next seems to be clearly
wrong. Esther is in the harem in a
beauty context to find a queen for the godless Xerxes. It would seem that she will either end up as
one of the king’s concubines (a sexual servant of the king) if she loses or
queen if she wins. But what about simply
refusing to go along with whole thing?
What about saying, ‘I follow a God who says I must only marry people who
love my God’? What about saying, ‘my God
says that I should not have sex with someone I am not married to’? ‘But’, you protest, ‘that would surely lead
to imprisonment or death.’ Yeah, and
aren’t we praying about many people in that part of the world, now Iran, who
are in prison at this moment because they would not compromise their faith?
We read that after a lengthy
beauty process Esther is taken to the king’s private rooms, not to emerge until
the next morning. They didn’t spend the
night talking about their favourite hobbies, and, yes, Esther sought to please
the king. She pleased him so much that
Xerxes made her queen.
But how can God use all of this? One preacher entitles his sermon on this
chapter ‘For such a slime as this’.
However, God is behind the scenes ensuring that Esther becomes
queen. Mordecai and Esther may be
compromised but God is actually using their actions to orchestrate the rescue
of his people. He is going to use these
two compromised people in heroic ways.
How can God use sinful things to
achieve his perfect purposes? This is
one of the wonders of our faith. Their
sin is their sin, but it serves God’s plan without compromising his
holiness. It is the principle that we
see behind the cross. Ignorant and evil
people are responsible for putting the Son of God to death, and through their
evil actions they achieve the salvation of God’s people. Indeed, even though almost his entire inner
circle of friends compromised their faith and deserted him, he still had plans
to use them in the building of his church.
Conclusion
A pastor went to visit a famous
gangster in an English prison. After
they had spoken for some time, the gangster asked, ‘what does God make of me, a
murderer?’ So the pastor took him to the
Bible and showed him people like Abraham, who twice lied to people about his
wife to save his skin; Moses, who murdered a man; and David who both committed
adultery and had the woman’s husband killed. God loves, forgives and uses flawed people. The gangster responded, ‘no-one ever told me
that God was like that.’
Mordecai and Esther seem to be
compromised people, yet they belong to God and he loves them. In fact, God has great plans for both of
them. But I need to make a few things
clear before we finish!
Please don’t think that I am
saying that sin does not matter. The
Bible teaches us that we can grieve the God we love. Sin may bring with it some very painful
consequences. It also says that our sin
can bring dishonour to his reputation.
If your compromises don’t make you feel uncomfortable then it might be
that you don’t love Jesus.
Please don’t get stuck in regret
over your sin. Bring it to God. Acknowledge what you have done is wrong. Grieve over it. But then you must stop grieving and start
praising. Your sorrow must turn to joy,
as you honour God by delighting in the promise that has forgiven you.
lease do not think that God has
given up on you. I don’t fully
understand how it works, but God uses all things—including our compromises—for
his purposes which include our ultimate good (which is to make us more like
Jesus). And he never gives up on those
who are his—so while you might not end up in a historical role like Esther, he
has prepared works for each of his children to do.
1 comment:
Thanks Paul. Your sermons are propably the best I have ever read and deeply spiritual, encouraging, whilst speaking into my heart and life as it is today. You don't miss the application of the gospel and the need for repentance and a relationship with Jesus. I don't know where you get such enlightened wisdom but boy are you speaking like a prophet into the wilderness which my life has bacome. Even when I was in ministry I could never come up with messages like these - you have achieved the ability to take scripture and allow it to speak in a relevant and contemporary manner without losing the truth or making it a dirge but rather opening the treasure chest oh Gods grace for people like me. God bless and regards Damien
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