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Chapter 1
In the second year of the reign of Artaxerxes the great king, on the first
day of Nisan, Mardochaeus the son of Jarius, the
son of Semeias, the son of Cisaus, of the tribe of Benjamine, a Jew
dwelling in the city Susa, a great man, serving in the king's palace, saw a
vision. Now he was of the captivity which Nabuchodonosor king of Babylon had
carried captive from Jerusalem, with Jachonias the king of Judea.
And this was his dream: Behold, voices and a noise, thunders and earthquake,
tumult upon the earth. And, behold, two great serpents came forth, both ready
for conflict, and there came from them a great voice, and by their voice every
nation was prepared for battle, even to fight against the nation of the just.
And, behold, a day of darkness and blackness, tribulation and anguish, affection
and tumult upon the earth. And all the righteous nation was troubled, fearing
their own afflictions; and they prepared to die, and cried to God: and from
their cry there came as it were a great river from a little fountain , even
much water. And light and the sun arose, and the lowly were exalted, and
devoured the honorable.
And Mardochaeus who had seen this vision and what God desired
to do, having awoke, kept it in his heart, and desired by all means to interpret
it, even till night. And Mardochaeus rested quiet in the palace with Gabatha and
Tharrha the king's two chamberlains, eunuchs who guarded the palace. And he
heard their reasoning and searched out their plans, and learnt that they were
preparing to lay hands on king Artaxerxes: and he informed the king
concerning them. And the king examined the two chamberlains, and
they confessed, and were executed. And the king wrote these things for a
memorial: also Mardochaeus wrote concerning these matters. And the king
commanded Mardochaeus to attend in the palace, and gave gifts for this service.
And Aman the son of Amadathes the Bugean was honourable in the sight of the
king, and he endeavored to hurt Mardochaeus and his people, because of the two
chamberlains of the king.
1:1 And it came to pass after these
things in the days of Artaxerxes, —(this Artaxerxes ruled over a hundred and
twenty-seven provinces from India)— 2
in those days, when king Artaxerxes was on the throne in the city
of Susa, 3 in the third year of his
reign, he made a feast to his friends, and the other nations, and to the nobles
of the Persians and Medes, and the chief of the satraps.
4 And after this, after he had shewn to
them the wealth of his kingdom, and the abundant glory of his wealth during a
hundred and eighty days, 5 when,
I say, the days of the marriage feast were completed, the king made a
banquet to the nations who were present in the city six days, in the court of
the king’s house, 6 which was
adorned with hangings of fine linen and flax on cords of fine linen and
purple, fastened to golden and silver studs, on pillars of Parian marble and
stone: there were golden and silver couches on a pavement of emerald
stone, and of pearl, and of Parian stone, and open-worked coverings variously
flowered, having roses worked round about; 7
gold and silver cups, and a small cup of carbuncle set out of the
value of thirty thousand talents, abundant and sweet wine, which the king
himself drank. 8 And this banquet
was not according to the appointed law; but so the king would have it: and he
charged the stewards to perform his will and that of the company.
9 Also Astin the queen made a banquet for
the women in the palace where king Artaxerxes dwelt.
10 Now on the seventh day the king,
being merry, told Aman, and Bazan, and Tharrha, and Barazi, and Zatholtha, and
Abataza, and Tharaba, the seven chamberlains, servants of king Artaxerxes,
11 to bring in the queen to him, to
enthrone her, and crown her with the diadem, and to shew her to the princes, and
her beauty to the nations: for she was beautiful. 12
But queen Astin hearkened not to him to come with the
chamberlains: so the king was grieved and angered.
13 And he said to his friends, Thus hast
Astin spoken: pronounce therefore upon this case law and judgment.
14 So Arkesaeus, and Sarsathaeus, and
Malisear, the princes of the Persians and Medes, who were near the king, who sat
chief in rank by the king, drew near to him, 15
and reported to him according to the laws how it was
proper to do to queen Astin, because she had not done the things commanded of
the king by the chamberlains.
16 And Muchaeus said to the king and to
the princes, Queen Astin has not wronged the king only, but also all the king’s
rulers and princes: 17 for he has
told them the words of the queen, and how she disobeyed the king. As then,
said he, she refused to obey king Artaxerxes,
18 so this day shall the other ladies of the chiefs of the
Persians and Medes, having heard what she said to the king, dare in the same way
to dishonour their husbands. 19 If
then it seem good to the king, let him make a royal decree, and let it be
written according to the laws of the Medes and Persians, and let him not alter
it: and let not the queen come in to him any more; and let the king give
her royalty to a woman better than she. 20
And let the law of the king which he shall have made, be widely
proclaimed, in his kingdom: and so shall all the women give honour to their
husbands, from the poor even to the rich.
21 And the saying pleased the king and
the princes; and the king did as Muchaeus had said, 22
and sent into all his kingdom through the several
provinces, according to their language, in order that men might be feared in
their own houses.
Chapter 2
2:1 And after this the king’s anger was
pacified, and he no more mentioned Astin, bearing in mind what she had said, and
how he had condemned her. 2 Then the
servants of the king said, Let there be sought for the king chaste and
beautiful young virgins. 3 And let
the king appoint local governors in all the provinces of his kingdom, and let
them select fair and chaste young damsels and bring them to the
city Susa, into the women’s apartment, and let them be consigned to the king’s
chamberlain, the keeper of the women; and let things for purification and other
attendance be given to them. 4
And let the woman who shall please the king be queen instead of
Astin. And the thing pleased the king; and he did so.
5 Now there was a Jew in the city Susa,
and his name was Mardochaeus, the son of Jairus, the son of
Semeias, the son of Cisaeus, of the tribe of Benjamin;
6 who had been brought a prisoner from
Jerusalem, which Nabuchodonosor king of Babylon had carried into captivity.
7 And he had a foster child,
daughter of Aminadab his father’s brother, and her name was Esther; and
when her parents were dead, he brought her up for a wife for himself: and the
damsel was beautiful.
8 And because the king’s ordinance was
published, many damsels were gathered to the city Susa under the hand of Gai;
and Esther was brought to Gai the keeper of the women. 9
And the damsel pleased him, and she found favour in his
sight; and he hasted to give her the things for purification, and her portion,
and the seven maidens appointed her out of the palace: and he treated her and
her maidens well in the women’s apartment. 10
But Esther discovered not her family nor her kindred: for
Mardochaeus had charged her not to tell.
11 But Mardochaeus used to walk every
day by the women’s court, to see what would become of Esther.
12 Now this was the time for a virgin to go
into the king, when she should have fulfilled twelve months; for so are the days
of purification fulfilled, six months while they are anointing themselves with
oil of myrrh, and six months with spices and women’s purifications.
13 And then the damsel goes in to
the king; and the officer to whomsoever he shall give the command, will
bring her to come in with him from the women’s apartment to the king’s chamber.
14 She enters in the evening, and in
the morning she departs to the second women’s apartment, where Gai the king’s
chamberlain is keeper of the women: and she goes not in to the king
again, unless she should be called by name.
15 And when the time. was fulfilled for
Esther the daughter of Aminadab the brother of Mardochaeus’ father to go in to
the king, she neglected nothing which the chamberlain, the women’s keeper,
commanded; for Esther found grace in the sight of all that looked upon her.
16 So Esther went in to king
Artaxerxes in the twelfth month, which is Adar, in the seventh year of his
reign. 17 And the king loved Esther,
and she found favour beyond all the other virgins: and he put on her the
queen’s crown. 18 And the king made
a banquet for all his friends and great men for seven days, and he highly
celebrated the marriage of Esther; and he made a release to those who were under
his dominion. 19 But Mardochaeus
served in the palace. 20 Now Esther
had not discovered her kindred; for so Mardochaeus commanded her, to fear God,
and perform his commandments, as when she was with him: and Esther changed not
her manner of life.
21 And two chamberlains of the king, the
chiefs of the body-guard, were grieved, because Mardochaeus was promoted; and
they sought to kill king Artaxerxes. 22
And the matter was discovered to Mardochaeus, and he made it
known to Esther, and she declared to the king the matter of the conspiracy.
23 And the king examined the two
chamberlains, and hanged them: and the king gave orders to make a note for a
memorial in the royal records of the good offices of Mardochaeus, as a
commendation.
Chapter 3
3:1 And after this king Artaxerxes
highly honoured Aman son of Amadathes, the Bugaean, and exalted him, and
set his seat above all his friends. 2
And all in the palace did him obeisance, for so the king had
given orders to do: but Mardochaeus did not do him obeisance.
3 And they in the king’s palace said to
Mardochaeus, Mardochaeus, why dost thou transgress the commands of the king?
4 Thus they spoke daily to him,
but he hearkened not unto them; so they represented to Aman that Mardochaeus
resisted the commands of the king: and Mardochaeus had shewn to them that he was
a Jew. 5 And when Aman understood
that Mardochaeus did not obeisance to him, he was greatly enraged,
6 and took counsel to destroy utterly all
the Jews who were under the rule of Artaxerxes.
7 And he made a decree in the twelfth
year of the reign of Artaxerxes, and cast lots daily and monthly, to slay in one
day the race of Mardochaeus: and the lot fell on the fourteenth day of
the month which is Adar. 8 And he
spoke to king Artaxerxes, saying, There is a nation scattered among the nations
in all thy kingdom, and their laws differ from those of all the other
nations; and they disobey the laws of the king; and it is not expedient for the
king to let them alone. 9 If it seem
good to the king, let him make a decree to destroy them: and I will remit into
the king’s treasury ten thousand talents of silver. 10
And the king took off his ring, and gave it into the hands
of Aman, to seal the decrees against the Jews. 11
And the king said to Aman, Keep the silver, and treat the nation
as thou wilt.
12 So the king’s recorders were called
in the first month, on the thirteenth day, and they wrote as Aman
commanded to the captains and governors in every province, from India even to
Ethiopia, to a hundred and twenty-seven provinces; and to the rulers of the
nations according to their several languages, in the name of king
Artaxerxes. 13 And the message
was sent by posts throughout the kingdom of Artaxerxes, to destroy utterly the
race of the Jews on the first day of the twelfth month, which is Adar, and to
plunder their goods.
And the following is the copy of the letter; The great king
Artaxerxes writes thus to the rulers and inferior governors of a hundred and
twenty-seven provinces, from India even to Ethiopia, who hold authority under
him. Ruling over many nations and having obtained dominion over the whole
world, I was minded (not elated by the confidence of power, but ever conducting
myself with great moderation and gentleness) to make the lives of my
subjects continually tranquil, desiring both to maintain the kingdom quiet and
orderly to its utmost limits, and to restore the peace desired by all
men. But when I had enquired of my counsellors how this should be brought to
pass. Aman, who excels in soundness of judgment among us, and has been
manifestly well inclined without wavering and with unshaken fidelity, and had
obtained the second post in the kingdom, informed us that a certain ill-disposed
people is mixed up with all the tribes throughout the world, opposed in their
law to every other nation, and continually neglecting the commands of the
king, so that the united government blamelessly administered by us is not
quietly established. Having then conceived that this nation alone of all
others is continually set in opposition to every man, introducing as a
change a foreign code of laws, and injuriously plotting to accomplish the worst
of evils against our interests, and against the happy establishment of the
monarchy; we signified to you in the letter written by Aman, who is set over
the public affairs and is our second governor, to destroy them all utterly
with their wives and children by the swords of the enemies, without pitying or
sparing any, on the fourteenth day of the twelfth month Adar, of the present
year; that the people aforetime and now ill-disposed to us having been
violently consigned to death in one day, may hereafter secure to us continually
a well constituted and quiet state of affairs.
14 And the copies of the letters were
published in every province; and an order was given to all the nations to be
ready against that day. 15 And the
business was hastened, and that at Susa: and the king and Aman began to
drink; but the city was troubled.
Chapter 4
4:1 But Mardochaeus having perceived
what was done, rent his garments, and put on sackcloth, and sprinkled dust upon
himself; and having rushed forth through the open street of the city, he cried
with a loud voice, A nation that has done no wrong is going to be destroyed.
2 And he came to the king’s gate,
and stood; for it was not lawful for him to enter into the palace, wearing
sackcloth and ashes. 3 And in every
province where the letters were published, there was crying and
lamentation and great mourning on the part of the Jews: they spread for
themselves sackcloth and ashes.
4 And the queen’s maids and chamberlains
went in and told her: and when she had heard what was done, she was disturbed;
and she sent to clothe Mardochaeus, and take away his sackcloth; but he
consented not. 5 So Esther called
for her chamberlain Achrathaeus, who waited upon her; and she sent to learn the
truth from Mardochaeus. 6 7 And
Mardochaeus shewed him what was done, and the promise which Aman had made the
king of ten thousand talents to be paid into the treasury, that he might
destroy the Jews. 8 And he gave him
the copy of the writing that was published in Susa concerning their
destruction, to shew to Esther; and told him to charge her to go in and intreat
the king, and to beg him for the people, remembering, said he, the days
of thy low estate, how thou wert nursed by my hand: because Aman who holds the
next place to the king has spoken against us for death. Do thou call upon the
Lord, and speak to the king concerning us, to deliver us from death.
9 So Achrathaeus went in and told her
all these words. 10 And Esther said
to Achrathaeus, Go to Mardochaeus, and say, 11
All the nations of the empire know, that whoever, man or woman,
shall go in to the king into the inner court uncalled, that person cannot live:
only to whomsoever the king shall stretch out his golden sceptre, he
shall live: and I have not been called to go into the king, for these thirty
days. 12 And Achrathaeus reported to
Mardochaeus all the words of Esther.
13 Then Mardochaeus said to Achrathaeus,
Go, and say to her, Esther, say not to thyself that thou alone wilt escape in
the kingdom, more than all the other Jews. 14
For if thou shalt refuse to hearken on this occasion, help
and protection will be to the Jews from another quarter; but thou and thy
father’s house will perish: and who knows, if thou hast been made queen for this
very occasion? 15 And Esther
sent the man that came to her to Mardochaeus, saying,
16 Go and assemble the Jews that are in
Susa, and fast ye for me, and eat not and drink not for three days, night and
day: and I also and my maidens will fast; and then I will go in to the king
contrary to the law, even if I must die. 17
So Mardochaeus went and did all that Esther commanded him.
[And he besought the Lord, making mention of all the works of the Lord; and
he said, Lord God, king ruling over all, for all things are in thy power, and
there is no one that shall oppose thee, in thy purpose to save Israel. - For
thou hast made the heaven and the earth and every wonderful thing in the
world under heaven. And thou art Lord of all, and there is no one who shall
resist thee Lord. Thou knowest all things: thou knowest, Lord, that it is not in
insolence, nor haughtiness, nor love of glory, that I have done this, to refuse
obeisance to the haughty Aman. For I would gladly have kissed the soles of his
feet for the safety of Israel. But I have done this, that I might not set the
glory of man above the glory of God: and I will not worship any one except thee,
my Lord, and I will not do these things in haughtiness. And now, O Lord God, the
King, the God of Abraam, spare thy people, for our enemies are looking
upon us to our destruction, and they have desired to destroy thine
ancient inheritance. Do not overlook thy peculiar people, whom thou hast
redeemed for thyself out of the land of Egypt. Hearken to my prayer, and be
propitious to thine inheritance, and turn our mourning into gladness, that we
may live and sing praise to thy name, O Lord; and do not utterly destroy the
mouth of them that praise thee, O Lord.
And all Israel cried with all their might, for death was before
their eyes. And queen Esther betook herself for refuge to the Lord, being taken
as it were in the agony of death. And having taken off her glorious
apparel, she put on garments of distress and mourning; and instead of grand
perfumes she filled her head with ashes and dung, and she greatly brought down
her body, and she filled every place of her glad adorning with the torn
curls of her hair.
And she besought the Lord God of Israel, and said, O my Lord, thou alone art
our king: help me who am destitute, and have no helper but thee, for my
danger is near at hand. I have heard from my birth, in the tribe of my
kindred that thou, Lord, tookest Israel out of all the nations, and our fathers
out of all their kindred for a perpetual inheritance, and hast wrought for them
all that thou hast said. And now we have sinned before thee, and thou hast
delivered us into the hands of our enemies, because we honoured their gods: thou
art righteous, O Lord. But now they have not been contented with the bitterness
of our slavery, but have laid their hands on the hands of their idols, in
order to abolish the decree of thy mouth, and utterly to destroy thine
inheritances, and to stop the mouth of them that praise thee, and to extinguish
the glory of thine house and thine alter, and to open the mouth of the Gentiles
to speak the praises of vanities, and in order that a mortal king
should be admired for ever.
O Lord, do not resign thy scepter to them that are not, and let them not
laugh at our fall, but turn their counsel, against themselves, and make an
example of him who has begun to injure us. Remember us, O Lord,
manifest thyself in the time of our affliction, and encourage me, O King of
gods, and ruler of all dominion. Put harmonious speech into my mouth before the
lion, and turn his heart to hate him that fights against us, to the utter
destruction of him that consent with him. But deliver us by thine hand, and help
me who am destitute, and have none but the, O Lord. Thou knowest all
things, and knowest that I hate the glory of transgressors, and that I abhor the
couch of the uncircumcised, and of every stranger. Thou knowest my necessity,
for I abhor the symbol of my proud station, which is upon my head in the days of
my splendour: I abhor it as a menstruous cloth, and I wear it not in the days of
my tranquility. And thy handmaid has not eaten at the table of Aman, and
I have not honoured the banquet of the king, neither have I drunk wine of
libations. Neither has thy handmaid rejoiced since the day of my promotion until
now, except in thee, O Lord God of Abraam. O god, who has power over all,
hearken to the voice of the desperate, and deliver us from the hand of them that
devise mischief; and deliver me from my fear.
Chapter 5
5:1 And it came to pass on the third
day, when she had ceased praying, that she put off her mean dress, and put on
her glorious apparel. And being splendidly arrayed, and having called
upon God the Overseer and Preserver of all things, she took her two maids, and
she leaned upon one, as a delicate female, and the other followed bearing her
train. And she was blooming in the perfection of her beauty; and her face
was cheerful, and it were benevolent, but her heart was
straitened for fear. And having passed through all the doors, she stood before
the king: and he was sitting upon his royal throne, and he had put on all his
glorious apparel, covered all over with gold and precious stones, and was
very terrible. And having raised his face resplendent with glory, he looked with
intense anger: and the queen fell, and changed her colour as she fainted; and
she bowed herself upon the head of the maid that went before her. But God
changed the spirit of the king gentleness, and in intense feeling he sprang from
off his throne, and took her into his arms, until she recovered: and he
comforted her with peaceable words, and said to her, What is the matter,
Esther? I am thy brother; be of good cheer, thou shalt not die, for our
command is openly declared to thee, Draw nigh.
2 And having raised the golden sceptre
he laid it upon her neck, and embraced her, and said, Speak to me. And she said
to him, I saw thee, my lord, as an angel of God, and my heart was
troubled for fear of thy glory; for thou, my lord, art to be wondered at,
and thy face is full of grace. And while she was speaking, she fainted
and fell. Then the king was troubled, and all his servants comforted her.
3 And the king said, What wilt thou,
Esther? and what is thy request? ask even to the half of my kingdom, and
it shall be thine. 4 And Esther
said, To-day is my great day: if then it seem good to the king, let both him and
Aman come to the feast which I will prepare this day. 5
And the king said, Hasten Aman hither, that we may perform
the word of Esther. So they both come to the feast of which Esther had spoken.
6 And at the banquet the king said to
Esther, What is thy request, queen Esther? speak, and thou shalt
have all that thou requirest. 7 And
she said, My request and my petition are: 8
if I have found favour in the sight of the king, let the king and
Aman come again to-morrow to the feast which I shall prepare for them, and
to-morrow I will do the same.
9 So Aman went out from the king very
glad and merry: but when Aman saw Mardochaeus the Jew in the court, he
was greatly enraged. 10 And having
gone into his own house, he called his friends, and his wife Zosara.
11 And he shewed them his wealth, and the
glory with which the king had invested him, and how he had caused him to take
precedence and bear chief rule in the kingdom. 12
And Aman said, The queen has called no one to the feast with the
king but me, and I am invited to-morrow. 13
But these things please me not, while I see Mardochaeus the Jew
in the court. 14 And Zosara his wife
and his friends said to him, Let there be a gallows made for thee of fifty
cubits, and in the morning do thou speak to the king, and let Mardochaeus be
hanged on the gallows: but do thou go in to the feast with the king, and be
merry. And the saying pleased Aman, and the gallows was prepared.
Chapter 6
6:1 But the Lord removed sleep from the
king that night: and he told his servant to bring in the books, the registers of
daily events, to read to him. 2 And
he found the records written concerning Mardochaeus, how he had told the king
concerning the two chamberlains of the king, when they were keeping guard, and
sought to lay hands on Artaxerxes.
3 And the king said, What honour or
favour have we done to Mardochaeus? And the king’s servants said, Thou hast not
done anything to him. 4 And while
the king was enquiring about the kindness of Mardochaeus, behold, Aman was
in the court. And the king said, Who is in the court? Now Aman was come
in to speak to the king, that he should hang Mardochaeus on the gallows, which
he had prepared. 5 And the king’s
servants said, Behold, Aman stands in the court. And the king said, Call him.
6 And the king said to Aman, What shall
I do to the man whom I wish to honour? And Aman said within himself, Whom would
the king honour but myself? 7 and he
said to the king, As for the man whom the king wishes to honour,
8 let the king’s servants bring the robe of
fine linen which the king puts on, and the horse on which the king rides,
9 and let him give it to one of the
king’s noble friends, and let him array the man whom the king loves; and let him
mount him on the horse, and proclaim through the street of the city, saying,
Thus shall it be done to every man whom the king honours.
10 Then the king said to Aman, Thou hast
well said: so do to Mardochaeus the Jew, who waits in the palace, and let not a
word of what thou hast spoken be neglected.
11 So Aman took the robe and the horse,
and arrayed Mardochaeus, and mounted him on the horse, and went through the
street of the city, and proclaimed, saying, Thus shall it be to every man whom
the king wishes to honour.
12 And Mardochaeus returned to the
palace: but Aman went home mourning, and having his head covered.
13 And Aman related the events that had
befallen him to Zosara his wife, and to his friends: and his friends and
his wife said to him, If Mardochaeus be of the race of the Jews, and
thou hast begun to be humbled before him, thou wilt assuredly fall, and thou
wilt not be able to withstand him, for the living God is with him.
14 While they were yet speaking, the
chamberlains arrived, to hasten Aman to the banquet which Esther had prepared.
Chapter 7
7:1 So the king and Aman went in to
drink with the queen. 2 And the king
said to Esther at the banquet on the second day, What is it, queen Esther? and
what is thy request, and what is thy petition? and it shall be
done for thee, to the half of my kingdom. 3
And she answered and said, If I have found favour in the sight of
the king, let my life be granted to my petition, and my people to my
request. 4 For both I and my people
are sold for destruction, and pillage, and slavery; both we and our
children for bondmen and bondwomen: and I consented not to it, for the slanderer
is not worthy of the king’s palace. 5
And the king said, Who is this that has dared to do this
thing? 6 And Esther said, the
adversary is Aman, this wicked man. Then Aman was troubled before the
king and the queen.
7 And the king rose up from the banquet
to go into the garden: and Aman began to intreat the queen; for he saw that he
was in an evil case.
8 And the king returned from the garden;
and Aman had fallen upon the bed, intreating the queen. And the king said, Wilt
thou even force my wife in my house? And when Aman heard it, he changed
countenance. 9 And Bugathan, one of
the chamberlains, said to the king, Behold, Aman has also prepared a gallows for
Mardochaeus, who spoke concerning the king, and a gallows of fifty cubits high
has been set up in the premises of Aman. And the king said, Let him be hanged
thereon. 10 So Aman was hanged on
the gallows that had been prepared for Mardochaeus: and then the king’s wrath
was appeased.
Chapter 8
8:1 And in that day king Artaxerxes gave
to Esther all that belonged to Aman the slanderer: and Mardochaeus was called by
the king; for Esther had shewn that he was related to her.
2 And the king took the ring which he had
taken away from Aman, and gave it to Mardochaeus: and Esther appointed
Mardochaeus over all that had been Aman’s.
3 And she spoke yet again to the king,
and fell at his feet, and besought him to do away the mischief of Aman,
and all that he had done against the Jews. 4
Then the king stretched out to Esther the golden sceptre: and
Esther arose to stand near the king. 5
And Esther said, If it seem good to thee, and I have found favour
in thy sight, let an order be sent that the letters sent by Aman may be
reversed, that were written for the destruction of the Jews, who are in thy
kingdom. 6 For how shall I be able
to look upon the affliction of my people, and how shall I be able to survive the
destruction of my kindred?
7 And the king said to Esther, If I have
given and freely granted thee all that was Aman’s, and hanged him on a gallows,
because he laid his hands upon the Jews, what dost thou yet further seek?
8 Write ye also in my name, as it seems
good to you, and seal it with my ring: for whatever orders are
written at the command of the king, and sealed with my ring, it is not lawful to
gainsay them.
9 So the scribes were called in the
first-month, which is Nisan, on the three and twentieth day of the same year;
and orders were written to the Jews, whatever the king had
commanded to the local governors and chiefs of the satraps, from India even to
Ethiopia, a hundred and twenty-seven satraps, according to the several
provinces, according to their dialects.
10 And they were written by order of the
king, and sealed with his ring, and they sent the letters by the posts:
11 wherein he charged them to use their
own laws in every city, and to help each other, and to treat their
adversaries, and those who attacked them, as they pleased,
12 on one day in all the kingdom of
Artaxerxes, on the thirteenth day of the twelfth month, which is Adar.
13 And let the copies be posted in
conspicuous places throughout the kingdom, and let all the Jews be ready against
this day, to fight against their enemies.
And the following is the copy of the letter of the orders.
The great king Artaxerxes sends greetings to the rulers of
provinces in a hundred and twenty-seven satrapies, from India to
Ethiopia, even to those who are faithful to our interests. Many who have been
frequently honored by the most abundant kindness of their benefactors have
conceived ambitious designs, and not only endeavour to hurt our subjects, but
moreover, not being able to bear prosperity, they also endeavour to plot against
their own benefactors. And they not only would utterly abolish gratitude from
among men, but also, elated by the boastings of men who are strangers to all
that is good, they supposed that they shall escape the sin-hating vengeance of
the ever-seeing God. And oftentimes evil exhortation has made partakers
of the guilt of shedding innocent blood, and has involved in irremediable
calamities, many of those who had been appointed to offices of authority, who
had been entrusted with the management of their friends' affairs; while men,
by the false sophistry of an evil disposition, have deceived the simple candour
of the ruling powers. And it is possible to see this, not so much from
more ancient traditionary accounts, as it is immediately in your power to see
it by examining what things have been wickedly perpetrated by the baseness
of men unworthily holding power. And it is right to take heed with regard
to the future, that we may maintain the government in undistributed peace for
all men, adopting needful changes, and ever judging those cases which
come under our notices, with truly equitable decision.
For whereas Aman, a Macedonian, the son of Amadathes, in reality an alien
from the blood of the Persians, and differing widely from our mild course of
government, having been hospitable entertained by us, obtained so large a share
of our universal kindness, as to be called our father, and to continue the
person next to the royal throne, reverenced of all; he however, overcome
by the pride of his station, endeavored to deprive us of our dominion,
and our life: having by various and subtle artifices demanded for destruction
both Mardochaeus our deliverer and perpetual benefactor, and Esther the
blameless consort of our kingdom, with their whole nation. For by these
methods he thought, having surprised us in a defenceless state, to transfer the
dominion of the Persians to the Macedonians. But we find that the Jews, who have
been consigned to destruction by the most abominable of men, are not
malefactors, but living according to the justest laws, and being the sons of the
living God, the most high and mighty, who maintains the kingdom. to us as well
as to our forefathers, in the most excellent order.
Ye will therefore do well in refusing to obey the letter sent by Aman the son
of Amadathes, because he that has done these things, has been hanged with his
whole family at the gates of Susa, Almighty God having swiftly returned to him a
worthy recompence, We enjoin you then, having openly published a copy of
this letter in every place, to give the Jews permission to use their own lawful
customs, and to strengthen them, that on the thirteenth of the twelfth month
Adar, on the self-same day, they may defend themselves against those who attack
them in a time of affliction. For in the place of the destruction of the chosen
race, Almighty God has granted them this time of gladness.
Do ye therefore also, among your notable feasts, keep a distinct day
with all festivity, that both now and hereafter it may be a day of deliverance
to us and who are well disposed toward the Persians, but to those that plotted
against us a memorial of destruction. And every city and province collectively,
which shall not do accordingly, shall be consumed with vengeance by spear and
fire: it shall be made not only inaccessible to men, but most hateful to wild
beasts and birds for ever.] And let the copies be posted in conspicuous places
throughout the kingdom and let all the Jews be ready against this day, to fight
against their enemies.
14 So the horsemen went forth with haste
to perform the king’s commands; and the ordinance was also published in Susa.
15 And Mardochaeus went forth robed in
the royal apparel, and wearing a golden crown, and a diadem of fine purple
linen: and the people in Susa saw it and rejoiced.
16 And the Jews had light and gladness,
17 in every city and province wherever the
ordinance was published: wherever the proclamation took place, the Jews had joy
and gladness, feasting and mirth: and many of the Gentiles were circumcised, and
became Jews, for fear of the Jews.
Chapter 9
9:1 For in the twelfth month, on the
thirteenth day of the month which is Adar, the letters written by the king
arrived. 2 In that day the
adversaries of the Jews perished: for no one resisted, through fear of them.
3 For the chiefs of the satraps, and
the princes and the royal scribes, honoured the Jews; for the fear of
Mardochaeus lay upon them. 4 For the
order of the king was in force, that he should be celebrated in all the kingdom.
5 6 And in the city Susa the Jews
slew five hundred men: 7 both
Pharsannes, and Delphon and Phasga, 8
and Pharadatha, and Barea, and Sarbaca, 9
and Marmasima, and Ruphaeus, and Arsaeus, and Zabuthaeus,
10 the ten sons of Aman the son of
Amadathes the Bugaean, the enemy of the Jews, and they plundered their
property on the same day: 11 and
the number of them that perished in Susa was rendered to the king.
12 And the king said to Esther, The Jews
have slain five hundred men in the city Susa; and how, thinkest thou, have they
used them in the rest of the country? What then dost thou yet ask, that it may
be done for thee?
13 And Esther said to the king, let it
be granted to the Jews so to treat them tomorrow as to hand the ten sons of Aman.
14 And he permitted it to be so
done; and he gave up to the Jews of the city the bodies of the sons of Aman to
hang. 15 And the Jews assembled in
Susa on the fourteenth day of Adar, and slew three hundred men, but
plundered no property.
16 And the rest of the Jews who were in
the kingdom assembled, and helped one another, and obtained rest from their
enemies: for they destroyed fifteen thousand of them on the thirteenth day
of Adar, but took no spoil. 17 And
they rested on the fourteenth of the same month, and kept it as a day of rest
with joy and gladness. 18 And the
Jews in the city Susa assembled also on the fourteenth day and rested;
and they kept also the fifteenth with joy and gladness. 19
On this account then it is that the Jews dispersed
in every foreign land keep the fourteenth of Adar as a holy day with joy,
sending portions each to his neighbour.
20 And Mardochaeus wrote these things in
a book, and sent them to the Jews, as many as were in the kingdom of Artaxerxes,
both them that were near and them that were afar off, 21
to establish these as joyful days, and to keep the
fourteenth and fifteenth of Adar; 22
for on these days the Jews obtained rest from their enemies; and
as to the month, which was Adar, in which a change was made for them,
from mourning to joy, and from sorrow to a good day, to spend the whole of it
in good days of feasting and gladness, sending portions to their friends,
and to the poor.
23 And the Jews consented to this
accordingly as Mardochaeus wrote to them, 24
shewing how Aman the son of Amadathes the Macedonian
fought against them, how he made a decree and cast lots to destroy them utterly;
25 also how he went in to the king,
telling him to hang Mardochaeus: but all the calamities he tried to bring
upon the Jews came upon himself, and he was hanged, and his children.
26 Therefore these days were called Phrurae,
because of the lots; (for in their language they are called Phrurae;)because of
the words of this letter, and because of all they suffered on this
account, and all that happened to them. 27
And Mardochaeus established it, and the Jews took upon
themselves, and upon their seed, and upon those that were joined to them to
observe it, neither would they on any account behave differently: but these
days were to be a memorial kept in every generation, and city, and
family, and province. 28 And these
days of the Phrurae, said they,shall be kept for ever, and their memorial
shall not fail in any generation.
29 And queen Esther, the daughter of
Aminadab, and Mardochaeus the Jew, wrote all that they had done, and the
confirmation of the letter of Phrurae. 30 31
And Mardochaeus and Esther the queen appointed a fast for
themselves privately, even at that time also having formed their plan against
their own health. 32 And Esther
established it by a command for ever, and it was written for a memorial.
Chapter 10
10:1 And the king levied a tax
upon his kingdom both by land and sea. 2
And as for his strength and valour, and the wealth and
glory of his kingdom, behold, they are written in the book of the Persians and
Medes, for a memorial. 3 And
Mardochaeus was viceroy to king Artaxerxes, and was a great man in the kingdom,
and honoured by the Jews, and passed his life beloved of all his nation.
And Mardocheus said, These things have been done of
God. For I remember the dream which I had concerning these matters: for not one
particular of them has failed. There was the little fountain which became
a river, and there was light, and the sun and much water. The river is Esther,
whom the king married, and made queen. And the two serpents are I and Aman. And
the nations are those nations that combined to destroy the name of the
Jews. But as for my nation, this is Israel, even they that cried
to God and were delivered: for the Lord delivered his people. And the Lord
rescued us out of all these calamities; and God wrought such signs and great
wonders as have not been done among the nations. Therefore did he ordain two
lots. One for the people of God, and one for all the other nations. And
these two lots came for an appointed season, and for a day of judgment, before
God, and for all the nations. And God remembered his people, and vindicated his
inheritance. And they shall observe these days in the month Adar, on the
fourteenth and on the fifteenth day of the month, with an assembly, and
joy and gladness before God, throughout the generations for ever among his
people Israel.
In the fourth year of the reign of Ptolemeus and
Cleopatra, Dositheus, who said he was a priest and Levite, and Ptolemeus his
son, brought this epistle of Phurim, which they said was the same, and that
Lysimachus the son of Ptolemeus, that was in Jerusalem, had interpreted it.
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