B.A.S.I.C. Reconciliation
THE MAIN IDEA
BASICs will experience the providence and the salvation of God.
MAMMON SEPARATES BASICs
Mammon means worldly wealth, with the emphasis on worldly. It has a sense of idolatry, greediness, and covetousness. And we see a perfect example of mammon in how Xerxes showed off his vast wealth (verses 3-8). And then he threw a banquet for seven straight days, where again, he showed off his vast wealth. Queen Vashti also threw a party for the women in the palace, even though Persian custom would have husbands and wives attend banquets together, and they forced all the other Persian couples to separate during the feast, as well. We can see how Xerxes and Vashti were not really yoked together as husband and wife. The details of the narrative suggest that their “vast wealth,” so prominently on display was a key contributing factor to their separated-ness as husband and wife. In life, we find that you can either pursue relationships or you can pursue mammon. “You can have it all” is a lie of the devil. Mammon always separates people, men and women, husbands and wives, and hinders men and women from finding and experiencing a loving, lifelong, covenant marriage in Christ.
PRIDE SEPARATES BASICs
Because of drunkenness and also pride, Xerxes summoned Vashti so that he could show her off to all the nobles and officers. Doing such a thing was extremely offensive in Persian. By doing so, Xerxes was sending a loud and clear message to Vashti: you are my property. Vashti audaciously refused, and in her response we get a very strong sense that this was not an isolated incident, but was just the climax of a power play that had been going on between them for some time. And so the king of the known world consults his advisors to appeal to Persian law in order to deal with her disobedience. But there was no law. And so they made one up. Their abuse of power is on glorious display! And while Vashti was a victim of injustice, we cannot think of her as a hero in this story. She didn’t act out of heroism, because heroism comes from a noble concern for what is right and just. She responded simply out of pride herself. When it says that her position would be given to someone who is better than she (verse 19), that is pointing to Esther, who never responded with pride, but always with wisdom and humility. Pride always separates brothers and sisters in Christ.
CHRIST RECONCILES BASICs
Healthy, godly marriages centered in Jesus Christ are the backbone and the engine of the kingdom of God, the church of Jesus Christ, and God’s plan of salvation for the world in Him. But women are leaving the evangelical church at an alarming rate. And that is alarming because (1) women have been the backbone of the church ever since the church was born; (2) while church engagement for men is on the rise, church engagement for women is on the decline; and (3) women’s engagement in the church has been steady throughout history until now. The Book of Esther is about the providence of God and the deliverance of His people from evil, even when He seems far away. We don’t see any dramatic miracles being performed in Esther, but we see God’s mighty hand and work throughout. And God’s mighty hand is always at work through the faithfulness and humility of brothers and sisters in Christ, like Esther, and like Mordecai. Xerxes and Vashti are the warning. But if Christian men and women would understand and pursue the original value of marriage as God ordained it, BASICs will experience the providence and salvation and power of God in our lives.
DISCUSSION QUESTION
Why do you think men and women are getting married later and having children later?