Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Esther -- Part 2 : Dr. Ariel Silver
Episode Date: July 24, 2022Dr. Ariel Silver continues and explores how God sometimes seems hidden, yet helps us act in seemingly impossible times where action is required. Please rate and review the podcast!Show Notes (English..., French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive ProducersDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing & SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Show Notes/TranscriptsJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Rough Video EditorAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsKrystal Roberts: French TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-piano
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two of this week's podcast.
I want to highlight how it is that Esther will know that she's not in the end facing
a death threat, but that she has been received by the king, and that's because he will extend
his golden scepter. So it's his way of indicating
should someone come unannounced, unsummoned, uninvited, the king has a choice himself to make, whether or
not to extend that golden scepter, whether to withhold his favor or whether to extend it. And in this
case, and maybe it's not a surprise given what we've already seen about
how much it is that he seems to like Esther. He extends that golden scepter.
Ariel, can I ask you a question? There's this moment in verse 16, I wanted to talk about. She says,
if I perish, I perish. She comes to this moment, what would you call this? This is like an acceptance
of the Lord's will.
That's a good question. It doesn't sound like she's saying, if we're faithful enough, I won't die.
She's saying, if I die, I die. Yeah. It's kind of like Daniel and his friends. God can save me, but if not,
you know, it's kind of that kind of Daniel and his friends moment. But if not, yeah.
These are both what we call exilic stories, right? Both Daniel and Esther are stories of exile.
As I mentioned at the beginning, they differ a little bit because
with Daniel, it's mostly a survival story. Let's get through this.
With Esther, she uses it as an opportunity. It is an exile story for them both,
and it is existential for them both. I think they already realize that they are a people that have been enslaved.
They have been oppressed.
They have been left to wander.
They have been taken into exile.
There have been threats of extermination before.
It responds at one level to the condition in which they find themselves.
If I perish, I perish.
And Mordekyde says this to her.
Look, if you don't do this, help will arise from another place, and you're going to die
anyway.
So it's sort of death or death, or maybe there is this slim chance that this is going
to work out, that we can be preserved. It is going to require
a tremendous amount of careful thought on Esther's part. And this speaks to some of the
things I mentioned earlier. This is a book about very creative, closely inspired solutions.
And that's why the fasting is so important. I'm'm gonna go in search of the answer.
I'm not gonna presume it.
I'm not gonna act on my own genius alone.
Right, I don't believe that that's the path to salvation, right?
According to the genius of my own creation.
No, she's looking for spiritual answers.
She's looking for spiritual solutions.
And when we pick it up in chapter 5, the King does receive Esther.
So the immediate question is, well, okay, she's made it past the very first test. She hasn't
been deposed. She isn't being sent to the gallows. Is this the moment? Is she going to
reveal her identity? As a Jew, he doesn't know. He doesn't know that this decree impacts
her. He might be mortified if he did. He doesn't know that. Is she going to reveal her Jewishness? Is she going to
ask for their preservation? You know what she does? She invites the king to a dinner party.
That's what she does. And she says, will you invite Haman to come with you?
So she's taking this one very strategic piece at a time.
She's not pouring her whole heart out to her husband all at once. And maybe there are
moments when such a solution is appropriate, but she realizes she has to tread very lightly,
and she's got to proceed with an immense amount of caution and
Insight and understanding and so she says will you come to a banquet? I'd like to make you some food
And I'd like you to invite your best friend your advisor
Haman to come with you the King's asking questions here. Why the beautiful thing is that
the very first thing he says to her, before she even asks,
you come to this dinner party, he says, Esther, what would you like?
I'm ready to give it to you up to half of the kingdom. You are my queen.
You would think that would be an invitation for her to lay it all out. Let's take care of this quickly.
He certainly gives her an opening to do that.
And he certainly responds with,
I would say for an ancient king,
that's a pretty generous offer.
You're right.
I'm prepared to give you whatever you ask for
up to half of the kingdom.
That's not bad for a woman who hasn't been his queen
for very long and is coming to him unannounced.
That's a pretty generous response.
So he offers that. She simply says, you know, I'd like you to come unannounced. That's a pretty generous response. So he offers that. She simply says,
you know, I'd like you to come to this banquet. I'd like to make some food for you. I'd like to
have a meal with you. Break bread together. The other thing that's happening in chapter 5,
that's really important, is that Haman is just still that bothered by Mordecai's insubordination.
And he's not satisfied with his larger plan
to have all of the Jews exterminated.
Before that moment comes,
he would like to see Mordekai himself hung.
Let's get him out of my line of sight.
I really don't want to have to deal with him
on a daily basis anymore.
I don't want to be reminded that there's
one person in the kingdom who won't bow to me.
So why don't I do this?
And I guess before he decides that he's going to develop this plot to hang Mordeky, he's
bothered by it, he goes to his wife, Zerish, and says, what should I do?
And she's credited with coming up with the idea.
Well, let's have some gallows built and you can request to have him hung on those gallows.
That's probably the other really significant thing
that happens in chapter five.
So we've got the stages set for a banquet.
Esther has, her life has been spared,
sort of at the first cut.
And it looks like Mordekin might die a quick death.
It's interesting.
Haman thinks his luck is come in.
Look at him.
I've been called to dinner with the king and queen.
And all I gotta do is have Mordecai die,
yet all this availeth me nothing so long as I see Mordecai,
the Jew sitting at the king's gate.
I want him dead.
It's fascinating in this story to see Haman kind of being set up for disaster.
He has no idea it's coming.
No, he has no idea it's coming in.
This is a tiny detail, but imagine how clever that was of Esther to invite Haman to this
banquet.
Did she realize that Haman would derive such pleasure from it, that this would puff him
up, that this would make him feel even more special and important.
I still marvel at Esther's strategy.
I think she was brilliant in the way that she goes about this.
And so the first banquet is held.
And what happens?
What does Esther do? Does she then lay out her plan?
Does she then reveal her identity? Does she tell
her sad tale and request a stay or a reversal of the decree? No. She simply asked them to come
again for a second banquet. And she also says, I will let you know why I've called you. I'll reveal my concern.
But even when she prepares the first banquet,
they gather and the first thing that the king says is,
he repeats his offer, Esther, what would you like?
I'll give you what do you need?
Yes, whatever you need.
Here's the credit card.
Take half the kingdom.
And she restrains herself.
She doesn't take half the kingdom.
She just says, could we have dinner again? Could we have another banquet?
That's where we leave it at the end of chapter five.
And they're making these gallows for Mordekai having no clue that he's making his own.
That's the no idea. And what happens next is this kind of lovely turn of events
that you couldn't have predicted.
And you wondered, did Esther know, was there any way for her to have figured this out?
That at the beginning of the next chapter, the king has insomnia.
He cannot sleep.
He's not that he dreams of dream per se.
He's just thinking about things, thinking about past events.
He's remembering the book of records and all of the intrigues and exploits of the court that are recorded and go on and he goes,
wasn't there a time in the past where someone helped foil a plan, a plot against
me? I could have sworn that something like that happened. And he has the record
brought to him and he reads it and he discovers that, oh, yes, there
was this guy named Mordecai who helped unveil this plan on my life by these two advisors.
And so we become reminded.
Let's talk again and again and again about the power of remembering.
And usually in the context of the need to remember God,
the need to remember all that God has done for us.
Here we have another instance of remembering.
So important, it's not specifically tied to remembering God and the salvation
that he provides, it's an experience of the King,
remembering a way in which he was saved.
The outgrowth of that remembering leads to the king, remembering a way in which he was saved, the outgrowth of that
remembering leads to the kind of remembering that is more essential and
providential to deliver it and to actual deliver it. So it's another really
interesting instance of the power of remembering and what that can bring to
our minds, the things that we become more grateful about
because we have remembered them, the things that we see more clearly because we remember them.
And the king is brought to a moment of truth. He remembers that his life was saved. And he remembers
because of the record that was written, the power of writing down the
record, the reason why God's people have always been implored to keep records and to teach
the things that they write in those records to their children so that they would know
to what source, to look for salvation.
He remembers and there's a record there that aids his memory. And that record
leads him back to Mordecai. So what does he do?
Haman comes in the next day and without disclosing the name of Mordecai, the king says,
Haman, what should I do for someone I would want to honor?
This is such a... Man, it's almost making a laugh, right?
Yeah, it's just, it's a comic story.
It's on the edge of comedy and tragedy.
It's just, I don't know if I can even express to you
the masterful quality of this text.
For me, it's like the Book of Hebrews in the New Testament.
It masterfully encapsulates the sort of the whole story,
the whole schimada of deliverance.
It's a different approach in the book of Hebrews.
We really learn about the role of Christ as our high priest and the author of our salvation
and all of these things.
But the book of Esther is similarly well crafted and similarly plays on multiple really interesting spiritual and emotional and intellectual levels
and gives us a view of how it is that the divine works and how those spiritual realities can come
to pass in our own lives. And the king says, how and what would you do? What would you do for someone
who you really wanted to show favor to?
And he thinks it's him.
He thinks it's him. He thinks that he is the guy and he takes it to the nth degree.
I would lay out all these carpets and I would dress him in this and I'd set him on a
horse or a camel or whatever and and I would parade him throughout the streets wonderful clothes and I would have
or whatever, and I would parade him throughout the streets. Wonderful clothes, and I would have proclamations go out and bands and music and food and you name
it.
And he has no idea that it's not him.
He thinks that finally he has hit the jackpot to end all jackpots.
He thought it was pretty good that he became his right-hand man and pretty good that he got
invited to this banquet with the king and ester.
And now he goes, now I'm going to be honored.
Yeah, I am the man already envisioning his, his reign whenever the king kicks
the can. And he has no idea that this is designed for Mordeky.
So the very person that he wants to hang is the person who is then honored
according to the plan that Haman has set forth.
I would love to see his face at that moment.
Chapter six, verse 10.
The King said to Haman,
make haste, take everything you've just talked about,
and do so to Mordeky, the Jew.
Wait, what?
The first job drop.
It's a huge jaw drop.
And then it says he hasted to his house morning
having his head covered.
Of all the people the King would choose, right?
Oh.
No, it's really interesting that you, John,
that you picked out that one verse because we're going
to see in the next chapter, the very swift demise of Haman.
And we know that he is on his way out
because his head is covered.
That is the sign that he's being sent to the executioner.
But in the chapter preceding it, he covers his own head,
in grief and in shame that this plot has gone awry.
This is not what I plan for.
This is not what I intended.
This is not what I wanted to have happened.
He doesn't know just yet how bad it is.
In both instances, there's a covering of the head.
There's a masking, a veiling, and a real erasure, if you will.
He anticipates it himself, even though he doesn't exactly know.
So that's chapter 6.
Ariel, the timing of this really makes me think of a quote from Elder Bednar.
I've quoted this talk many
times on the podcast. I have to apologize. I quote it so often. It's called the tender
mercies of the Lord from Elder David A. Bednar.
It was his first address as an apostle and it is beautiful.
The fact that the king has the memory of Mordekai saving his life. On a night, the Kudnik
couldn't sleep.
And he said, let me read, right?
What are the odds that he's gonna remember Mordekai?
Elder Bednar says in this talk,
the tender mercies of the Lord,
some may count this experience as simply
as a nice coincidence,
but I testify that the tender mercies of the Lord are real.
They do not occur randomly or merely by coincidence.
And then this statement, often the Lord's timing of his tender mercies helps us both to discern
and acknowledge them.
God isn't listed by name in chapter 6, but he surely is there in this timing of having
Mordecai be remembered.
At the very same time, Haman is building the gallows for him.
It's just, I think you can get,
that's the hidden God that you talked about earlier, right?
And one or both of you made some mention of
this text as being a text full of what appear to be coincidences.
Yeah.
Of things happening, thus in such a way, by coincidence,
we can also read them as moments of real mercy. And that's true to even with miracles in our lives. We have to choose to see it as a
miracle. It's not a miracle de facto, it's not a miracle. It's not a miracle de facto, it's not a miracle.
Biblical, right?
Without dispute, we're choosing to see that experience as an experience that
involved the hand of the Lord, not as something that just randomly occurred,
but as something that involved his mercy for us, his great and profound love for us.
The point is we choose to see it that way.
To someone else that might be a coincidence.
I see almost in Hamam a type of the adversary.
I think I'm going to win, I'm going to get you,
and then it's all reversed in the end.
Now, let's keep going,
cause I wanna hear what happens.
Okay.
So in chapter seven, we come to the,
perhaps more consequential second banquet or dinner party.
It's interesting because at this point,
Haman already begins to see that there are problems in paradise.
In his paradise.
He thought he was going to be honored in this grandiose way, his sworn enemy instead.
You know, the person he wants to get rid of is elevated.
You know, that's a problem for Haman.
Things are about to get worse.
It's about to get much worse.
It's about to get much, much, much worse.
I think chapter seven is really like we should know it almost as well as we know chapter four.
It's a consequential chapter and she invites the king and Hammond to the second banquet.
And it is here that she does finally announce her identity, who she is.
And she sort of as a corollary to that,
acknowledges that this plot, this decree of genocide is a decree against her and her people.
This is really the moment where she moves from being an unknown Jew to being
a known Jew, right, from being veiled to being unveiled. And at this moment, I think
Haman begins to realize, oh, this is really not good. The King loves Esther. I plotted this decree of extinction against her people, which also involve her.
This is a problem, and the king sort of begins to put all the pieces together.
He begins to sort of see it all finally, all at once, and he's so upset, and probably
primarily upset with Haman, that he has done this, and he's so upset, and probably primarily upset with
Haman that he has done this, and he has put himself, the king, in what I think
the king would see as a exposed position, where he has made a decree that
involves his wife, in a way that he would never have done if he had known that his
wife was a Jew, Haman chose to keep many things from him.
So he walks away for a minute.
I think trying to collect himself, to compose himself,
and while he's gone, Haman basically begs Esther
for his life, pleads with her,
realizing that the tables have turned entirely
now.
And it's not just a matter of who's being honored with great clothing and a nice horse ride
out in the courtyard or in the capital city, but I'm looking at a pretty grim prospect
for myself.
And so he starts to plead for his life.
Well, Esther is sort of reclining on a couch.
It's a banquet.
And he bows before her, but it puts him in a position
where he's basically on the bed with her.
Just looked really bad.
It looks absolutely terrible.
And the king comes back into the room
and he realizes, this is not good. I was viciously upset with you when
I left. When I come back, you've only added insult to injury.
You're attacking the queen. You know, that is really the moment when
the king responds, has Hammond's head covered and he is escorted out of the banquet.
Alza Bredner should give a talk on this called the bitter ironies of the Lord of
the World to put God. Everything just goes downhill for this guy. He was going to
have an entire people annihilated. He built his own gallows. He did build his own
gallows and that shouldn't be lost on any reader and it wasn't just
Physically that he built his own gallows. He was building his own gallows from the beginning of this story. Right. It's a cautionary tale about
the limits to which
Revenge can be taken
or the great cost of
pursuing a program of revenge
or the great cost of pursuing a program of revenge, that things will not work out if that is your focus.
You cannot be elevated on the backs or the blood of others.
It's a very compensatory tale for the Jews.
It's very satisfying to see that such a malevolent character
would have justice, real justice done to him
and that his intricate plot to kill them
all would come to naught. It has a level of, you know, real irony. Yeah, irony and melodramatic
satisfaction that he meets it in. Even if not everyone looks like common, we're far more multi-dimensional, but it's a cautionary tale against pursuing,
we'll call it vigilante justice.
Yeah, revenge, pride.
Yes, there really is no good that can come from trying to take the law or the power into
one's own hands. And it's not even just that he
now is returning. It's far beyond eye for an eye or tooth for tooth. This is not revended
on any kind of equal measure. It's not even that. He was slighted in a small way. Mordecai
would not bow to him. And before we know it, he's going to personally preside over Mordecai's demise and watch the killing of all of the Jews in the eventual hopes that he becomes the king.
This is a real desire to stick it.
And so it functions as a warning against pursuing that kind of course in one's life, either in large ways, you know, like here or in very small ways.
I think Esther is teaching us that it's not the path of virtue.
Elder Uktorf gave a talk in October of 2010 called Pride and the Priesthood.
He talked about pride is the great sin of self elevation.
Similar to what you just said, he said, pride turns to envy.
Pride looks bitterly at those who have
better possessions, more talents, or greater possessions than they do. They seek to hurt, diminish,
and tear others down in a misguided and unworthy attempt at self-elevation. That seems to be
Hommons downfall, his self-elevation and his pride completely blinded him to the fact that he was building his own
destruction. I mean, there's a level of irony there that's scary. There's a verse in 1st Nephi
14. So it's Nephi seeing his own longer version of Lehigh's dream where he says the great pit of
destruction, which was digged for the children of men men she'll be filled by those who digged it.
So it was kind of like,
you made this galo and you're the one
who's gonna get hung on it.
You were thinking of damaged somebody else
or to kill someone else.
And that yeah, that's the irony you mentioned.
It's such an ironic, sad, and also like I can see
what you would say Ariel, did you see in this?
Compensatory, you got what you deserved. You got unto others what you were trying to do to them,
where you've got what you were doing unto others done to you. It's a demonstration that
that kind of approach to life won't work. It doesn't prevail. And in the process, whatever destruction you might visit on, someone else, ultimately,
you destroy yourself.
That's the real punishment.
It is self-destructive to seek one's own self-elevation.
You did this to yourself, Haman.
Oh, man.
It's such a dramatic story.
It reminds me a little bit of an experience that I had as a missionary
in France. I happened to have a companion who was from Taiwan. We spoke Mandarin Chinese. She had
come to France to work as a nanny, and she herself had encountered the missionaries, and then she
decided while she was living in France to serve a mission, and she was called to the Bordeaux,
France mission, where I was was serving and became my companion.
And she loved to tell me about this Chinese folktale or myth of the enlightened man who is climbing
the mountain with each level. He can see more and more and he becomes more enlightened.
In some ways, it's maybe the reverse of the experience of
Haman, but he is being elevated both geographically and spiritually.
And he gets to the top of the mountain,
wants to share with his family, you know, this great achievement that he has made.
And he looks around him and he sees them nowhere to be found.
And he looks down and he sees them all at the base of the mountain.
Because in his pursuit of his own enlightenment,
he never shared those insights or those experiences
with others.
And so he finds himself at the top of the mountain all alone.
This is maybe a little different.
In this case, a homin is going into Dante's in Ferno,
rather than climbing a mountain. But it's a similarly lonely path that one seeks one's own
advancement. Whether for ostensibly good ends or less than salutary ends, the experience ends
really in isolation and in destruction and in failure. Let's do 8, 9, and 10 real quick here. What ends up happening to Mordekai and Esther?
So the Haman is killed and Mordekai is placed over the house of Haman. He basically takes
this place and takes his ring. Well, yeah, Esther is given the role of presiding over the House of
Hammond and she gives the token of that authority to Mordeky.
He sort of in every way replaces Hammond.
The king reaffirms that he cannot change.
He's the king, he's made this decree.
And so he issues another decree that the Jews can defend themselves on the day when this extermination
order is to take place.
In fact, he says, you are permitted to defend yourselves and you can take the spoils from
your enemies, from those who attack you and you may defend yourself, including killing
them if necessary, and you may take the spoils of war or the spoils of this conflict.
In chapter 9, that's really when we get to the moment of the first decree, which is the day that was set aside for this genocide, and we have a small war, which ensues on this day. The record
explains in chapter 9 that the Jews slay their enmeses and they give numbers for in Shushan,
the capital, and throughout the provinces, those deaths include the deaths of Hommans
10 sons.
So it's a generational curse that continues.
Hommans' wickedness is visited upon his children as well.
And they are not only killed in battle,
but they are then also hung.
I don't know if it's precisely the same gallows
that that Haman was hung on, but I think so.
And the record is also very careful to indicate
that the Jews did defend themselves,
and they did so vigorously,
but they did not take any spoils.
That's verse 10 now.
They restrained themselves and they sort of did what they had to do, but no more.
They deemed that their lives were valuable, that their lives were important to the God who made them, that it was a worthy request to be allowed to defend themselves.
And then they create a holiday, right? a worthy request to be allowed to defend themselves.
And then they create a holiday, right? They create a holiday.
This is so great and so important.
And it comes about through two letters.
The first one's written by Mordeky,
the second one's written by Esther herself,
and there's to be a feast of Purim.
What is Purim?
It comes from the word Pur, which meant to cast a lot.
And basically, what had happened earlier in the text
is that the lots had been cast against the Jews.
They drew the short stick,
and they were going to be exterminated.
They were deemed a nuisance,
hissed in a byword,
and problematic neighbors to live amongst.
And so they decided that we'll just take care of them
and make short work of them.
But that is really transformed in this text, right?
Instead of being exterminated, they prevail in this conflict and in this threat.
And the purpose of the feast of Purim is to remember that they were preserved and that they were saved and that they were redeemed from this existential threat, and that they're
to read this story every year, in part because it is a story that in miniature, you know,
tells the plan of salvation and also anticipates the reign of the Messiah in the millennium when
all things are made just, and which all losses compensated for and when the
proud are made low and the humble are finally elevated. So it's a very happy celebration. Like I say,
they reenact the story every year. There's special desserts and foods of the ham and tash and the
little sort of little triangular cookies that they they make and eat, they act out the story, and they give gifts,
they give to charity, and they remember their own humility before God by extending that charity
and generosity to others. So it's really, it's an important celebration for them. It's one that
that holds a lot of value and has cemented the place of the Book of Esther as an essential part of
their canon, essential text for them because of the things that it teaches.
And the last chapter is really quite brief.
It's just that we learned already in chapter 8 that Mordekin sort of takes the place of
Haman and now he sort of is sort of fully invested as the right hand man to the King is sort of accorded all of the powers and privileges of that office.
But I think it's right at the very end of chapter 10 where it talks about Mordekai speaking peace to his seed and to his people that even though it is a tale that involves a threat of destruction and self-defense
and some destruction, it's also a story about beating swords into plowshares, moving away
from violence and towards peace.
Yeah, I knew the story somewhat.
I think we have some great, great moments of, wow, what a turnaround.
And I like to what you said that you can see her as a type of Christ,
for us personally, to remember our redemption. I think if they, as they have this feast,
so do we, every week, to remember our redemption. I really like what you said, that we have
moments in our lives where we turn to God and like you said, God turns to us. How did you make it through that moment in your life?
It's just in the mission field for six days up in Idaho
and he's in as assignment.
Yeah.
It's impossible to describe everything that I learned.
It feels like I learned a thousand things
in the period of just a few days.
And many more in the weeks and months and years after that.
You talked about finding me on the Maxwell Institute website because I'm writing a memoir
about that very experience.
It was a tremendous touchstone for me spiritually.
And as I mentioned that one night, the nurse who had been watching me unbeknownst to me,
I don't know that I can explain entirely.
I mean, I know where the strength came from, but I might not be able to describe entirely
just how profound it was, just how sustaining it was, how much I learned about the power of sustaining, sustaining
others who are called being sustained in a moment of kind of exquisite trial.
It feels like there were numerous blessings.
He was blessed at the site.
He was blessed by his mission president when he got to the hospital.
His grandfather gave him a blessing when we arrived. We got home from the hospital
that night. I said, I think I'm going to need a blessing to get through this. And in that blessing,
I was blessed that I would be an instrument of his healing, but I would be given strength to give
to him. I mean, I think I just, I really do have a profound sense of the very significant role that women play in the
salvation of others.
I have experienced it in personal terms, but we see it in the Old Testament as well.
It's not just Esther.
There aren't too many other figures like her who play a really a salvific role on behalf
of others, but Jail certainly does that.
Judas certainly does that. Judas certainly does that.
And in every instance, it takes tremendous courage.
It takes a real stepping outside of oneself and one's own needs of the moment
to, you know, to be a source of strength for others.
While he was in that coma, I had the chance to go and visit the site where he
had had been injured,
which coincidentally is not too far from where they are building.
The temple in Burley, Idaho.
It was interesting because I had several thoughts when I visited the site and saw the blood
from his brain smeared across the road, still there several days later.
It wasn't just that I was going to have to tell him this story because he wasn't going
to remember it.
He doesn't know what happened, doesn't have any memory.
I had to be the remembrance, tell the story to him, but even more than that was the experience of meeting
an incredible member who had arranged for this service project.
And his own son had suffered a traumatic injury. He felt, he felt just terrible about what had happened.
But he was the source of so much wisdom and
insight.
I felt like I was just drawing that from him to bring to Stuart our son and to transfer
that wisdom and insight, that knowledge that things would eventually, however they worked
out, they would work out, bringing that power and understanding. But for me, he was a source of tremendous understanding
and really bore me up in all kinds of ways. And then I think I too just had to be on my knees
and I'd be very carefully asking, what do I do now? What do I do? What do I ask for tomorrow?
What do I need tomorrow to make it to the next day?
What do I need?
What does my family need?
What does my son need?
What do the others who have been impacted by this need?
And I just feel like careful solutions were provided all along the way.
I had already written the sort of basic manuscript for this book.
I felt like I had already crossed
the plains. I mean, writing that dissertation with six children, doing a doctoral program
with six children was something else. I felt like I had already walked through the great
plains with rags on my feet. I couldn't imagine anything more difficult than what I had already
experienced. And here two years later was another
tremendous experience for which the other experience had prepared me. I mean, it's almost really
only now that I'm making a lot of connections between that experience that I passed through and
the book of Esther. But I think I just knew intuitively that this is something we don't talk about enough, we don't hear about enough,
we don't see enough of in the scriptures,
the spiritual lives of women,
the role that they play in the sort of spiritual growth
and redemption of others.
Now there are so many other things I want to tell you
about the book of Esther,
one that is really, really crucial.
And it may seem odd for me to mention this right now after just talking about my experience as a mother
with my son in the midst of his injury. It's really significant to me that in the book of Esther,
we have the experience of a woman who does something at a redemptive level on behalf of others
thing at a redemptive level on behalf of others that is not tied to motherhood and is not tied to the bearing of children.
Just about every other example in scripture is an elevation of the female as a mother and
as a teacher, as a nurture, someone who provides continuity, strength, wisdom, and insight from generation to
generation to generation. And those things are all tremendously important. But it is
also important to recognize that that is not the only role that women fill in
life and that they have great gifts to give in other realms as well. And Esther provides us a very powerful example
of a woman apart from motherhood
who does tremendous work and carefully seeks out
guided inspired solutions that are going to bless and benefit
from her people.
It's not a pretty thing that she's really being asked to do,
but she does it and she transforms her predicament and her situation into a scenario where she
brings tremendous blessing and tremendous benefit to her people. It wasn't what she set out to do, but she herself evolves over time.
She comes into an understanding of her capacity and of her strength and of her
her perception, her ability to perceive what needs to be done, what needs to be said.
It's really important.
There is another side to the story, God being hidden in this text.
He is present.
And I hope that our discussion has demonstrated the ways in which God was present in Esther's
life, was present in Mordecaus.
I was present in this text and in this story.
But many people have suggested that the hiddenness of God,
that that figure is obscured slightly
so that we can see what we might call the female divine.
And I think our most comfortable corollary
is a heavenly mother. I think it's worth
mentioning that she really functions in much the way that Esther does. She's both hidden
and she's revealed. There's not a lot that is said about her, her role remains a bit obscured. And yet, we also affirm and reaffirm her presence.
And we recognize that divinity is incomplete without her.
We haven't really talked yet about the ways in which Esther
is a book of multiplicity.
We've talked about the ways which there's a hiddenness there.
So from the period of judges to the period of exile, which is where we find the book of
Esther, a share who is recognized as a female canonite, mostly fertility, daddy, was worshiped.
And it's interesting because the prophets were really opposed to the worship of Bale,
and they realized the trouble that the Israelites
and the children of Israel had gotten into because they worship Bale,
but there was a greater tolerance for worship of Asherah,
and we see it more explicitly in Jeremiah, chapter 44, verse 17,
where it explains that people worship the Queen of Heaven in the streets of Jerusalem and in the cities of Judah. But there comes a moment when
prophets feel as though that worship of a female deity is a threat to prophetic
Judaism and so that worship goes underground and more specifically it goes
abroad. It goes into exile.
And that's really, it's an important piece of the book of Esther because the Babylonian variant
of Ashera is Ishtar, which is the Babylonian equivalent of the name Esther. When you see the book
of Esther, it is the book of Ishtar. It is the book of Ashera.
It is the book of Hadassah. It is the book of Esther who has these two names, her Jewish name and
her Babylonian or Persian name. By functioning in this role of redemption, she is in some ways fulfilling
She is in some ways fulfilling her divine counterpart. Esther is just another powerful example how God works that deliverance.
And it means something that he works it through a woman.
Talk about a good marriage.
It's really a situation where working together.
And I think that's another power
of the Book of Esther. God is a little hidden. They've got to find their own solution. He
will inspire them. He will lead them. He will direct them. But they're going to have to
do some things too. They're going to have to lay their life on the line. They're going
to have to proceed carefully, strategically, cautiously, with thoughtfulness.
They're not going to be able to do this
just on a whim knowing that God is going to come in from.
Right, save the day.
They have to build themselves into the kind of people
in concert with their God can work that, that salvation.
Ariel, Dr. Silver, this has been just a fantastic day.
I think our listeners would be interested
in your story of your faith and your scholarship
and how those have influenced each other.
What's that story been like for you?
The first thing that comes to mind
is the moment when I returned from my mission.
I was still an undergraduate. I served
a mission between my junior and senior years in college. So I came back to Smith College
and I was studying religion and biblical literature and I was taking a course I think it was
on the book of Romans. I just remember taking notes for the class, beginning to develop what
I fondly refer to as my Marginalia,
sort of the notes on the side of the paper. And I do this all the time. I do this in books that I
read. So there's a kind of a, you know, main line of notes, and then there's their side notes.
I just remember, you know, we're looking at a specific text in the New Testament. And the Marginalia is filled with references
to the Book of Mormon, which I had recently been spending
a lot of time with as a missionary,
references to the Pearl of Great Price,
references to the Old Testament,
references to other pieces of literature that I had read
or thought about, sometimes stories or personal experiences
that I remembered that somehow connected for me to the things I was
learning in the book of Romans, and they maybe had nothing to do per se with the book of Romans,
Romans are the narrative there, you know, I mean, I still remember, of course, you know,
beautiful passage in Romanates, but you know, nothing, you know, nothing, absolutely nothing
can separate us from the love of God, nothing, nothing. That love is constant and unconditional.
However much we feel in exile at any point in our lives,
we are never separated from the love of God.
What it demonstrated for me was that a life lived in belief,
even if I didn't have all the answers,
and there are many things that I have on the backburners,
wanting responses for many things,
even if I didn't have the answer to every question,
that a life lived in hope, a life lived in belief,
a life lived in the scriptures,
was a life that would be a constant spark
and a constant inspiration for me,
and that it would feed me intellectually and spiritually,
the things that I was doing spiritually
would also feed me intellectually and emotionally.
I have always seen them as a marriage,
to walk away from either of them would leave me
less fulfilled, a much less self-examined individual.
And I tell my seven students this all the time.
You know, reading the scriptures
will teach you how to think critically.
Close reading of texts is a wonderful spiritual exercise.
It's a wonderful intellectual exercise.
And sometimes you do have to read between the words
and between the spaces.
You have to look for the things that are not said there at all.
My mission president, Elder Anderson,
was a tremendous teacher for me in this regard.
He said, when you listen to General Conference talks,
listen to what you're hearing,
but listen above all else to the spirit that's teaching you
and keep a record of the things that you are being taught.
They may have nothing to do with what is being said.
But that, the experience of being there,
listening to someone who is set apart
to be an oracle will be a spiritual catalyst for you.
And when we place ourselves in those kinds of waters, right? And I love
the image in Ezekiel 37 of, you know, the waters of the temple flowing out. And at first
they touch just your toes, your heels, and your ankles. And the further that chapter goes,
the more we are swimming in the waters that come out of the temples, and they are healing
waters. They are waters that restore us. They are waters they are healing waters. They are waters that restore us.
They are waters that edify us.
They are waters that refine us and enoblice.
We become filled with the spirit of the temple,
which is the spirit of Christ, which is the spirit of God.
We are changed by that.
We are baptized by that.
I am a swimmer and I love to swim just about every day.
It's not why the waters of the temple, but it's a daily reminder of being immersed
in the things that matter most.
And so I have just seen them as being invaluable to each other, a spiritual life and an intellectual
life I have seen them as being much poorer without the other.
And I have the confidence that God will lead me along that I will be given
the understanding that I need when I need it. You know, I also believe firmly and have seen
evidence of the promise that if you ask, you will receive. If you knock, it will be opened unto
you. If you seek, you will find. You may be like the woman in Luke 15, you may be sweeping that house
every corner until you find the lost coin. It may take many years for the lost son to return.
You may not find the lost sheep at first perusal, but if you keep at it,
you will learn in the process, you will be changed in the process. You might be more ready to receive the lost son when he or she chooses to return. You may know what to do with the coin when
you eventually find it. You may know how to care for the sheep if it comes back to you.
We are changed in the process and it's God being hidden, not having answers sometimes is an invitation to exercise greater faith, and it's an invitation
to lean more heavily on the purposes and the will of the Lord.
We don't know how things will end, and we have to depend on that spirit for guidance.
What else is going to guide us?
Where else will we find truth? I wouldn't want to separate myself from that
power or source of revelation for anything. It is everything. I remember often feeling like
I was running around my mission like a chicken who's had it been cut off just wanting to tell
people about the power of the gift of the Holy Ghost. You know, if only you could have that. And we remember we had an elderly gentleman who was a veteran of any
number of French wars and who smoked multiple packs a day and he was a hard
cell, but he kept inviting us back and every time we came back, something about
him had changed and he started coming to church and months passed and he said, I
don't think I can give it up.
I'm not eligible for baptism.
Is there any way I could just get the gift of the Holy Ghost?
Something, right, in those teachings, had impressed him enough to know that that was a
gift worth having.
It's a gift worth, worth keeping and pursuing and seeking after because it is the thing
that will lead us to the solutions that we need in life.
We can't arrive at them on our own. And the Israelites were wise enough when they were at their best to know that,
that they could not arrive at those solutions on their own. They had to have a higher strength and a higher source of insight. I had a chance to
mention a little earlier my experience with our missionary son and I thought
you might enjoy hearing how that experience was resolved and it is an
experience among other things of fasting which is where the Book of Esther
really takes off. There were so many loving friends and people concerned about him.
And we explained that we would be holding a fast on his behalf six days after he was injured
and first put in this medically induced coma because they were going to try to take him off of the ventilator.
In the midst of that fasting process where many people who had never fasted before were fasting,
and on our son's behalf, like the Persian handmaidants
who were fasting for Esther,
in the midst of that process took the tubes out,
and he was immediately able to breathe on his own.
We didn't really look back.
You know, they ran a battery of tests the next day
for cognitive function,
and he was just remarkably
intact.
He didn't have half his skull, so that was a process.
There's a protocol normally when there's an injury of this nature that missionaries need
to wait a year before returning to the mission field.
He got that clearance from his doctor about four months after the injury.
He ended up returning to the mission field about eight months after the initial
initial accident. So he returned to the same mission. What ended up being really a three-year mission
from start to start to finish and I went to college and I've done very well study biology and he's working at a research lab in Boston now and is applying to medical school.
That is beautiful, beautiful resolution
for a beautiful family.
It's kind of like the book of Esther.
It's a dramatic tale of redemption, it is.
Yeah.
We want to thank Dr. Ariel Silver for being with us today.
What a great day from studying this book
and hearing your stories.
Oh, it was just a moving time to be together, thank you.
We want to thank our executive producers,
Steve and Shannon Sonson, as well as our sponsors.
David and Verla Sonson, and we hope all of you will join us
next week, come back for another episode of Follow Him.
We have an amazing production crew.
We want you to know about David Perry, Lisa
Spice, Jamie Nielsen, Will Stoden, Crystal Roberts, and Al Kuwadra. Thank you to our
amazing production team.