Reflection: * As we continue this new devotional series, a word of warning for newcomers: much of Esther deals with R-rated themes. Some readers may find these devotions confronting.
Hegai taught Esther how to please the king, schooling her in arts of seduction few parents would want their daughters to learn. I wonder whether he hoped that this girl, exceptionally beautiful and newly skilled, might enchant the king sufficiently to stop the nightly sacrifice of virgins to the king’s bed. I imagine that Esther agrees to the plan, feigning pleasure to save other girls that fate.
What difference does becoming queen make to Esther’s life? Don’t let the title deceive you. Queen Esther lives in luxury but has little freedom: her life still hangs in the balance.
Imagine you are Esther. Do you welcome the king’s affection or resent it? How do you feel about your future?
Engaging our world: Do you teach your children things you’d prefer they be spared? How might we protect our children while giving them freedom to grow and explore?
Prayer: Reflect on this poem and pray for all those imprisoned, denied freedom, or otherwise oppressed.
Advice to Parents:
Teach your children when they are young,
to love open spaces, widen their mind.
They will be glad of this, especially if later
they must endure a life confined
by a slit window’s littleness
to one small patch of sky.
Dom Helder Camara, Brazil