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bible, Biblical Truth, Christ Centered Devotionals, Christian, Christian Poetry, christianity, faith, gospel, hope, Inpirational, Inspirational, jesus, jesus-christ, Poetry, Praise, Prayer, Royally Redeemed, salvation, theology, worship
The ode celebrates Esther, a Jewish orphan turned queen, whose courage and faith deliver her people from annihilation, as recounted in the Book of Esther. It opens by portraying her as a “star of Judah’s darkened night” and a “tender bloom amid the palace stone,” reflecting her humble beginnings (“Mordecai had a cousin named Hadassah, whom he had brought up because she had neither father nor mother” – Esther 2:7, NIV) and her rise to queenship (“The king was attracted to Esther more than to any of the other women, and she won his favor” – Esther 2:17). Her beauty, likened to “dawn’s first fragile light,” conceals a “lion’s strength,” hinting at the inner resolve that will define her legacy.
The poem shifts to the looming threat of Haman’s decree (“Letters were sent by couriers to all the king’s provinces with the order to destroy, kill and annihilate all the Jews” – Esther 3:13), vividly captured in “banquet halls with gold and myrrh ablaze” and “whispers of a tyrant’s cruel decree.” Esther, clad in “robes of saffron,” steps into this peril, embodying vulnerability and determination as she approaches King Xerxes uninvited (“I will go to the king, even though it is against the law. And if I perish, I perish” – Esther 4:16). This moment, where she stands “before the king, unbidden, scepter low,” evokes the tension of risking death (“Anyone who approaches the king in the inner court without being summoned [is] to be put to death unless the king extends the gold scepter” – Esther 4:11).
Her preparation through fasting and prayer (“Go, gather together all the Jews… and fast for me” – Esther 4:16) is depicted as a “flame to pierce the shroud of silence dense,” fueling her resolve. Mordecai’s crucial exhortation, “And who knows but that you have come to your royal position for such a time as this?” (Esther 4:14), is directly quoted in the poem—“For such a time as this,” he spoke—igniting her purpose, symbolized by “salvation’s spark” in her eyes. This line underscores God’s unseen providence guiding her actions.
The climax celebrates Esther’s triumph as she outwits Haman through her banquets (“Let the king and Haman come today to a banquet I have prepared” – Esther 5:4; “So they impaled Haman on the pole he had set up for Mordecai” – Esther 7:10), turning “doom to songs of praise.” The “gallows loomed” for Mordecai but become Haman’s downfall, while “Shushan’s streets, with jubilee aflame” reflect the joyous establishment of Purim (“The Jews agreed to continue the celebration they had begun” – Esther 9:27-28). Esther emerges as a “queen of courage, crowned by heaven’s hand,” her faith a conduit for “God’s mercy reigns supreme,” affirming her role as a divinely appointed savior of her people.
O Esther, star of Judah’s darkened night,
A tender bloom amid the palace stone,
Your beauty gleamed like dawn’s first fragile light,
Yet in your heart, a lion’s strength was sown.
The banquet halls, with gold and myrrh ablaze,
Echoed whispers of a tyrant’s cruel decree,
But you, in robes of saffron, faced the maze,
A fragile reed to bend fate’s stern decree.
Before the king, unbidden, scepter low,
You stood where death’s cold breath might sweep you hence,
With fasting’s prayer, your spirit dared to grow,
A flame to pierce the shroud of silence dense.
The gallows loomed, a shadow stark and grim,
Yet Mordecai’s voice stirred—“For such a time as this,”
He spoke, a prophet’s hymn to rouse your vim,
And in your eyes, salvation’s spark took guise.
O queen of courage, crowned by heaven’s hand,
You turned the scroll of doom to songs of praise,
Through banquet’s guile, you broke the tyrant’s band,
And Haman fell beneath your steadfast gaze.
Now Shushan’s streets, with jubilee aflame,
Resound your name through time’s unyielding stream,
A daughter meek who bore a nation’s claim,
In Esther’s faith, God’s mercy reigns supreme.