Tiffany Dupont as Hadassah in One Night With the King, 2006. (Gener8Xion)
In Hadassah: One Night With the King, a popular 2004 novelization of the Book of Esther, the queen describes her first night alone with the king of Persia. Apparently she had a great time:
… our mutual hunger raged unchecked—at no time did I even think of demurring or becoming submissive, for my desire for him was genuine. I had fallen in love with him. I had seen past his outer facade … and now I had reached his heart.
This isn’t the same meek, pure Esther most Jews are familiar with from the story of Purim, the woman Jewish girls throughout history have wanted to emulate. This Esther is a bundle of raging hormones, swept away by the handsome and powerful Xerxes (or as Jews know him, Ahasuerus).
But the Esther in this novel is different from the heroine we’re familiar with in another significant way. Later in Hadassah, Esther is depicted on her walk toward Xerxes to request a private banquet with the king and Haman. She teeters between life and death, as anyone who approached the king unbidden risked being put to death immediately. The original telling of this moment in the Bible portrays both Esther’s fortitude and her resignation to her fate: “If I perish, I perish,” she famously says. But in this novel, Esther seems to embrace her possible death:
[I]t was not until then that I remembered it all again. That the King of Kings was my father, that he missed me and longed for my presence as dearly as my own father had—and as urgently as I had come to crave the presence of Xerxes. And just as I had come to anticipate those times of fellowship with Mordecai and [Hathach]—simply basking in the warm glow of their nearness—G-d looked forward to my being with Him.
Suddenly, this most Jewish of all heroines is anticipating her death and looking forward to the day she is reunited with her God. The woman Jewish girls have revered since the days of the first Purim carnival suddenly seems so … Christian.
The Christian tone of Hadassah is due to the fact that the author is Tommy Tenney, a Pentecostal preacher and writer whose “God Chasers” book series has sold millions of copies. The popularity of Hadassah spawned a 2005 sequel and a 2006 motion picture with appearances by Peter O’Toole and Omar Sharif.
The Christianized Esther depicted in Tenney’s novel may be unfamiliar to Jewish readers, but she is far from unique. In the past decade there has been growing attention given to Esther by Christian authors, pastors, and Bible-study leaders.
Since Tenney’s book came out, Esther has been the subject of countless Christian Bible studies, sermons, and online discussions. Beth Moore, the closest thing evangelical Christianity has to a contemporary, female Billy Graham, wrote Esther: It’s Tough Being a Woman in 2008, and since then hundreds of churches have used her book as the basis for their own study of Esther.
Some other churches use Espresso With Esther, a 2006 Bible study by Sandra Glahn—whose Coffee Cup Bible Series also includes Premium Roast With Ruthand Mocha on the Mount—as their guide to the text. Brenda Salter McNeil, a pastor and a professor at Seattle Pacific University, a Christian college, has given several prominent sermons about Esther during the past few years and, as of 2012, was writing a book about her. And two years ago, Mars Hill Church, a nondenominational, fast-growing mega-church based in Seattle that includes 14 campuses in five states, launched a controversial 12-part sermon series about Esther by Pastor Mark Driscoll, who described the topic on the series’ website as “the toughest Bible book I’ve ever preached” and “the most head-scratching, jaw-dropping, heart-changing sermon series we’ve ever done at Mars Hill.” Driscoll’s description of Esther as a woman of sexual depravity precipitated even more online commentary about Esther from a Christian perspective, most notably from the popular blogger Rachel Held Evans, who wrote a five-part “Esther Actually” series, where hundreds of commenters debated Esther’s context and her relevance to modern life.
In 2008, Esther even entered the realm of Christianity and politics. Vice presidential nominee Sarah Palin embraced Queen Esther as a role model. According to Vanity Fair, Palin asked several pastors for examples of biblical leadership that she could strive to mimic. “Quoting scripture,” writer Michael Joseph Gross explained, “the pastor told Palin that she, like Esther, had ‘come to the Kingdom for such a time as this.’ ” Many Palin supporters took up this comparison, and Palin herself encouraged it, noting that she often chose the Book of Esther as bedtime reading for her daughter Piper.
Christians are definitely having an Esther moment. While Tenney, Moore, Driscoll, and Held appeal primarily to evangelical, often conservative Christians—albeit through very different approaches—Esther has made her way into the consciousness of liberal and mainline Protestants as well. In recent years, she has been the basis of sermons by clergy who lead congregations as diverse as the 15,000-member, nondenominational McLean Bible Church in McLean, Va.; the mainline Redland Baptist Church in Rockville, Md.; and Presbyterian Welcome, a New York-based group with a special focus on supporting LGBTQ youth, among many others.
Given Christianity’s history with the text of the Book of Esther, this moment may surprise people of all religious persuasions. As Christian author and book editor Joel J. Miller described on his Patheos.com blog last year:
John Calvin did not include the book in his biblical commentaries and only referenced it once in the Institutes (see 4.12.17). Though he included it in his Bible, Martin Luther was highly ambivalent about it. “I am so great an enemy to … Esther, that I wish [it] had not come to us at all, for [it has] too many heathen unnaturalities,” he said in Table Talk 24. And in one exchange with Erasmus he said it “deserves … to be regarded as noncanonical.”
So, what do today’s Christians see in Esther that their church fathers missed?
Contemporary Christians view Esther as a complicated hero, but one who provides an exemplary model of upright, faithful behavior. She is seen as an example of how people can become awakened to their true roles in life, stop hiding their true selves, become a leader when needed, and act outside of personal interest. “Esther calls us to think beyond our individual lives,” Moore’s Bible study begins, in an introduction by her daughter and research assistant. (The book ends with a recipe for hamantaschen.)
Esther is also seen as a model of obedience to God. “Esther was obedient to God’s will and in that way saved her people. That’s the moral lesson that you learn—to be obedient to God’s will,” explained Pastor Debbie Blue, the spiritual leader of the House of Mercy in St. Paul, Minn. Moore assesses the Book of Esther similarly: “A paramount theme in Esther is what God can do when we resolve to obey and ‘if I perish I perish.’ Anytime He calls us to die, His purpose is to reveal larger life.”
Esther’s femaleness is crucial. “For evangelical women, there haven’t been that many biblical heroes that evangelical women can emulate,” explained Jana Riess, a Christian author and religious publishing expert whose latest book isThe Twible: All the Chapters of the Bible in 140 Characters or Less. “Esther is not a victim; she takes charge and saves her people.”
Blue, who recently added her voice to the myriad Christian clergy preaching about Esther, agreed. “More interest in women is starting to happen in evangelical circles. They are looking for strong females in the Bible,” she said. “Even though Esther at first seems like she’s happy to be a beauty queen, there is a turn and she takes it in a different direction. There is a waking up,” said Blue, that Christian women are inspired by.
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