Grading several papers on Esther, it occurs to me that the book is more about Mordecai's exalation than about Esther. Esther's exalation to queen is part of the means by which Mordecai and the Jews are ultimately saved, and the story climaxes with Mordecai at the right hand of the king (like Joseph and Daniel - Esther 10:2). Further, the key moral transition in the book comes when Mordecai stops urging Esther to hide her identity. A disappointment for feminist interpreters perhaps, but the book is more the book of Mordecai than the book of Esther.
posted by Peter J. Leithart on Monday, December 05, 2005 at 11:25 AM
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