In Esther 8, some excitement occurs in the story of Esther. It is at this point that the king makes a decision to "approve" Esther's request that her people, the Jews, be saved from destruction. Isn't that great?
Yes, but...
What if the king's scribes didn't respond quickly to write the edict? (v. 9)
What if people didn't know all the individual languages, to be able to write in that language, for all the various provinces? (v. 9)
What if the "sealing" of the edict hadn't happened properly, to affirm the authority of the command? (v. 10)
What if the person who "wrote in the name of the king" didn't accurately portray what the king wanted? (v. 10)
What if the mounted couriers didn't speed to deliver the news? (They didn't have email or Facebook back then.) (vv. 10, 14)
For that matter, what if those who took care of the horses did a sloppy job, resulting in sluggish, overweight horses that couldn't gallop? (It is noted that these horses were of prime pedigree.) (v. 10)
What if a specific date (the thirteenth day of the twelfth month) hadn't been specifically chosen? (v. 12)
What if copies weren't quickly made (they didn't have copiers) so all provinces could get the same message? (v. 13)
The Jews would have died.
Do you see how important good administration, training, and teamwork is?
0 comments:
Post a Comment