Keil and Delitzsch Commentary - Esther 4:15 - 4:15

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Keil and Delitzsch Commentary - Esther 4:15 - 4:15


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This pressing monition produced its result. Esther returned answer to Mordochai: “Go, gather together all the Jews that are found in Susa, and fast ye for me: I also and my maidens will fast; and so will I go to the king against the law; and if I perish, I perish.” Esther resolves to go to the king unsummoned, but begs Mordochai and all the Jews to unite in a three days' fast, during which she and her maidens will also fast, to seek by earnest humiliation God's gracious assistance in the step she proposes to take, for the purpose of averting the threatened destruction of her people. “Though 'God' and 'prayer' are not here mentioned, it is yet obviously assumed that it was before God that the Jews were to humble themselves, to seek His help, and to induce Him to grant it. 1Ki 21:27-29; Joe 1:14; Jon 3:5.” (Berth.). To designate the strictness of this fasting, the words: “neither eat nor drink,” are added. The “three days, night and day,” are not to be reckoned as three times twenty-four hours, but to be understood of a fast which lasts till the third day after that on which it begins; for according to Est 5:1, Esther goes to the king on the third day. Comp. the similar definition of time, Jon 2:1. The addition “day and night” declares that the fast was not to be intermitted. וּבְכֵן, and in thus, i.e., in this state of fasting. כַּדָּת לֹא אֲשֶׁר: which is not according to law. לֹא אֲשֶׁר is used, like the Aramaean form לָא דִּי, in the sense of without (comp. Ewald, §222, c): without according to law = contrary to law. The last words: “if I perish, I perish,” etc., are the expression not of despair, but of resignation, or perfect submission to the providence of God; comp. Gen 43:14.