I few years back I used to do a lot of whinging to God about my circumstances. There was a stage when I was like ‘it’s not fair God!’ But after a while, I’d think, well Rob is all your whinging completely valid? I mean, there’s a lot in your life that’s great and you live in the western world, life’s pretty easy in many ways… so I’d say to God ‘Aha, but what the Developing world, the third world countries, where 15,000 children die every 24 hrs (that’s from 2019). What about that, that’s not fair. Why don’t you intervene? Got you there.
Then I get this thought ‘Robyn, if everyone lived as God has asked us to, if everyone did their bit, if everyone lived out their purpose, if everyone lived generously… there would be no hunger in the world, there’d be enough medications and medical treatment for all and diseases would not be decimating populations. If we lived as God has asked us to, with compassion and peace, there would be no homelessness in Australia – there would be the resources for adequate mental health services and housing for people.
Imagine if everyone in the world gave a tenth of their income, if not to church, then to a charity that’s making a difference. If people lived as God wants us to, there would be basic sanitation and running water in the developing world. If the world lived as God has asked us to live, there’d be no exploitation and no human trafficking.
If we lived differently…the truth is that many of us in the western world don’t think much further than our immediate surroundings. So often we just don’t see the need in our own communities, let alone the need in the world.
I’ve taken these words from Tarrawanna’s face book page, from this week.
“As Covid cases have increased in the Illawarra, many of the most vulnerable in our community have been impacted. Two local facilities for the homeless were put into isolation last week. From last Friday, with only a few hours notice, the Salvos were called in to provide breakfast and lunch to about 130 people who are isolating in rooms with little more than a bed. From lunch today, NSW Health are now equipped and ready to provide meals to these facilities for the remainder of their 14 day isolation period.
Thank you to all who helped over the weekend by shopping for food, picking up at McDonalds and Subway where needed, making 280 sandwiches, baking slices, packing breakfast and lunch packs and delivering meals around the clock. Please continue to pray for those who are isolating in extremely difficult circumstances in our local community, who feel very scared and alone.” It all starts with seeing a need and doing something about it.
In our story today, Esther is a young Jewish woman who ended up married to King Xerxes, the King of Persia. She’d been raised by her Uncle Mordecai, and at his suggestion, she kept her Jewish heritage a secret from the King.
Not long after she became part of the royal court, a decree was made that on a certain date the entire Jewish population living in Persia was going to be killed. King Xerxes made this decision at the suggestion and urging by a guy in the royal court called Haman. So, the Jews are to be killed in Persia, and Esther, a Jewish woman, is married to the King. I say married, but it’s not as we know it nowadays. He still had a harem and she had no power whatsoever.
When news gets out that there will be a genocide of the Jewish people, Mordecai says to Esther – you have to do something, you have to talk to the King. Esther is like, but it’s dangerous. You see, you could only see the King if he asked you. But if you approached him, without his permission, he’d put you to death...even if you were his wife. There were a lot of risks for Esther.
In Esther 4:13 Mordecai replies to Esther, ““Don’t think that just because you live in the king’s house you’re the one Jew who will get out of this alive. If you persist in staying silent at a time like this, help and deliverance will arrive for the Jews from someplace else; but you and your family will be wiped out. Who knows? Maybe you were made queen for just such a time as this.””
That’s a good question that Mordecai asks Esther - who knows if God has placed you in the royal household for all these years, so that at this particular time in history, you are in a position to do something courageous.
Think about our own lives. How would you react if someone said to you, “God has placed you where you are, in this point in history, for a purpose.” Is it possible that God has placed you in your current position, at home, in your neighbourhood, in your family, in your school, in your work, in your group of friends, that you’re alive at this time in history for a purpose? This was Mordecai’s question to Esther.
Mordecai wasn’t asking her to do something supernatural, he was asking her to be courageous and speak up for family, her people, her beliefs. To no longer be secretive about who she was. To intervene on behalf of other people. Yet this is God’s intervention. I’m always amazed that God uses us ordinary people to intervene in other people’s lives.
Do you sometimes think ‘where are you Lord? Why don’t you intervene in this world?’ For whatever reason, God usually chooses not to directly intervene in history, with a miraculous signs and wonders.
But he does intervene… and the amazing thing, is that he chooses to work through you and I. And for each generation, God works through the lives of ordinary men and women to bring about his purposes. Each time, the need has been great, and there have been men and women who have seen the need and responded to it. Courageous ordinary people through the wars, courageous ordinary people standing with Martin Luther King to bring about change. Courageous ordinary people standing up to say ‘Black Lives Matter’. And today, we know that there are courageous ordinary people stepping in to intervene in human trafficking.
If Esther, our hero in this story, travelled through time and was with us today, I wonder what she would tell us. I think she would tell us that God sees the big picture of your life.
To you, your life may seem disjointed and purposeless. Maybe your life seems so ordinary and mundane. But God has a different view of your life.
I think Esther would tell us that God has plans and purposes for our lives that we can only guess at. Maybe he’s not going to use our life to save a whole nation, but he may very well use our life to save another human being.
There may be someone you work with, living a life of silent desperation, praying that someone will listen to them. There may be a neighbour who is worried and would love someone to pray with them. There may be a friend who’s just waiting to hear about the love and light that Jesus can bring to their life.
Esther would tell you, that God has placed you where you are, in this point in history, for a purpose. Song, O Church Arise