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Esther 5:4-6 Esther's power over the king - Day 28

 Good afternoon friends,

Well today's devotion is really dated.  Looking back on what I thought before the election last November is a challenge.  Obviously, the January 6th insurrection has come to a low point in the American experiment in ordered self government.  Yet this was not the revolution I was thinking about.  As a political movement, Black Lives Matter is essentially Marxist.  And Marxism and constitutional representative democracy are not compatible.  And reference to fleeting power is the French Revolution.  No one was safe from the scaffold. Finally, our first revolution was against the crown, the second was against the union.  So the next one will be the third.  However, using this passage as a basis for political analysis is really not valid.

So what have I learned?  I think I am still learning.

Blessings, 

Jeff

The submission of Esther in the midst of trying time.   Suppose that a third revolution occurs as a result of upcoming election. What lessons doors Esther teach us?  

Instruction - why does Esther manipulate the king?  Her power over him was in a way more serious than Vashti's open refusal.  But he doesn't realize that.   Vashti thought she had the power, but Esther really does. 

But in a revolution, power is fleeting. Only a stable society offers protection from oppression.

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