This
post will be a two for one special. Not
only will we be looking at Queen Esther as a valiant woman, I’m also going to
review the 2006 movie based on a novelized version of the story, titled “One Night
with the King.”
Quick
basic overview of the facts of the Bible story- Esther was a Jewish orphan girl
living in Persia, and was chosen by King Xerxes to be his bride. The Grand Visier (every bit as evil as
Aladdin’s Jafar) is infuriated that the Jew Mordecai (Esther’s uncle and
guardian) will not bow to him, and so he convinces the King that the Jews are
disloyal and should be destroyed. The
King allows the Visier to issue and edict allowing the Persians to kill all
Jews on a particular day in a few month’s time.
Esther knows that to approach the King without permission is to risk
death, but for the sake of her people, she goes to the King and asks him to
spare the Jews. He agrees, and all ends
happily. So, now onto the details, where
the interesting stuff lurks.
Of
course, the most obvious aspect of Esther’s character is her bravery. She risked her life in order to save her
people. In doing so, she is an Old
Testament prefiguration of Christ, laying down His life for His sheep. But she was also a woman with a lot of common
sense. When the King was choosing his
bride from among the maidens of the land (very Cinderella-eque) they each had a
chance to come before him, arrayed in any finery they chose from the royal
treasury. Esther chose nothing for
herself, but asked Egeus, the eunuch who had charge over the virgins, to adorn
her. She understood that he would be a
better judge of what the King would find attractive. And it worked. “The king loved her more than all the women:
and she had favor and kindness before him above all the women.”
Later, we see her feminine
intuition working when she goes to the King without being summoned. Instead of asking right then and there for
him to save her people, she asks him to a banquet that day. After he had eaten (and drunk) his fill, he
asked her what her petition was. She
asked him to come to another feast the next day. That day, Esther waits until her husband is
“warm with wine” and then she asks him her great favor. She understood that she needed to charm her
husband before asking something so great from him. It’s a bit of wisdom we can all learn from –
bribing men with food never did any woman any harm. J
One of my personal goals in having
this blog has been to learn more about the women of the Old Testament. When I heard about this movie, “One Night
with the King,” I was really excited, and looking forward to a cinematic
portrayal of this compelling story. I
should have realized that this wouldn’t be the case. I could rant about the overuse of slow motion
and oddly placed flash-backs, the over-complicating of the story with political
intrigue and unnecessary characters (including a contrived love interest!) or
the terrible script writing (including such lines as “Are you okay?”). However, I’m going to limit myself to the
film’s treatment of the character of Esther.
It’s true that the Biblical account
of Esther doesn’t give us much about her personality, other than what I’ve
mentioned above. We know that she was
physically beautiful, wise, and brave.
We know that she was a Jew with a firm faith in God. However, I like to think that the real life
Esther was very different from this film’s portrayal of her, which is more
reminiscent of a Disney princess than a valiant woman. We see her telling stories to the children of
the village, making them laugh and giggle.
We see her sneaking out of the house to attend one of the king’s
banquets, against her uncle’s orders. We
see her reveling in the beauty of the palace gardens (spinning around, head thrown
back, smiling at the sky). We see her
dramatically running through the rain to the royal hall in order to ask Xerxes
for mercy for the Jews. (Esther would
have much more sense than to appear before the king looking like a drowned
rat.) In short, we are given a picture
of an impetuous and imaginative young woman who would fit very well into
Princess Diaries, or maybe the Kiera Knightly version of Pride and Prejudice.
(I did love the costumes, but seriously, it looks like Xerxes is trying to take a selfie here...)
The movie makers got the big
picture, that Esther was brave, but they didn’t give us a portrait of a valiant
woman. They gave us what they’re good
at—Disney princesses. It’s
disappointing, but I should have seen it coming. The one thing they did with her character
that I did like is that they gave her a love of books and reading. She loves the stories of the Old Testament,
and is so familiar with them that she can recite them from memory. But she also reads other stories, like the
Epic of Gilgamesh. (I don’t know how
historically accurate that is, but I don’t think it’s outside of the realm of
possibility.) So I guess if you want to
learn more about Esther, the real Esther, your best bet is to read her story
from a source we can trust—Sacred Scripture.
The selfie! That's immediately what I thought of before even reading your caption! Lots of neat pictures
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