Alastair's Adversaria - Biblical Reading and Reflections: July 13th (Esther 9 & 10 & 1 Timothy 5)
Episode Date: July 12, 2021The feast of Purim. Widows and elders. My reflections are searchable by Bible chapter here: https://audio.alastairadversaria.com/explore/. If you are interested in supporting this project, please co...nsider supporting my work on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (https://bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or buying books for my research on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/36WVSWCK4X33O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035?mt=2.
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Esther chapter 9. Now in the 12th month, which is the month of Adar, on the 13th day of the same,
when the king's command and edict were about to be carried out, on the very day when the enemies of the Jews hoped to gain the mastery over them,
the reverse occurred. The Jews gained mastery over those who hated them. The Jews gathered in their cities
throughout all the provinces of King Ahazuerus to lay hands on those who sought their harm,
and no one could stand against them, for the fear of them had fallen on all peoples.
All the officials of the provinces and the satraps and the governors,
and the royal agents also helped the Jews,
for the fear of Mordecai had fallen on them.
For Mordecai was great in the king's house,
and his fame spread throughout all the provinces,
for the man Mordecai grew more and more powerful.
The Jews struck all their enemies with the sword,
killing and destroying them,
and did as they pleased to those who hated them.
In Souser the citadel itself,
the Jews killed and destroyed 500 men,
and also killed Parshandatha,
and Dalfon and Aspatha and Poretha and Adalia and Aradatha and Arrata and Arratae and Arratae and Vizetha the ten sons of Haman the son of Hamadatha the enemy of the Jews but they laid no hand on the plunder
that very day the number of those killed in Sousa the Citadel was reported to the king and the king said to Queen Esther in Suza the Citadel the Jews have killed and destroyed 500 men and also the ten sons of haman what then have they done in the rest
of the king's provinces. Now, what is your wish? It shall be granted you, and what further is your
request? It shall be fulfilled. And Esther said, if it pleased the king, let the Jews who are in
Susa be allowed tomorrow also to do according to this day's edict, and let the ten sons of
Haman be hanged on the gallows. So the king commanded this to be done. A decree was issued in Souser,
and the ten sons of Haman were hanged. The Jews who were in Sousa gathered also on the 14th day of
the month of Adar, and they killed 300 men in Sousa, but they laid no hands on the plunder.
Now the rest of the Jews who were in the king's provinces also gathered to defend their lives,
and got relief from their enemies and killed 75,000 of those who hated them, but they laid no
hands on the plunder. This was on the 13th day of the month of Adar, and on the 14th day they rested,
and made that a day of feasting and gladness. But the Jews who were in Susa gathered on the 13th day
and on the 14th, and rested on the 15th day, making that a day of feasting and gladness.
Therefore, the Jews of the villages, who lived in the rural towns, held the 14th day of the month
of Adar as a day for gladness and feasting, as a holiday, and as a day on which they send gifts
of food to one another. And Mordecai recorded these things and sent letters to all the Jews who were
in all the provinces of King Ahazuerus, both near and far, obliging them to keep the 14th day of the month
Adar, and also the 15th day of the same, year by year, as the days on which the Jews got relief
from their enemies, and as the month that had been turned for them from sorrow into gladness,
and from mourning into a holiday, that they should make them days of feasting and gladness,
days for sending gifts of food to one another, and gifts to the poor. So the Jews accepted what
they had started to do, and what Mordecai had written to them, for Haman the Eagagai, the son of
Hamadatha, the enemy of all the Jews,
had plotted against the Jews to destroy them, and had cast pur, that is, cast lots, to crush and to
destroy them. But when it came before the king, he gave orders in writing that his evil plan that he
had devised against the Jews should return on his own head, and that he and his son should be
hanged on the gallows. Therefore they call these days Purim, after the term per, therefore, because of all
that was written in this letter, and of what they had faced in this matter, and of what had happened to them,
the Jews firmly obligated themselves and their offspring, and all who joined them,
that without fail they would keep these two days according to what was written,
and at the time appointed every year,
that these days should be remembered and kept throughout every generation,
in every clan, province and city,
and that these days of Purim should never fall into disuse among the Jews,
nor should the commemoration of these days cease among their descendants.
Then Queen Esther, the daughter of Abahel,
and Mordecai the Jew gave full written authority,
confirming this second letter about Purim.
Letters were sent to all the Jews,
to the 127 provinces of the kingdom of Ahazuerus,
in words of peace and truth,
that these days of Purim should be observed at their appointed seasons,
as Mordecai the Jew and Queen Esther obligated them,
and as they had obligated themselves and their offspring,
with regard to their farce and their lamenting.
The command of Esther confirmed these practices of Purim,
and it was recorded in writing. Chapter 8 of Esther ends with a triumphal march, a feast and a celebration,
which might all seem rather premature, considering the fact that Haman's decree is still on the books.
It's to be carried out in about eight months' time. However, these were all part of Mordecai's plan.
It was a purposeful spectacle designed to show that the strength of the Persian government was behind the Jews.
Once the move in the king's support had become apparent, many others started to shift their allegiance.
Harbona already did this at the end of Chapter 8, and by Chapter 9, the shift in the weight of power is decisive.
As people start to recognise which way the political winds are blowing, they start to join with the Jews.
When the day of Haman's planned pogrom arrives, it's the Jews who achieve a victory of devastating scale.
The defeat executed upon the Jews' enemies needs to be crushing.
Only with such a crushing defeat will they ensure that their enemies don't nurse realistic hopes of vengeance and rise again to attack them.
The Jews kill 75,000 of their enemies, chief among them the ten sons of Haman.
In the process, a great many more potential enemies are deterred.
Yoram Hizoni observes that Mordecai is probably concerned also to send a signal to King Ahazueris.
He wants Ahazueris to know that the Jews are a strong group, and that it is in his interest to tolerate and support them.
The king has already shown that he is not overly concerned about matters of justice,
and that, save for possible reasons of political expediency,
he probably would not be particularly troubled by the genocide of the Jews.
The Jews don't take any spoil, even though the decree of Mordecai permits them to do so.
This is important to note because the decree of Mordecai should not be regarded just as an independent thing.
The purpose of the decree of Mordecai was to go toe to toe with the decree of Haman
to demonstrate that a decisive shift in the weight of the government's support had occurred.
This would only be effective if the severity of Mordecai's decree was every bit as severe as Haman's.
Anything less, and it would still seem that Haman's decree was the primary one,
with the other merely being a slight mitigation of it.
The severity of the judgment and the fact that they don't lay hands on any of the plunder
also should recall the judgment upon the Amalekites.
Haman was the Agagite.
As an agagite, he was a descendant of King Agag.
The Benjaminite King Saul was rejected from the throne of Israel,
his failure to kill King Agag and for taking plunder from the Amalekites.
Now the Benjaminite Mordecai, another son of Kish, is going to rectify his ancestors' fault.
Yoram Hizoni helpfully discusses the importance of power in such a situation.
Without the exertion of effective power, justice cannot be exercised, the innocent and the
vulnerable cannot be defended, and the world belongs to powerful aggressors.
While contemporary readers of the Book of Esther, living in peaceful modern societies, can have
great difficulties with the description of the judgment on the enemies of the Jews delivered
here, it is important to recognize that genocidal enemies cannot be effectively defeated with a mere
slap on the wrist. Only, for instance, with the utter defeat of Nazi Germany, could the security
of the Jews be achieved after the horrors of the Holocaust. The merely chastened Hitler might
have licked his wounds and retaliated when he had built up his strength again. After the successful
action of the Jews on the day formerly planned for Haman's pogrom, King Ahazueris approaches Esther to ask if there is
anything else that she might want. His only comments upon the shift here. Previously Esther has had to
approach the king with her requests. Now the king is approaching her, asking whether she has any request of him,
and this time he mentions no upper bound up to half the kingdom. Esther's request is that the right
of the Jews in Sousa to attack their enemies also continue for the following day. Perhaps there's reasons
to fear reprisals at this point. It is important that the victory, particularly in the capital
of Sousa, be so decisive as to be uncontestable. The hanging of the ten sons of Haman serves as a
further spectacle designed to prove that there is no hope for those who will oppose the Jews.
After the victory of the Jews in the provinces, they rest on the 14th day, and in Sousa, after the
extra day, on the 15th. The story of the Book of Esther is a story of six feasts. There's the
initial feast of chapter one where Vashti fails to come when summoned. There's the feast of Esther's
installation in chapter two. In chapters five and seven we have Esther's first and second feasts, the turning
points of the book. In chapter eight there is a feast as the Jews celebrate Mordecai's decree and his
elevation. And now in chapter nine there is a final feast, the feast of Purim, a feast originally
celebrated as a rest after the deliverance, and then continued as commemoration of what occurred. The
institution of the Feast of Purim is surprising in many respects. This is the first great new
annual feast that is instituted after the foundational feasts of the book of Leviticus. It's anomalous in
other respects. The other feasts of the year are very much rooted in the life of Israel. This is a feast
that is set in the diaspora, with its focus not being Jerusalem and its temple, but Sousa. It's a
feast that makes central Jews living outside of the land. It's a feast that the Jews voluntarily
adopt, not just a feast that's imposed upon them by the Lord's command.
In Esther chapter 4, Mordecai's command to Esther plays upon the laws concerning the annulment of vows
in Chapter 30 of Numbers. If Esther spoke up against the decree to her husband, she might be able
to overthrow it, using Numbers Chapter 30 as a model. If she did not speak up, she would be
complicit. Versus 24 to 26 give the reason for the name of the feast of Purim. The feast, it
seems, was named for the casting of lots. This is strange indeed, as Rabbi Foreman observes,
the lots seem to play a fairly minor part within the story, and they are used by the enemy of the
Jews Haman in setting up his plan. Why do they give their name to the feast itself?
Rabbi Foreman argues that we need to see the background of numbers 30 to understand what is going on
here. Per is the word for lots, but it might also be a word for the annulment, the annulment that Esther
brings to Haman's decree. He writes,
on one plane of meaning, it is called that because of Haman's purr, his lots.
But on another plane of meaning, it is called that because of Esther's per, her annulment of
Haman's decree. If we look at the passage this way, here's how to read it.
Haman tried to kill us, and to that end he cast lots, the pur, but the McGilla suggests,
that's not the whole story concerning how the holiday came to bear this name.
For afterwards, Esther, with her back to the wall, managed to annul Haman's plotted genocide,
And so the McGilla concludes, that's why they call these days Purim, because of the purr.
In other words, the McGilla's explanation for the name Purim is deliciously ironic.
In the end, that's why they call these days Purim, not because of Haman's lots, but because
of Esther's annulment.
Haman had wanted the day to be known for his pur, for his instruments of chance, but instead
the fate of the Jews was determined by something else, by another per, namely by Esther's act,
her annulment of the decree. As such, that's why they call the day Purim, because of Herpur,
not his. The institution of a feast of Purim is an event in the life of the Jewish people
that marks an important milestone. With the downfall of the northern kingdom of Israel, they had been
scattered by the Assyrians, and they had lost their identity as a people. Huge numbers of the Jewish
people had just disappeared and assimilated into other nations. Earlier in the Book of Esther, we see that the Jews of the
second exile, the Jews scattered and exiled by Babylon, had not lost their identity in the same way.
According to Haman's description, they were scattered among the peoples of the provinces,
but they observed their own distinct customs. In continuing to keep the law of the Lord in some way,
even as dispersed people, they retained something of their distinctiveness. Yet this distinctiveness had
marked them out for this great pogrom. The deliverance from the pogrom then was a sign that
the Lord would preserve them. Even as a distinct people, dispersed.
among the nations. It was a sign not just for that generation of the Jews, but for all of their
generations. A number of Jewish commentators have recognized a parallel between the Day of
Atonement and the Feast of Purim. Leviticus chapter 16 and the law concerning the day of
Atonement begins with recalling the death of the sons of Aaron, an event that occurred in the context
of the consecration of the tabernacle, an event that has many similarities with the description of
Chapter 1 of Esther, Nadab and Abayhu had approached the tabernacle in the wrong way.
In the book of Esther, we see several recollections of the story of the consecration of the
tabernacle, where the dangerous approach to the presence of the Lord in the tabernacle is comparable
to the dangerous approach to the presence of Ahazuerus, the king.
If you come in when you are not called, you do so in peril of death.
Leviticus chapter 16 verse 2, and the Lord said to Moses,
tell Aaron your brother not to come at any time into the holy place,
inside the veil, before the mercy seat that is on the ark, so that he may not die, for I will
appear in the cloud over the mercy seat. There is only one specific day of the year that Aaron can
approach, and not at any other time. Rabbi Foreman observes that Mordecai plays off this language
in his charge to Esther in chapter 4 verse 14, for if you keep silent at this time, relief and
deliverance will rise for the Jews from another place, but you and your father's house will
perish. And who knows whether you have not come to the kingdom for such a time as this?
Esther is called to act at a decisive moment, at the one moment where approach will be possible.
Esther's approach to Ahazuerus is like the one propitious time at which Aaron is permitted to approach
the presence of the Lord. Esther's response to the charge is to instruct Mordecai and the Jews to have a
fast. The one ordained fast of the festal calendar is that of the Day of Atonement, much as Aaron has
to approach the Lord wearing particular garments, so Esther must approach the king wearing royal robes.
Esther makes her dangerous approach to the inner court, much as Aaron has to approach the inner court
of the Holy of Holies. In Esther chapter 5 verse 2, and when the king saw Queen Esther standing in the court,
she won favour in his sight, and he held out to Esther the golden sceptre that was in his hand.
then Esther approached and touched the tip of the sceptre.
Esther's touching of the tip of the sceptre is in some ways like Aaron's application of blood
to key parts of the tabernacle.
Aaron the high priest then has to approach in a similar way.
He has to intercede for himself as an individual, as the high priest,
but he also has to intercede for the whole people.
As Rabbi Foreman observes, Esther has to intercede to the king,
both for herself and for her people.
The Day of Atonement also involves, of all things, a lottery between two paired goats,
one of them being used as the sin offering and the other being sent away into the wilderness.
The Book of Esther is a story of divided pairs and divergent faiths, of Vashti and Esther,
of Esther and Zeresh, of Mordecai and Haman.
Furthermore, the words Yom Kippurim could be translated as a daylight purim,
and some Jewish commentators have long recognized the resonance between these two feasts.
between Purim and the Day of Atonement.
The Day of Atonement seems to deal with eschatological themes,
with the approach to God's very presence,
with definitive acts of atonement,
with great events of division,
with the one goat being brought near
and the other goat being sent far away.
The Day of Purim might be seen as a sign
resting upon something greater.
The Lord will provide atonement for his people.
The Lord will allow for approach for his people to his very presence,
and the Lord will divide his people
from those who are not his people.
In the Feast of Purim, we see this playing out on a different plain.
The Lord will provide access for his people to the very thrones of the nations.
As they fast and turn to him, they will be delivered from their sins,
and he will vindicate them in the sphere of history.
He will divide them from their enemies, casting their enemies out,
and raising his people up to positions of power.
Stories that begin with mourning and death will end with joy and gladness and rejoicing.
A question to consider, how might we identify themes of Exodus in the story of Esther,
and how might these themes, along with others that we have identified, point forward to Christ?
Esther chapter 10. King Ahazuerus imposed tax on the land and on the coastlands of the sea,
and all the acts of his power and might, and the full account of the high honor of Mordecai to which the king advanced him.
Are they not written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of media and Persia?
for Mordecai the Jew was second in rank to King Ahazuerus,
and he was great among the Jews and popular with the multitude of his brothers,
for he sought the welfare of his people and spoke peace to all his people.
Besides the fact that it is exceedingly short,
the final chapter of the Book of Esther seems rather anticlimactic.
After all of the personal and political drama of the book,
it begins with King Ahazuerus imposing attacks on the land and on the coastlands of the sea.
Why on earth would the drama of the book be arrested for this description of the king's tax policy?
Besides being exceedingly boring, it seems rather irrelevant.
David Dalba has written a very perceptive article on this chapter and on this verse in particular.
He points out that behind the whole story of the book of Esther,
there is this subplot of how the king is going to raise revenue.
Haman the Egerguide, he argues, proposes that the king raise his revenue by plunder.
In chapter 3 verse 9,
please the king, let it be decreed that they be destroyed, and I will pay 10,000 talents of silver
into the hands of those who have charge of the king's business, that they may put it into the
king's treasuries. The financial character of the transaction is also raised by Esther in her
appeal to the king in chapter 7 verse 4, for we have been sold, I and my people to be destroyed,
to be killed and to be annihilated. If we had been sold merely as slaves, men and women,
I would have been silent, for our affliction is not to be compared with the loss to the king.
Esther there raises the point that even selling the population of the Jews into slavery
would be a better financial transaction than trying to raise money from them through genocide and plunder.
In the preceding chapter, even though the Jews had been given the right by the decree of Mordecai to take plunder from their enemies,
they did not avail themselves of it. Presumably all of that money went to the king.
What verse one represents then is an alternative way for King E Hasueras to raise his revenue,
not by genocide and plunder, not by selling whole populations into slavery, but by imposing
attacks. By imposing attacks upon the Jews living within the land and its various provinces,
and by taxing the Jews in the Mediterranean trading cities, he would have a reliable, but also a just
source of revenue. In this verse we see how the particular interests of Jews and their Gentile
rulers can align. They do not have to be at odds with each other. This would not be the last time
that Jews appeal to this sort of principle. It is reasonable to believe that this policy was
suggested to King Ahazuerus by Mordecai. Mordecai is like the wise Joseph in Ahazuerus's court,
the second in command, and the one who has administration over all of the affairs of the kingdom.
By Mordecai's prudent regulation, the chaos of the realm of Ahazuerus, under the oversight of his
vizierre Haman, is overcome.
Like the hero Joseph, Mordecai achieves this by prudent tax policy.
This all seems very pedestrian and boring, but it brings peace to the people.
There is a deep partnership established between King E Hasueras and Mordecai.
King Ehasiuras is praised for his acts of power and might,
but also for his elevation of Mordecai, which enables him to achieve these things.
As Gentiles elevate and bless and show hospitality to Jews in their midst,
they too will be blessed.
Earlier in the book, we noted resemblances between the characters of Mordecai and Esther and the characters of Abraham and Sarah, the numbers 127 and 180 at the beginning of the book, drew our minds back to Sarah, another woman hidden in a pagan king's court, and to Isaac the threatened seed.
In Joseph, a story of the great uncovering of identities, as Joseph reveals himself to people he had formerly hidden himself from.
we find themes from the story of Abraham and Sarah coming to a full expression,
whereas the mistreatment of Abraham and Sarah have brought judgment upon Gentile rulers and their peoples.
Through Joseph and his prudent tax policies, many Gentiles were blessed and their lives preserved.
Mordecai is a new Joseph, a man who is joined with a Gentile king, who elevates a Gentile king by his wise counsel,
and through his elevation blesses his brothers.
John Levinson writes,
The scene with which the Masoretic Esther closes
is one for which Jewish communities in the diaspora have always longed.
Jews living in harmony and mutual goodwill with the Gentile majority
under Jewish leaders who are respected and admired by the rulers,
yet who are openly identified with the Jewish community
and unashamed to advance its interests and to speak out in its defence.
Levenson also notes that in contrast to the story of Joseph
where a pharaoh could arise that had forgotten Joseph,
the deeds of Mordecai were not merely commemorated in the Feast of Purim,
but were also written down so as not to be forgotten in the Book of the Chronicles of the Kings of Media and Persia.
The figure of Mordecai reminds us of Joseph.
He is also contrasted with the figure of Haman and his policies.
In this chapter then we can see that the Book of Esther is not merely concerned
with recording a special deliverance that the Jews experienced,
or even just with instituting its commemoration.
It also has a political vision to propound to people within the world.
the diaspora, both Jews and Gentiles, a vision of how both parties can act in their own best
interests and also for the interests of the other. The Book of Esther is shot through with themes of
wisdom, with the wisdom of the plan of Esther and of Mordecai's plan. Those plans were exercised from
a position of weakness and vulnerability, but now there is a plan exercised from a position of rule and
authority, and it is no less wise. As in the story of Joseph, one of the greatest gifts that the Jews can
give their Gentile rulers is the gift of their wisdom, not functioning as opponents, but as trustworthy and loyal counsellors.
The theme of loyalty pervades the story of Joseph, and the theme of loyalty is playing throughout the book of Esther too.
Throughout the book, Ahazuerus is troubled with a crisis of loyalty. Can he trust his closest servants,
when Big Than and Terrish have risen against him? How can he find a queen to trust when his queen Vashti
refuses to obey his command? What are the dangers of trusting too much?
in a man of questionable loyalties, as in the case of Haman. Like Joseph in Genesis
Chapter 39, where he seemed to be guilty of adultery with his master's wife, Mordecai initially
appears to be guilty in his failure to bow to Haman at the king's command. However, as the story
works out, it is proven that he is the true loyal servant. He is the one that the king can depend
upon, whereas Haman is proven to be untrustworthy, largely revealed as such by Esther's
scheme, along with their wisdom, in their unimpeachable loyalty, the Jews will build up the authority
of anyone who elevates them. All of this, then, is a fulfillment of the promise to Abraham,
that in his seed, all of the nations of the earth would be blessed. A question to consider,
David Dalba has argued that Mordecai is the primary hero of the book of Esther. Do you believe
that he has justified in making this claim? If so, how? If we were to read the story of Esther,
as focused upon the character of Mordecai,
what elements and themes of the book would come more to the surface?
1 Timothy chapter 5.
Do not rebuke an older man, but encourage him as you would have father,
younger men as brothers, older women as mothers,
younger women as sisters, in all purity.
Honor widows who are truly widows,
but if a widow has children or grandchildren,
let them first learn to show godliness to their own household
and to make some return to their parents.
for this is pleasing in the sight of God.
She who is truly a widow, left all alone,
has set her hope on God,
and continues in supplications and prayers night and day,
but she who is self-indulgent is dead even while she lives.
Command these things as well,
so that they may be without reproach,
but if anyone does not provide for his relatives,
and especially for members of his household,
he has denied the faith, and is worse than an unbeliever.
Let a widow be enrolled if she is not less than 60 years of age,
having been the wife of one husband and having a reputation for good works if she has brought
up children has shown hospitality has washed the feet of the saints has cared for the
afflicted and has devoted herself to every good work but to refuse to enroll younger
widows for when their passions draw them away from Christ they desire to marry and so
incur condemnation for having abandoned their form of faith besides that they
learn to be idlers going about from house to house and not only idlers but also
gossips and busy bodies, saying what they should not. So I would have younger widows marry,
bear children, manage their households, and give the adversary no occasion for slander. For some
have already strayed after Satan. If any believing woman has relatives who are widows, let her care
for them. Let the church not be burdened, so that it may care for those who are truly
widows. Let the elders who rule well be considered worthy of double honour, especially those
who labour in preaching and teaching. For the scripture says, you shall not muzzle an ox when it treads
out the grain, and the labourer deserves his wages. Do not admit a charge against an elder,
except on the evidence of two or three witnesses. As for those who persist in sin,
rebuke them in the presence of all, so that the rest may stand in fear. In the presence of God,
and of Christ Jesus, and of the elect angels, I charge you to keep these rules without prejudging,
doing nothing from partiality. Do not be hasty in the laying on of hands, nor take part in the sins of others,
keep yourself pure. No longer drink only water, but use a little wine for the sake of your
stomach and your frequent ailments. The sins of some people are conspicuous, going before them to
judgment, but the sins of others appear later. So also good works are conspicuous, and even those
that are not, cannot remain hidden. In 1 Timothy chapter 5, Paul instructs
Timothy concerning various groups within the congregation, various age groups, and then the widows and the
elders. As Timothy addresses the various issues in the church in Ephesus, he needs to be mindful of the
way that he interacts with different age and gender groups. The instructions in verses one and two
relate with the teaching that follows concerning a specific group of older women, the widows, and a
specific group of older men, the elders. It also develops the portrayal of the church as the household of
God, as in chapter 3. The church is like an extended family, and Timothy needs to deal with the
members of the church accordingly. He compares older men to fathers, younger men to brothers, older women to
mothers, and younger women to sisters. We should beware of reading this too much in terms of the modern
nuclear family. Rather, we should think of the large extended family, with uncles and aunts, cousins,
grandparents, nieces and nephews, and various other forms of relations. Elsewhere, Paul also speaks
of different groups within the church by age and gender,
in Titus chapter 2 versus 1 to 6, for instance.
But as for you, teach what accords with sound doctrine.
Older men are to be sober-minded, dignified, self-controlled,
sound in faith in love and in steadfastness.
Older women likewise are to be reverent in behaviour,
not slanderers or slaves to much wine.
They are to teach what is good,
and so train the young women to love their husbands and children,
to be self-controlled, pure, working at home,
kind and submissive to their own husbands, that the word of God may not be reviled.
Likewise urged the younger men to be self-controlled.
As the Apostle Paul's emissary, Timothy has authority, but he needs to learn how to use it properly.
He will, for instance, have to be dealing with the elders, as we see at the end of this chapter,
and Paul's instruction concerning how to approach older men at the beginning of the chapter
provides Timothy with direction about how he ought to go about dealing with those elders that have failed in some regard.
When dealing with older men, Timothy needs to moderate his authoritative approach with the deference that's due to father figures.
Rather than rebuking such an older man, he needs to exhort and encourage him.
Such an approach operates within the honour that is due to such a figure, while still allowing for correction to be heard.
Timothy will have more freedom when dealing with the younger men, men who are his peers in age and younger.
As in the case of dealing with the older men, when he deals with the older women, Timothy needs to show them of proper honour.
in this case treating them as he would a mother. Timothy needs to treat the women of his age and younger as sisters,
and here it is particularly emphasized that he must act with purity towards them.
Given the household character of the church, Paul is concerned that Timothy perceive and operate within the structures of honour,
authority, and association that naturally exist in a society that's ordered by gender and age.
Using the relations of the extended family as guides, Paul can give him a template within which to think about the way
it he relates to different groups. The church does not float free of the generational and gendered
character of communal life more generally. This was one of the concerns of Paul in Chapter 2 when
dealing with men and women in the congregations. In the related passage in Titus chapter 1,
we should note the gendered and generational character of the church is expressed in the orders
of its teaching. The discipleship of the younger women is largely undertaken by older women,
not by Titus himself. Titus, however, plays that role relative to the younger man.
There seem to have been problems in the Ephesian congregations around the issue of widows,
and it is to this matter that Paul now turns in verses 3 to 16.
Throughout the scripture the Lord expresses an especial concern for the widow, the fatherless,
and the stranger. Isaiah chapter 1 verse 17,
learn to do good, seek justice, correct oppression, bring justice to the fatherless,
plead the widow's cause.
Chapter 1 verse 27. Religion that is pure and undefiled before God the Father is this,
to visit orphans and widows in their affliction and to keep oneself unstained from the world.
As a sort of extended family, the church would take responsibility for providing for needy persons
in their midst. We see this in Acts chapter 6, where there were structures of community
provision for the widows in the congregation. The church is not merely a place of teaching,
It's a household, and there needs to be provision of material assistance to its members.
In Acts Chapter 9, we also see another instance where widows are mentioned as a group,
as those who had been helped by Dorcas.
The problem in Ephesus, however, is that the church's provision for widows seems to have been abused.
Some young widows of marriageable age were depending upon the church's resources when they did not need to be.
Some families seem to have been neglecting their duty of support,
and handing it over to the church, expecting the church to pick up their service.
slack. Other widows enjoying the support of the church were engaging in community-disrupting
behaviours. Paul addresses this situation by providing criteria by which true widows could be supported,
and unworthy recipients of the church's support would be removed from the rosters. The widows who were
enrolled for support by the church needed to be without family to support them. If a widow had such
family, it was not the duty of the church to look after her, but the duty of the family,
and if the family was not prepared to do its duty,
then any of the widow's family members shirking their responsibility
should not be regarded as members of the community of faith.
This was a rejection of the faith,
and the sort of Christian behaviour that ought to accompany it.
Paul restricts the church's support to widows over the age of 60
who had a reputation and a long-standing record of godliness.
The widows to be supported by the church
were expected to have been wives of one husband,
faithful mothers, persons who had practised
hospitality, especially to the members of the church, and marked out by commitment to charity and the
works of mercy. These were women who had given much of their lives and their resources to the service
of the household of faith, and the household of faith had a corresponding duty to show them great
honour. The statement with which Paul begins this section, honour widows who are truly widows,
singles out this group for special respect and also the material provision and support that is
a necessary component of such honour. The faithful widows are contrasting.
with another group, a group of younger widows, perhaps examples of the new Roman women that some
have seen in the background of the Book of First Timothy and its situation in Ephesus.
A number of these women, presumably more wealthy, were given to practices that were causing
trouble in the community. Rather than devoting themselves to the works of mercy and charity,
they went from house to house engaging in gossip, slander and the spread of false teaching.
Their commitment to the faith also seems to have been slight, a number of them, itching to remarry,
seem to have sought new husbands from outside of the household of faith,
abandoning Christ for a pagan spouse.
This would greatly have unsettled a church
and compromised its witness to the surrounding society.
Paul is concerned that women susceptible to such falling away
are not enrolled in the company of widows that the church provides for.
They can provide for themselves,
many of them will have families that will be able to support them,
and no small number of them will be able to remarry.
While there are situations, as we see in 1 Corinthians chapter 7,
where Paul can advise against remarriage,
here he presents it as a prudent response to the young widow's condition.
The ideal was that such young women remarried
and gave themselves to the activities of a wife and mother.
We should also bear in mind the concept of managing their households
would have been a very expansive activity within the first century context,
far wider than what we often think about in terms of homemaking.
The woman who managed her household was overseeing the children,
but also the wider activity of the household as a site.
of production. In many respects, the household could be compared to a small business today,
and much of the activity of production within a society occurred within its context.
Many have wondered whether the widows described in this chapter were a particular class of
appointed women within the church with special ministry roles. This, it seems to me, is unlikely.
While the women in question were being honoured for their past service, they were selected not
according to the aptitude for future ministry, but according to their need. Besides, as a group limited
to women over 60, many of the widows would not be able to perform any sort of active ministry.
Given the degree to which the modern church has been abstracted from the context of the household,
we are more likely to think of the church as an organisation that is perhaps similar to a business,
with importance in the community being defined by official roles, titles, and by positions on the payroll.
This was not the case in the early church, and I think we are misguided if we are looking for the
prominence of women in the community by looking for official positions and titles.
The widows that are honoured here, for instance, are women who had been serving the community
for some time already prior to their being enrolled in the company of the widows.
As the church functioned as a household, the church was not primarily defined by official titles
and positions, rather it was the life of a community, and the ministries and works of service
in the community mostly did not occur under the auspices of official titles and roles.
Women like those described here who were faithful in their service of the community were supposed to be treated with a special honour, for which material support and provision was essential.
Elsewhere in Paul's letters in places like Romans 16, we see the great number of women who are active within particular communities.
Churches in this context seem to have numerous prominent women, even while the positions of official oversight of the communities were exclusive to men.
In modern Christian contexts where most of the Ministry of Churches occurs through churches
as official organisations and structures, it may be difficult to recover the prominence that
women enjoyed within a structure of the church as an organic household, and an active community,
most of whose life was carried out in informal contexts.
However, it seems to me that pursuing such a challenge is absolutely essential if the church
is to be what it ought to be.
The less that the church functions like an extended family and household, the more that there
will be a breach between word and life within its existence. From the widows, Paul turns to another
group that need to be accorded special honour, the elders. Alistair Campbell in his book on the elders
argues that the group referred to here are the elders of the town churches rather than just the
households. The elders of the house churches would not presumably have been paid for their labour in
preaching and teaching. It was only the overseers, the leaders of the town churches,
that would need to give themselves completely to these tasks.
As the fatherly guardians and instructors of the Christians within a given town,
it was important that the office of these elders be shown a proper respect.
This would involve paying them for their efforts.
To support his assertion here, Paul cites two statements,
the first from Deuteronomy chapter 25 verse 4,
concerning the arcs threshing the grain,
and then the second from Luke chapter 10 verse 7,
Words of our Lord,
and remain in the same house, eating and drinking,
what they provide, for the labourer deserves his wages. Elsewhere in 1 Corinthians chapter 9
verses 7 to 14, Paul also references the case law concerning the ox threshing out the grain.
Who serves as a soldier at his own expense, who plants a vineyard without eating any of its fruit,
or who tends a flock without getting some of its milk? Do I say these things on human authority?
Does not the law say the same? For it is written in the law of Moses, you shall not muzzle an
ox when it treads out the grain. Is it for oxen that God is concerned? Does he not certainly speak
for our sake? It was written for our sake, because the ploughman should plough in hope, and the thresher
thresh in hope of sharing in the crop. If we have sown spiritual things among you, is it too much
that we reap material things from you? If others share this rightful claim on you, do not we even
more. Nevertheless, we have not made use of this right, but we endure anything rather than put an
obstacle in the way of the gospel of Christ, do you not know that those who are employed in the
temple service get their food from the temple, and those who serve at the altar share in the
sacrificial offerings? In the same way, the Lord commanded that those who proclaim the gospel
should get their living by the gospel. There appear to have been issues with some of the elders in
Ephesus. Certain elders seem to have been accused of sin, and some seem to have been clearly guilty.
Part of Timothy's task in this situation is to exercise justice as Paul's reprimers.
To equip him in this task, Paul references a number of Old Testament principles of justice.
The first concerns proper evidence, Deuteronomy chapter 19 verse 15. A single witness shall not
suffice against a person for any crime or for any wrong in connection with any offense that he
has committed. Only on the evidence of two witnesses or of three witnesses shall a charge be
established. Where repentance was not forthcoming, elders would have to be rebuked in the presence of
everyone. When private and respectful appeal to them as fathers had failed, the company of the
elders and Timothy would have to gather together and collectively enact justice in the situation.
A communally witnessed rebuke would also be a deterrent for any others.
Deuteronry chapter 19 verse 20 is another principle in the background here, and the rest shall
hear and fear and shall never again commit any such evil among you.
The impenitent sinning elder is rebuked in the presence of the whole company of the church,
and Paul charges Timothy in the presence of the entire heavenly council,
of God, of Christ Jesus and of the elect angels.
Like Old Testament judges, he is charged to exercise these rules
without prejudice and without partiality.
He needs to be very careful about appointing people to the office of an elder.
He must not take part in the sins of others,
whether allowing people's abuses to continue without rebuke
or by appointing people who are not worthy of the positions that they are entering.
As an aside at this juncture, Paul speaks to Timothy's health and his need to drink wine.
Perhaps Timothy was experiencing health issues, drinking unclean water, while he was abstaining from alcohol.
Drinking wine in moderation would not be giving himself to drunkenness, but it would spare him from the health issues that he might experience otherwise.
Paul has given Timothy a most solemn charge.
However, Timothy, like any human being, is not up to the task of discerning other people's hearts.
people's hearts cannot be fully discerned, and Paul recognises this at the end of the chapter,
certain people's sins are conspicuous, or can be recognised by the observant person.
Other sins, however, are secret sins, and only appear later over time,
perhaps through sudden scandalous exposure, or perhaps in the character that they produce
in a person over many years. Others may only be revealed on the day of judgment.
On the other hand, there are people whose good works are obvious and plain to everyone around them,
and others whose good deeds are not seen by others, but are largely hidden.
However, even those good deeds that are not immediately obvious
will be made apparent over time.
By their fruit you will know them,
and people's habitual behaviours will be steadily revealed in their characters.
A question to consider,
what are some of the ways in which modern churches can learn from Paul's teaching
concerning the church as the household of God in the book of 1 Timothy?
