Posted on 02/28/2018 5:40:55 PM PST by SJackson
The tale of Queen Esther and Mordechais salvation of the Jews from Hamans final solution is filled with themes that have permeated the Trump administration and his election.
President Donald Trump may not know this (although his daughter Ivanka might), but Purim is his holiday. The tale of Queen Esther and Mordechais salvation of the Jews from Hamans final solution is filled with themes that have permeated the Trump administration and his election.
Circumstance and personality make Trump most akin to Ahasuerus, the Persian monarch who is introduced to us through a royal carnival meant to impress upon the people his wealth and greatness and to give them a part of the action. But after an assassination attempt, Ahasuerus realizes that throwing massive parties for the people wont earn him their loyalty, and so he appoints the Jew-hating vizier, Haman, wholl intimidate his subjects into submission.
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Thankfully, Trump has appointed no Haman, and has skipped to hiring Jewish advisers, but Trump comes across as an amoral, vulgar man who loves the good life and who slowly evolves into a moral man who embraces righteous causes, especially that of the Jews.
Here are some common themes:
Obsession with news: When Queen Vashti refuses to appear with the king at his banquet, he calls upon his advisers to troubleshoot this scandal. Thus begins his own news factory. He wont wait for outside gossip: the news will be what he makes it. They decide to banish Vashti and spin the story, as it says: Dispatches were sent to all the provinces of the king, to every province in its own script and to every nation in its own language, that every man should rule in his home and speak the language of his own people (Esther 1:22). The Purim tale is filled with instances of the kingdom sending out its own news stories in the language of all subjects. Trumps Twitter feeds are like his dispatches, spoken in simple language the people will understand.
Obsession with sex and beautiful women: it was Trumps hot-mic scandal that instigated the current media obsession with stories of men exploiting beautiful women. No one was more talented at exploiting women than King Ahasuerus, whose beauty pageant in search of a new Persian queen was basically a rape pageant. This is not to accuse Trump of being a rapist, but Trump, as a pageant-owner, shares with Ahasuerus an admiration of beautiful women, and their respective tales of power are full of hotties.
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Showmanship: people often accuse Trump of being a braggart, but thats his game and strategy. Hes a showman. Even before winning, he set up press conferences in which it appeared as if he was already president. Hed post photos/videos of the massive crowds at his rallies. He understood the power of optics so did Ahasuerus and Mordechai. When Haman comes up with a plan for being honored, in which an esteemed courtier would parade him through the capital, Ahasuerus seized upon this idea to honor Mordechai instead, understanding that to impress people with an idea, you must show rather than tell.
Mordechai, for all of his wisdom, embraced this principle as well, making sure that the people of Shushan understood that winning would come to those who stand up for the Jews, as it says: Mordechai left the kings presence in royal robes of blue and white, with a magnificent crown of gold and a mantle of fine linen and purple wool (8:15). And so, when Trump is upset that the media misrepresents how many people show up at his rallies, he is simply following the principle that you must give people a good show.
Reversals of fortune: A major theme in the Book of Esther is reversal of fortune, when the opposite of what was expected happens (vnahafoch hu). Instead of rising up, Haman fell and was hanged. Instead of being hanged, Mordechai was raised up as vizier. Instead of being murdered, the Jews killed those who attempted to murder them.
Vnahafoch hu is a hallmark of the Trump victory. Instead of Trump accusing Hillary Clinton of voter fraud, Hillary accused Trump of voter fraud. Instead of bringing Trump down for sexual harassment, Democratic leaders (with Harvey Weinstein leading the pack) fell to their ruin. Instead of catching Trump in Russian collusion, the Democrats were exposed for unlawfulness. As for fake news, Trump adopted the term for himself and cast public doubt on media integrity.
Standing up for the Jews: one of the more important themes is Trumps position on the Jewish people. Accusations of him being an antisemite (or catering to them) have proven unfounded. He has emerged as a great champion of the Jewish people, calling out the antisemitic violence of the Palestinian cause and publicly recognizing Jerusalem as Israels capital. In doing so, he has continued to create reversals of fortune.
The Haman-like Jew-hatred endemic to the Palestinian cause has been exposed through Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbass deranged speech denouncing Trump for his decision. US Vice President Mike Pences speech to the Knesset, on the other hand, has brought light and happiness, joy and honor (ora vsimcha, sasson vikar) to the Jews.
Winning: Purim is a story about winning, and while we wait to see what will happen under a Trump administration, the Esther tale ultimately teaches us that it is our own actions that will lead to goodness and winning for the Jewish people. Mordechai and Esther took brave action, speaking out against hate and genocide, making Ahasuerus see that true justice and stable rule occurs when Jews can live safely and in freedom. Their moral victory was the victory of all the people of Shushan, who the text describes as glad when Mordechai won. Let this Purim season and those to come see more winning against evil and dictatorship and more ora vsimcha, sasson vikar for the Jewish people, Americans and all of humanity.
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Youtube: Esther and the King starring Joan Collins, Richard Egan, and directed by Raoul Walsh.
Ping!
And it has been spoken that Mordecai will once again prevail and Haman will be hanged (according to Kim Clement’s prophecy). LORD, let it be. Amen.
Blah, blah, blah. The same old foreign press: “he’s vulgar, horrible, I hate him and will jump up and down on a bed to prove it or hold my breath until I turn purple, but he’s doing good things despite himself.”
They can all go to hell!
The closest thing to enmity between Trump and Jews is the statistical likelihood that the latter will side with secular leftists — and Trump’s constant tweet barrage against these leftists.
But any serious bible student isn’t surprised.
His past had been more vulgar than his present. That’s what the writer is getting at.
Buzz off.
And anyhow he also has his Democrat past to blame it on :-)
You don’t listen very well, do you?
Hey songwriter, try reading sometime.
He is vulgar, at least was. The article certainly isn’t about proving he’s horrible.
You don’t read very well or even understand Jewish lore do you?
Marm ought to know as a Christian about sin-to-salvation stories. Which are in both Jewish and Christian bibles. It’s like some people don’t want to hear the “sin” part.
The story seems to be following a Christian pattern with Trump, in which evil is recognized as possessing an ultimately independent existence from humanity. That’s why no literal Haman figure, though he’s appointed then fired a number of parties who did wrong and didn’t pan out.
As personally a Christian, I don’t see the need to iconize Donald Trump to watch him yield his sinful self more and more to the goodness of God, and in turn exhort America in an according way. Parallels to bible stories illuminate timeless principles.
Since there is no literal Haman here to flout, could we have some Trumpentaschen to celebrate? (Cookie MAGA caps!)
Indeed!
Now time to...
If Purim is indeed Trump’s holiday, it shows he has very superficial understanding of the Christianity he professes to believe.
According to Rabbi Michael Strassfeld, “The Jewish Holidays,” p. 189. He says, “The spirit of Purim is best captured in the Talmudic dictum, ‘It is the obligation of each person to be so drunk as not to be able to tell the difference between ‘Blessed be Mordechai’ and ‘Cursed be Haman.’” The roles are switched, in other words, at Purim they become Haman.
He says, p. 108, that Judaism lives by the Torah all year, but at Purim, “all inhibitions are swept away, the one day in the year “we can let out our repressed feelings as we overturn all the rules, even turning the Torah itself upon its head.”
It is Judaism’s Mardi Gras, he says. When “everything is topsy-turvey, and a Mardi Gras spirit runs wild.,” p. 187.
This drunken holiday of mockery and masquerade (Rabbi Strassfeld’s words) does not square with the Christianity Trump professes to believe.
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