Then, Esther 5:7,8: "Esther replied, "My petition and my request is this: 8 If the king regards me with favor and if it pleases the king to grant my petition and fulfill my request, let the king and Haman come tomorrow to the banquet I will prepare for them. Then I will answer the king's question."
After this, Haman goes home to brag about his dinner party-- yet in spite of all that is going well in his life, he cannot forget his hate for Mordecai, Esther 5:13. This is when he decides to commission building the gallows for Mordecai.
That very night, King Xerxes cannot sleep and he asks for the book of chronicles to be brought and read to him (Esther 6:1). In this reading, the account of Mordecai saving the King is read and Xerxes asks what was done to reward Mordecai for this-- to which the answer-- nothing (Esther 6: 2-4).
Just then, Haman comes to talk to King Xerxes about hanging Mordecai-- but before he can ask-- Xerxes asks Haman, "What should be done for the man the king delights to honor?" (Esther 6:6)
Haman replies with every imaginable honor he can think of because he thinks King Xerxes plans to honor HIM! Boy, is he surprised when the king reveals that he wants Haman to go and carry out all these honors for the very man that he just built gallows to hang-- Mordecai!
So how does the story end of Haman? King Xerxes finds out about the gallows and has Haman hung on them! I don't think that worked out the way Haman planned.
Lon connected this story very well to our lives as Christians living in the 21st century. As Christ followers, we will encounter Haman's through out our lives-- 2 Timothy 3:12 promises that if we are living Godly lives, we will be persecuted.
How are we to fight these Haman's? With GOD as our DEFENDER. Lon gave a great quote from A.W. Tozer, "Whoever defends himself will have himself for his defense, and he will have no other; but let him come defenseless before the Lord and he will have for his defender no less than God Himself."
Lon highlighted that God loves to use the scheme of the schemers against them. It's SPIRITUAL JUDO. Judo is the art of using the enemies momentum against him-- allow him to provide the inertia to flip himself. That's what God did with Haman-- Haman constructed the gallows to kill Mordecai, but it was Haman that hung.
And as Lon pointed out in the sermon, God does this throughout the Bible because He has the black belt in spiritual judo:
1)Genesis: Joseph's brothers sold him into slavery to keep them from ruling over them and God puts into motion a series of events so that Joseph does rule over them but he is able to help them during famine.
2) Exodus: Moses-- Pharoh traps the Israelites up against the Red Sea and God uses this to humble Pharoh and destroy his chariot force by closing the Red Sea in on them but allows Moses to cross safely with the Israelites.
3) Daniel: Daniel's political enemies try to use his prayer life against him, have him thrown into the lion's den but God flips the situation around so that the king hears about Daniel and has the enemies thrown into the lion's den and eaten.
Our human nature is to respond with vengeance-- we want to get down there and mud wrestle with the Haman's in our life. But God does not want that for us. We need to step aside and leave room for His wrath, revenge is His to repay-- see Romans 12: 17-20.
As God commands us in Romans 12:21, "Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good."
In conclusion-- give your Haman's up to the One that is our ultimate defender!
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