ipWft'ii'i ipJw -HA ' .V TCJ -t '"TT.Wf.WB The Commoner n It fc. I'. tiilns of joy and tho trolls of sprrow arc not fcir apart. Our omo'tiohs aro often mixed; we weep when overwhelmed with grief, and tears often furnish au outlet for our feelings when wo are happy. Hero wo have tho old and the' young working togotjaor; memories crowd in upon the old itnd their hearts are unahlo to express the satisfac tion that thoy fool. The young, with no memories of tho past, live in the present and in their visions of tho future; their joy finds an outlet in noise. To tho old ty was unothe? passover; to the yoting.it was more Ukoour Fourth of July a na6naj birthday. ' ThoHoxt tolls: us tftat thQjshoutsof joy and the noisd of the woepin'g were so mingled that those who tyoroiafar 0ff doum not separate the sounds, lb wapiti great day,' jsucft as foW;liave seen, for days arot made by tho -events that are crowded inMthemjj '.,, ' . ', , " ' At this distatfeo w,e can', only estimate the in tensity of tho fooling, but, recalling some out standing instanco of individual joy, wo can multi ply it by tho number of tho Children of Israel and then multiply that sum by the number that represents tho ratio between national enthusiasm and, religious feeling. BUILDING ACCORDING TO GOD'S PLAN The 'elders of tho Jews builded the temple through the prophesying of the prophets; the men of God superintended the work and com municator! jwith the elders as they received divine direction. J f They were engaged in a holy work and they yielded themselves to the will of God; it was His house upon which they worked and they were faithful to His designs. They builded and thoy prospered, as people always prosper when they work according to God's plans. It is when we substitute man's' plans far the plans of the Creator that we meet unexpected difficulties and come up against im possibilities. There are no blind alleys on God's highways; He never loads us into any situation without: providing a way out if we but trust and obey. The, fiouse was finished and the Children of Israel, the' priests and the Levites, and the rest .of the people, kept the dedication of the house, and they did it with joy. The Christian life is a simple life. It is built upon a, definite plan and js conducted along well settled Jines that radiate from the religious cen ter. "Seek ye first tho kingdom of God, and His righteousness; and all those things shall be added unto you." Tho Christian life develops like a tree, from the trunk out. One will never find the kingdom of God by seeking first something else, but if he Books -the kingdom of God first, all other good things wil bo added to him. When the Children of Israel were obedient,' all went well; when thoy were disobedient they were punished until they repented. When thoy returned to God and proved their repentance by theMr works, they were forgiven and life became a delight. There is no reason why any Christian's life should be dark or gloomy. MBe of good cheer" was Christ's salutation. He would not that any one should,, be sad. Just as with the Children of Israel obedience was followed by joy that approached ecstasy, so today and in the days to come, obedience will bring brightness into tho life so that oven our sorrows will be relieved by faith. "Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning" if we are about the Mas ter's business and willing to His will. THE TWO GREAT WOMEN OF THE BOOK OF ESTHER - y WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN BIBLE TEXT LESSON FOR AUGUST 13 (Esther iv:10 v:3) Again Esther spake unto Hatach, 'and gave him commandment unto Mordecai; n All the king's servants, and tho people of the king's provinces, do know, that whosoever, whether man or woman, shall come unto tho kinir into th inner court, who is not called, there is one law to i,110 dci.atll except such to whom the kin shall hold out tho golden sceptre, that ho mnv live; but I have not been called to come in unto tho king these thirty days. u tno And they told to Mordecai Esther's words Then Mordecai commanded to answer TMm.. Think not with thyself that thou shalt escape in the king's house, more than all tho Jews 'For if thou altogether holdeat thy peace at thi time, then shall thoro enlargement and dcllvernm!! arise to the Jews from another placo: but fw, and thy father's house shall bo destroyed- and who knowoth whether thou art come to the iciVwl dom for auch a time as this? M iao Kln&m Then leather bade them return Mordecai M answer. i una "Go. gather together all tho Jewa that are in Shushan and fast yo Tor me, and neither eat nor drink three dayr, night or day: I, also arid my maidens will fast likewise; and so will I go In unto the king, which la not according to the law: and if I perish, I perish. , ,,-, ,, So Mordecai went his way, and did according to all that Esther had commanded him. Now it came to pass on tho third day, that Esther put on her royal apparel, and stood in the Inner court of tho king's house, over against the kings house: and the king eat upon his royal throne in tho royal' house, over against the gate of the house. And It was so, when the king saw Esther the aueen standing in the court, that she obtained fuvor in his sight: and tho king held out to Esther the golden sceptre that was, in his hand. So Esther drew near, and touched the top of the ' tfocptre. . , ' Then- ,said the king unto her, What wilt thpu, queen, Esther and what Is thy request? It shall be even given thee to the half of the kingdom. : - Esther is not tho only heroine the the. book of 'the Bible tjiat has made her namo immortal. She is not the only woman mentioned in its ten won derfully dramatic chapters whose life holds a great lesson for men and women of all times and all countries. Vashti, though her part has been considered a minor one, should not be overlooked, especially in these latter days. She proved that she pos sessed real nobility; she defended, not the wel fare of a group, but all womanhood, and she had no guardian to spur her on by appeals to race pride and by threats addressed to her fear for herself. We read that Ahasuerus, King of Persia, Vashti's husband, was a typical Oriental mon arch, with a domain that extended "from India even unto Ethiopia." It was divided into 127 provinces. In the third year of his reign he made a feast unto all his princes and his servants. He showed them "the riches of his glorious kingdom and the honor of his excellent majesty many days, even an hundred and four-score days." Then he gave a seven days' feast to all the people who were present in the Shushan palace. "Also Vashti the queen made a feast for the women in the royal hpuso which belonged to king Ahasu-. erus." VASHTI'S NOBLE REFUSAL On the seventh day, "when the heart of the king was merry with wine," he commanded the seven chamberlains to "bring Vashti the queen before the king with the crown royal, to shew the people and the princes her beauty: for she was fair to look on." But Vashti refused to ex hibit her beauty before a lot of drunken revellers "therefore was the king very wroth, and his anger burned in him." Then the king called the wise men together and asked, "What shall be done to Vashti?" Memucan one of the princes- of Persia and Media, suggested that Vashti, the queen, had not only wronged the king, but all the princes and all the people as well. Memucan seems to have been tho prototype of quite a numerous tribe of which some arguments which he employed have been repeated in modern times. Here is his suggestion to tho king: "For this deed of the queen shall come abroad unto all women, so that they shall despise their husbands in their eyes, when it shall be re ported. The king Ahasuerus commanded Vashti the queen to be brought in before him, but she came not. ,, . , "If it please the king, let there go a royal commandment from him that Vashti come no more before king Ahasuerus; and let the king give her royal estate unto another that is better than she." SELF-RESPECT ABOVE POSITION This Pleased tho kinghe was just drunk enough to listen- to such advice and he issued an order that Vashti should no more come before the king, and he gave her royal estate unto an oilier. Vashti may bo regarded as one of the earliest martyrs to the cause of temperance. Her refus al to obey her husband, when ho was merry with wine, qost her her crown, but she preserved her self-respect. She deserves to be remembered now when wives have ceased to be the helpless vic tims of intoxicated husbands. The dethroning of. Vashti opened the way for the selection of a new queen. Mordecai, a Jew who had been carried away, from Jerusalem with the captivity entered his uncle's daughter Esther, whom he had raised as a member of hfs family in tho contest, which was open to "all the fair young virgins." After the 12 months required foj their purification, the maidens werebrought before the king, and the kinTSo We read that "the king loved Esther above all tho women, and she obtained grace and favour in his sight more than all the'virginb; so that hi f .. - set tho royal crown upon tferhead, and mad h queen instead of Vashti." made ller AN INFAMOUS CONSPIRACY This brings us to the lesson. Haman wilft "had bee promoted to the chief place under fS long, was enjoying the reverence of the kinS servants that is, of all except Mordecai iL "bowed not, nor did him reverence." This filinri Haman with wrath and for this lack of reverend on the part of one Jew, Haman decided to Sp fctroy all the Jews in the kingdom. He did not tell the king his personal Krov anco, but did as the wicked always' do, viz nip tended that he was' prompted, by noble motive For the king's benefit, 33 he .put it, he asked an thority to kill them. Mordecai had concealed Esther's race and the Icing did riot know that hia queen was fncludod in the decree. (Hanriii probably did; not know it.) The conspiricv promised to be successful; orders were sent forth to "destroy, to k'lland to cause to perish al Jows, both young and old, little children "and women, in one day." When Mordecai learned what was done he at once put oh sackcloth and went before the king's gate. Esther, learning of his mourning, dis patched a trusted messenger to him to know the cause. He sdnt word to her, urging her to go in unto the king and make supplication in behalf of the people. TWO WONDERFUL UTTERANCES . Esther sent back word that, according to the law, any one presumptuous enough 10 go before the king without being called would be put to death, unless the king held out the golden scep ter, adding that she had not befen called into the king's presence for thirty days. Mordecai then appealed to Jier own interest he sent back an answer to her. "Think not with thyself that thou shalt escape In the king's house, more than all the Jews." And then the faith of Mordecai blazed forth, he spoke in the tone of the prophets and warned Esther that if she held her peace, deliverance would arise to the Jews from another place and that she and her father's house would bo 'destroyed. He con cluded with a wonderful sentence, often used in appeals to those in authority:' "Who knoweth whether thou art come to the kingdom for such a time as this?" Esther, strengthened and inspired by Mor decai's appeal, returned an answer that ranks with the words of Mordecai. . She asked Mor decai to gather together all the Jews in Shushan to fast for her for three days and three nights; she and hef maidens would tast also, and then she promised Mordecai, "So will I go in unto the king, which according to the law: and if I perish, I perish." A DRAMATIC CONTRAST , ,. Behold the contrast! On one side was the chief man of the kingdom, with a decree author izing him to kill all the Jews, and with all the power of the kingdom to carry out the con spiracy. On the other side was a Jew condemned to death and a Jewess queen whom her husband ha'd unknowingly included in the death sentence. What an unequal combat and what a difference in character is disclosed! The scheming Haman, working under cover and practicing deceit, was seemingly near to a wicked triumph, but he had not numbered the unseen forces the hosts, concealed upon the mountain top, which form the unconquerable re serve in every righteous cause. Moses declares that one with God shall chase a thousand and two shall put ten thousand to flight. Mordecai was number one and Esther was number two in the rival army that was to shatter the plans of Haman. The Jews fasted, Mordecai and Esther with them. And on the third day Esther put on her royal apparel, and stood in the inner court of the king's house; she obtained .favor in the sight of the king; he held out the golden scepter; tho crisis was past she had triumphed. The king asked what she desired and she invited him and Haman to a banquet with her that day. When the two guests appeared and the king asked what her petition was, Esther deferred the pre sentation of her petition and aBked them to bo -her guests again on the following day. A HUMOROUS SITUATION Haman, in the meantime, had further occasion to be stirred with wrath against Mordecai for lack of reverence. Unaware of impending peril, he ordered that a gallaws fifty cubits high ho made for Mordeca'l. Something also happened to the king. That night he could not sleep; he spent his restless. hours listening to the reading of the' chronicles. It so happened' was it' just an accident?' that they road to the king :of the act of Mor 'fct -. t u .j"iuL.t,H A&Kte.ifat.M&M'LA JKkiks.uu.