By Andrew Jacobson
Every Tuesday, the Nachshon Project takes us to the Pardes Institute in Jerusalem for an afternoon of learning. Along with several other fellows, I am taking a course titled "Jewish Identity as Reflected in Tanach" with Howard Markose. Each week we tackle a new subject - Shabbat and conversion amongst them so far. Last week - given the holiday - we confronted one question in particular: Is G-d present in Megillat Esther? Well, He is not mentioned explicitly. At no point in the ten chapter story are any of G-d's names said outright. He is textually absent, a weird fact given that He is mentioned by name in quite literally every single other book in Tanakh bar the Song of Songs.
But what if we peel back the facade and look deeper? And if we do find G-d, albeit hidden and concealed, what statement does this make - about the nature of G-d, but more importantly, about the nature of ourselves, coincidences, and the phenomenon of free will? Maybe He is trying to teach us something about the necessity of humans to take action when they see injustice, especially to their own people? We investigated, by first reading the story through and then making note of any odd coincidences and textual anomalies.
Here's what we found:
So G-d might appear textually. But what about in terms of content, the plot-line? I figured this was a pretty simple question - after all, when I finished reading the megillah, I said, really? All those astonishing coincidences without G-d's help? Consider a few examples:
So maybe this is to say: The story of Purim is that of divine intervention in seemingly natural events. The part I love most is that you don't realize (or at least I didn't) how these seeming coincidences fit together to produce a positive ending for the Jews until the very hand. Such is life: what we experience is partly a result of our decisions, and partly a result of the conditions. Part is within our control and part isn't. And when the part that isn't effects our lives - for better or for worse - it's never until the very end when we understand how it all fits together.