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109

Source (gab.com)

[Source](https://gab.com/TorahPatriot/posts/111234439329179841)

(post is archived)

[–] 2 pts

Esther is a satirical warning against the rise of Rabbinical thinking and Talmudism.

It’s a farce about how Esther, the jewess, was such a sexy broad that Xerxes, the ruler of the greatest empire to that point of history, begged her to be his wife. It’s also about Mordecai, the most smartest and bestest guy ever, saving Xerxes from a plot. Finally, it’s about Haman, the dirty goyim who so cleverly plotted against the jews that he even tricked Xerxes into a proclamation that would allow him to wipe them out.

The truth is that the story never features mention of God or of prayer. The only appeal Esther and Mordecai make in their story, and through the process of scheming and plotting, is to Xerxes, the self proclaimed God-King. Meaning, they prayed to a false god and were thereby saved through trickery and legal wrangling of men, rather than by God’s action.

[–] 0 pt (edited )

The truth is that the story never features mention of God or of prayer

This is where the (((Masoretic))) and the Septuagint differ. The Septuagint version does make God more overt than the masoretic in forms of prayer and prophecy.