the Third Week after Easter
Click here to learn more!
Read the Bible
Bahasa Indonesia Sehari-hari
Ester 6:14
Bible Study Resources
Dictionaries:
- FaussetEncyclopedias:
- InternationalDevotionals:
- EveryParallel Translations
Maka sementara mereka itu lagi berkata-kata dengan dia, tiba-tiba datanglah sida-sida raja, dihantarnya akan Haman dengan segeranya kepada perjamuan yang telah diperbuat oleh Ester.
Contextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
hasted to bring: Esther 5:8, Esther 5:14, Deuteronomy 32:35, Deuteronomy 32:36
Reciprocal: Esther 2:2 - king's servants Esther 5:5 - Cause Haman Esther 7:9 - one of the chamberlains
Cross-References
And when she coulde no longer hyde hym, she toke a basket [made] of bull russhes, and dawbed it with slyme and pitche, and layed the chylde therein, and put it in the flagges by the riuers brinke
For as in the dayes [that went] before the fludde, they dyd eate, and drynke, marry, and geue in maryage, euen vntyll the day that Noe entred into the Arke:
They dyd eate, and drynke, they maryed wiues, and were maryed, euen vnto the same day that Noe went into the Arke: and the fludde came, & destroyed them all.
Which sometime had ben disobedient, when once the long sufferyng of God abode in ye dayes of Noe, whyle the Arke was a preparyng, wherein fewe, that is to say eyght soules, were saued in the water:
Gill's Notes on the Bible
And while they were yet talking with him,.... About these things, and giving their opinion of the issue of them, upon the present appearance of them:
came the king's chamberlains, and hasted to bring Haman unto the banquet that Esther had prepared; the time appointed for it being very near, or quite up, and Haman being backward and dilatory, having no stomach to go to it, and perhaps fearing worse things were coming upon him he should hear of there.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse Esther 6:14. Hasted to bring Haman — There was a dreadful banquet before him, of which he knew nothing: and he could have little appetite to enjoy that which he knew was prepared at the palace of Esther.
ONE grand design of this history is, to show that he who lays a snare for the life of his neighbour, is most likely to fall into it himself: for, in the course of the Divine providence, men generally meet with those evils in life which they have been the means of inflicting on others: and this is exactly agreeable to the saying of our Lord: "With what measure ye mete it shall be measured to you withal."