
The COMPLETE Story of Esther (With the Hidden Apocrypha Chapters!) Feast of Purim
This is a reading of the Book of Esther including the Deuterocanonical (Apocrypha) additions, arranged according to the traditional Septuagint (LXX) order rather than the standard Protestant order found in the King James Version.
Here’s a clear breakdown to help you understand what’s happening structurally and textually:
📖 What This Version Includes
The version in your transcript follows the Greek Septuagint structure (used in Orthodox and Catholic Bibles), which includes six additions not found in the Hebrew Masoretic Text.
These additions are usually labeled:
Addition A – Mordecai’s Dream (before Esther 1)
Addition B – The king’s edict to destroy the Jews
Addition C – Prayers of Mordecai and Esther
Addition D – Esther before the king (expanded dramatic scene)
Addition E – The king’s second edict defending the Jews
Addition F – Interpretation of Mordecai’s dream (at the end)
In Protestant Bibles like the King James Version, these sections are either:
Placed in a separate Apocrypha section (older KJV editions), or
Omitted entirely (most modern Protestant printings)
🏛 Historical Setting
The king referred to as Ahasuerus (Artexerxes in Greek form) is traditionally identified with:
Xerxes I
The empire stretching “from India unto Ethiopia” reflects the vast Persian Empire at its height.
The setting takes place in:
Susa (Shushan)
✨ Major Differences Between Hebrew & Greek Esther
The Hebrew version of Esther is unique in that:
God is never explicitly mentioned.
There are no formal prayers recorded.
Events appear more political and court-centered.
The Greek (Septuagint) version adds:
Explicit references to God (the Most High / Elohim)
Long prayers from both Mordecai and Esther
Theological interpretation of events
Prophetic framing through Mordecai’s dream
These additions make the story much more overtly religious and providential.
🔥 Theological Themes in the Additions
The Apocryphal sections emphasize:
Divine sovereignty over kings
Repentance and national fasting
Covenant identity of Israel
God reversing decrees
Judgment imagery (lots cast before God)
The dream of the “two dragons” (Mordecai and Haman) frames the entire story as spiritual warfare interpreted at the end.
📜 About the Final Chapter (Greek Ending)
The closing note referencing:
Ptolemy and Cleopatra
Dositheus the priest
Lysimachus of Jerusalem
Places the Greek version’s transmission in the Hellenistic period, likely under the Ptolemaic dynasty of Egypt.
This reflects how the book circulated in the Greek-speaking Jewish world centuries after the Persian period.
🎉 Purim
The feast established in the book is:
Purim
It commemorates:
The Jews’ deliverance
The reversal of Haman’s decree
The casting of “pur” (lot)
It is still celebrated annually in Jewish communities worldwide.
