Haman, a powerful official in Persia, allowed pride and hatred to consume him when Mordecai refused to bow, leading him to plot not only Mordecai’s death but the destruction of the entire Jewish people (Esther 3:5–6, 13). Confident in his scheme, he even built gallows to execute the very man who had offended him (Esther 5:14). Yet behind the scenes, God was at work—prompting the king to honor Mordecai for saving his life and positioning Queen Esther to courageously expose Haman’s wicked plan (Esther 6:1–11; 7:3–6). In a dramatic reversal, Haman’s moment of pleading turned into his downfall when the king, enraged and misinterpreting his actions, condemned him (Esther 7:7–8). The very instrument of his hatred became the means of his judgment, as he was hanged on the gallows he had prepared for Mordecai (Esther 7:9–10). His story powerfully reveals that evil ultimately collapses under its own weight, echoing the truth that the wicked fall into the pit they dig (Psalm 7:15). What Haman intended for destruction, God turned for deliverance, proving that no scheme can stand against His sovereign purpose.
David wrote that the wicked man "makes a pit, digging it out and falls into the hole he has made" (Psalm 7:15). That Psalm was written hundreds of years before the historical events that took place in the book of
Esther, but it perfectly captures what happened to Haman. It also shows how God is always at work behind the scenes. Haman acted according to his own sinful desires, but God used him and the surrounding circumstances to bring salvation to the Jewish
people (Esther 8–9).
Many "Hamans" still exist today, people who do all they can to rid the world of God’s children. Some still target the Jewish people, a longstanding,
prejudicial hatred that has continued since early history. But that hatred has
been expanded to include Christians because of their claims about Jesus being
the only way to be saved. Jesus anticipated that hatred, warning believers that
the world would hate them (John 15:18–19).
That hatred shows
up in different ways. In some nations, it’s the outright and public murder of
anyone professing faith. In other nations, it takes the more subtle form of
laws meant to entrap, capture, and punish them. Either way, God takes note. The perfect Judge will render perfect justice. God is always
there, working out all things for the good of His people (Romans 8:28).