Whispers of Evil
The Chosen PeopleSeptember 23, 2025x
247
00:23:1421.32 MB

Whispers of Evil

🎙️ Aaron Salvato🎙️ Aaron SalvatoVoice Actor | Writer | Theology Consultant
Zak Shellabarger Zak Shellabarger Showrunner | Head Writer

# 247 - Whispers of Evil - In this episode of The Chosen People with Yael Eckstein, Mordecai exposes an assassination plot and is forgotten as Haman rises to power, demands homage, and spins a sealed decree to annihilate the Jews. In the shadows of Persia’s palace, Esther’s hidden position—and a single act of defiance—sets the stage for a showdown between whispering evil and quiet courage.

Episode 247 of The Chosen People with Yael Eckstein is inspired by the Book of Joshua.

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For more information about Yael Eckstein and IFCJ visit https://www.ifcj.org/

Today's opening prayer is inspired by Psalm 139:23–24, “Search me, God, and know my heart. Try me, and know my thoughts. See if there is any wicked way in me, and lead me in the everlasting way.” 

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Show Notes:

(01:42) Intro with Yael Eckstein

(02:32) Whispers of Evil

(21:14) Reflection with Yael Eckstein

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

00:00:00 Speaker 1: Previously on the chosen people. In the heart of the world's greatest empire. Power was not whispered. It was shouted from palace rooftops and poured into ornate goblets. And King Xerxes was not a man of half measures. 00:00:21 Speaker 2: So it shall be Queen Vasheiti shall be banished. 00:00:27 Speaker 3: We will find your new queen, one who will honor your commands as you rule this empire. Let beautiful young women be sought for the king and added to your harem. Let them be gathered from every province, and let the one who pleases you most be crowned queen and brushed his place. 00:00:50 Speaker 1: In the heart of Susa, the capital of the Persian Empire, lived a man named Mordecai. He had taken pains to make sure all the men he associated with at the city gate thought Esther was Persian, not Jewish, when he took her in as a child. When his uncle died, he forced her to adopt a Persian name in an attempt to conceal their heritage. 00:01:16 Speaker 4: Say your goodbye and bring her to the palace within the hour. 00:01:20 Speaker 2: Tell me your name. 00:01:22 Speaker 1: Esther kept her eyes downcast or alluring, as her guy had called it, and answered her king. I am called esther my king, and so the orphan girl, the peasant princess, became Queen of Persia. 00:01:45 Speaker 5: Shallo, my friends from here in the holy Land of Israel. I'm ya el extein with the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews, and welcome to the Chosen People. Each day we'll hear a dramatic story inspired by the Bible, stories filled with pie, timeless lessons of faith, love, and the meaning of life. Through israel story, we will find this truth that we are all chosen for something great. So take a moment today to follow the podcast. If you're feeling extra grateful for these stories, we would love it if you left us a review. I read every single one of them, and if you're interested in hearing more about the prophetic, life saving work of the Fellowship, you can visit IFCJ dot Org. Let's begin. 00:02:35 Speaker 1: The city gate had always been a place of business and judgment, Mordecai's domain. He had memorized Persian law, prided himself on applying it with wisdom and precision. This was his craft and once his pride. But now the gate had become a place of restless waiting. The palace loomed close, yet esther felt impossibly far, Locked behind thick stone walls and buried beneath silken garments and endless feasts. She was queen, now living behind veils and gates, exulted in name, yet silent in power. Mordecai's eyes flicked toward every courier and messenger leaving the palace, hoping for a glimpse of news, some sign that his counsel still echoed in her heart. Every day he fretted and worried over her living among the whisperers and schemers of King xerxes court, the men who feasted on intrigue and gorged on plots to satiate their ambition. But he had taught her to listen, to observe. Now he could only pray it had been enough. Mordecai sat at his post, scrolls and papers spread before him. The ink blurred where restless fingers had smudged it. He tried to focus, but his anxious thoughts pressed down, heavy and suffocating. The hours spent worrying had compounded, and he now had hours of paperwork to do, despite his counterpart judges, all having gone home hours ago to their families, but Mordecai had no family to go home to. The sun dipped low shadows, lengthening but then piercing the stillness of dusk. At the deserted city gate, like jackals on the hunt, came hurried whispers. They were quick, sharp, and secretive, but they were not meant for him. Mordecai slunk down, but craned his neck upward in the direction of the whispers. Sure enough, above there were two figures who lingered near the stone battlements, thinking themselves alone. Mordecai recognized them immediately. They were royal guards, Big Thana and Teresh. Their voices caught by the wind and echoed down the stone alcoves, carried to where Mordecai sat. 00:05:15 Speaker 2: He doesn't deserve that throne. 00:05:19 Speaker 3: Keep your voice down, But you're right. We risk our lives for him, and for what disdain mockery? 00:05:28 Speaker 2: I say, I say we ended quietly a blade of a violent poison. The citizens of Susa will thank us, and the king's rivals who will reward us. 00:05:47 Speaker 1: The wind then shifted and carried the voices elsewhere. Mordecai's breath caught in his throat a plot He could see the men continuing in their murderous planning, unaware of his presence below. But he didn't want to push his luck, and besides, he didn't need to hear any more. To prove their guilt, as silently as he could, he gathered his scrolls with shaking hands, his mind racing. This was more than treason. It was also a threat to Esther. Though Mordecai had no great love for King Serxes, what would happen to Esther if he was removed from power? Would one of those treasonous thugs take his place? He shuddered to think of either one of those smami men laying a hand on Esther. Mordecai moved quickly, slipping away from the gate, heart pounding to send secret word to the palace. The next morning, Esther reclined in her private garden, her handmaidens near by, their quiet chatter blending with the rustle of leaves. She tilted her face toward the sun, soaving the warmth on her skin, while the cool bite of night still clung to the shaded corners of the dense oasis. She was still adjusting to the staggering wealth and the suffocating presence of constant companionship her handmaidens seemed harmless enough, but Mordecai's warnings lingered. 00:07:21 Speaker 5: The palace is full of spies, whispers, and watching eyes. 00:07:26 Speaker 1: It was strange to go from a life of quiet solitude to one where she was never truly alone. From somewhere beyond the garden walls, doors opened and shout. Moments later, heat Arch appeared, the eunuch the king had assigned to her after their wedding. Even that notion still felt surreal. 00:07:47 Speaker 5: And married queen that a king's wife. 00:07:52 Speaker 1: And yet with every passing day the title felt more like a role to perform than a life to live. She watched hettarc approach, uncertainty flickering in her chest. He had once served Queen Vashti. Where did his loyalty truly lie? Was he the King's watchful eye, placed to guard against rebellion? Or could he be something more a confidante in a palace full of masks, My queen lord? He straightened, then flicked a glance at the handmaiden's with the smallest lift of his brow. They scurried away, disappearing into the palace corridors. Esther marveled at the subtlety of his authority, her power wielded without raising his voice. 00:08:42 Speaker 4: She wondered if she. 00:08:43 Speaker 1: Would ever command presents like that. She resisted the urge to stand. It felt strange to sit while he towered over her, but she remembered Higgey's instructions. She stood and bowed only to one man, her husband, the king. The silence stretched. Hetarch seemed perfectly at ease with it. Esther less, so she searched her mind for the right protocol. Petarc raised a finger to silence her, his head tilting slightly toward the retreating handmaidens still lingering within earshot. Only when they had vanished into her private chambers did he speak, his voice low and direct. 00:09:30 Speaker 4: A man named Mordecai, a singing word. 00:09:33 Speaker 1: Esther's breath caught. Mordecai had warned her to keep not only her heritage, but also their connection a secret. Yet now it seemed Hetarch new But for the moment, Esther pushed aside the implications. She was too eager to hear. What news he carried Mordecai? What news? Hetark hesitated, weighing her the risk and the words, he. 00:10:00 Speaker 4: Is much to give this to you. 00:10:03 Speaker 1: The message, Teresa, he drew a folded parchment from his robe and placed it in her hand, his eyes never leaving her face. Her heart pounded as she unfolded it. Her cousin's familiar neat script swam before her eyes. 00:10:22 Speaker 6: My dear Esther. 00:10:24 Speaker 4: Must warn the king two of his guards, big sonner Tesh, conspire to murder him. 00:10:33 Speaker 3: Overheard them myself at the city gate. 00:10:36 Speaker 4: I know the risk of sending this message, but I trust. 00:10:39 Speaker 6: You act swiftly, and I remember all. 00:10:44 Speaker 5: I have taught you. 00:10:46 Speaker 2: Yours more. 00:10:47 Speaker 1: The guy Esther looked up the weight of the words, still sinking. In Hetta watched her closely, measuring every flicker of emotion. She shot to her, her voice barely a whisper. 00:11:02 Speaker 4: We must act immediately. 00:11:04 Speaker 1: We must go to the king. For the first time, Hetarg's polished composure cracked. He closed the space between them, his voice low and sharp, and. 00:11:15 Speaker 4: Swear that this is not some scheme of your cusps in the accusation discourse. Destoy your standing. 00:11:21 Speaker 7: Give me your custom step. 00:11:24 Speaker 4: You know the cost of a mistake of this palace. 00:11:27 Speaker 1: Esther faltered. His warning echoed the very danger Mordecai had taught her to fear, and her Guy's lessons too, wives are summoned, they do not summon the king. But then she drew herself up. No, I believe him. 00:11:45 Speaker 4: Mordecai is no schemer. 00:11:48 Speaker 2: He raised me to stand loyal and speak the truth. 00:11:52 Speaker 4: I will do the same. 00:11:53 Speaker 1: Pet Arg held her gaze with piercing intensity, as though searching for any shadow of doubt. Esther did not flinch, She would not wilt. At last, Hettark gave a single nod, very well, we will soon know the truth. With Hetarch's reluctant permission, Esther went before the king. She kept her connection to Mordecai hidden, trusting Hetark to do the same. But only time would tell where his true loyalties lay. The plot was investigated, found true, and justice came swiftly. Big Thana and Teresh were impaled on stakes outside the palace gates, a gruesome warning. The king recorded the event in his royal chronicles. Mordecai's name was written down as the man who revealed the traitors, but it was quickly forgotten. No thanks were sent to the city gate. Mordecai was not exalted. There was no reward, no commendations. Xerxes slept soundly and Queen Esther kept her place in his favor, but in the shadows Mordegai remained unseen and unthanked, a man remembered by parchment but forgotten by power. Five years passed, the palace bustled with new faces, shifting alliances. Favor was fleeting, power even more so. And then, after a long absence from court, off fighting in the King's War, earning victories as well as influence, an old familiar faith returned to Susa. Haman. He was a polished politician and a ruthless opponent on and off the battlefield. He hailed from the province of Agag, and was even rumored to be descended from an Amalekite king sworn enemies of Israel. In fact, disdain for the Jews and the other minorities within his province was no secret. His ambition rippled through every gesture and polluted every calculated move. He bowed to power, not out of loyalty, but for the rewards it could deliver. Persia ruled the world, and Hamon intended to rule whatever parts of it he could grasp. When he returned to Susa, the king elevated him, and so he strutted through the capital in robes of the highest rank, and wherever he went, conversations died, smiles faltered. No one dared meet his gaze, but they were compelled to bow and scrape to him, as they would the king. This was an honor bestowed to no other man in the Persian Empire. One morning, at the city gates where Mordecai worked, Haman emerged from the palace. The nobles bent low, merchants pressed their foreheads to the ground, and servants groveled in the dust. But despite the masses paying their homage to the man deemed second in all of Persia, Mordecai stood tall and unmoving, his eyes narrowing in silence, seething hatred and distrust. Ajan, Mordecai's fellow judge, noticed out of the corner of his eye, when Hayman and his entourage had continued out into the city and the bystanders around them resumed their activities. He leaned over and whispered discreetly to his old friend. 00:15:40 Speaker 2: Why do you not bow? Do not fear what Lord Harmon might do to you? 00:15:45 Speaker 1: Mordecai felt his jaw said. He chose his words carefully, his years of quiet loyalty, his unwavering service to the Empire and the king had gone unnoticed for God in the royal record. And now to see an obscenely ambitious, cruel man with an abhorrent reputation, an enemy of his people, no less elevated to honor and power, he didn't just feel unjust. It felt like a violation of the natural order. Mordecai had given his loyalty to Persia, the captors of his people. He had served faithfully, though his people were scattered across the empire, far from home. But to bow to this man, this enemy, never. 00:16:37 Speaker 4: I will not bow to that man. 00:16:39 Speaker 1: But unfortunately for Mordecai, Aarjang was not the only one who noticed that Mordecai did not bow. The whispers carried and rumors spread, as they always did in Susa. They reached Hayman's ears like smoke curling through palace halls. 00:16:59 Speaker 4: Who's a man will not bow? 00:17:01 Speaker 7: His name is Mordecai. He's a judge at the city gate. And this isn't public knowledge, mind you. He likes to keep it quiet, But I know those who have seen what side of town he goes to each night and comes from each morning the Jewish quarter. He's a Jew. 00:17:15 Speaker 3: Of course, I. 00:17:17 Speaker 4: Knew this had to be no more than pity posturing, the trivial jealousy of arrival. Hah is if this no name judge could rival me, and that he's a Jew. Those repugnant refugees creeping in every corner of Persia, they couldn't all their own land, so now they infest ours. And if this Jew dares to define me, there's to say those won't follow. Oh, this isn't about one man. It's about routing out the disease before it spreads. 00:17:54 Speaker 1: Later that evening, in his chambers, Hayman rolled a small object between him. His fingers are poor a lot. He cast it, watching it fall, marking a date. He then went to the King. 00:18:09 Speaker 4: Your majesty, I have egregious news. I'm loathly even reported, but surely you know by now how deep my loyalty rouse to you. 00:18:20 Speaker 1: My king, King Xerxes lapped up every lie, every false sentiment laid by Hayman. 00:18:30 Speaker 4: I've been making observations of my travels through lords Empire, grievous observations. Indeed, there's a people scattered among your preferences who do not follow your laws. Dangerous disloyal. Allow me to remove them for the good of the empire. Who are these people. 00:18:57 Speaker 1: Hayman bit back a wicked smile at how the king was falling flawlessly into his trap. 00:19:03 Speaker 4: It is the Jews, my king. Their laws are different from everyone else's. They do not pay the King's laws. It is not in the King's best interest in tolerate them. If the king approves, let an order be drawn up authorizing their destruction, and I will pay three hundred and seventy five tons of silver to the officials for deposit in the royal treasury. Let it be as you say, and pick whatever you need to be rid of them. 00:19:34 Speaker 1: So the king removed his signet ring from his hand and gave it to Haman, son of Hamidata the acre GeTe, the enemy of the Jews. Hayman, with the signet ring, the authority of the king had the scribes draw up the edicts, seal them in wax and clay, and distribute them throughout the entire kingdom. Early that morning, Mordecai woke up feeling uneasy. When he arrived at the city gates, he saw knots of his fellow judges and other officials gathered together, whispering. When he drew closer, they hushed in concern. His friend Ajan sighed and pulled him aside, handing him an edict. Even before he read the words, his hands trembled, anticipating the severity of whatever was inside. 00:20:28 Speaker 6: On the third twoth day, twelve months old, Jews, men, women, children got to be destroyed, annihilate them all and plunder their possessions. 00:20:44 Speaker 1: Single day, panic rippled through the empire. In Sousa. There was confusion and horror and weeping at the hateful words. There were whispers of dread, whispers of evil, and soon whispers would rise into walls that clothe the streets in sackcloth and sorrow, as if the earth itself tore its garments in grief, beneath the weight of reckless hate. 00:21:17 Speaker 5: If your faith has been kindled by this podcast and it has affected your life, we'd love it if you left her review. We read them, and me personally I cherish them as you venture forth boldly and faithfully. I leave you with the biblical blessing from numbers six Iva Hashem vishmerechra Yeah Heir hashempanave ele y sa Hashempanavelera Shaloon. May the Lord bless you and keep you. May the Lord make his face shine upon you. May he be gracious to you. Made the Lord turn his face towards you and give you peace. 00:21:59 Speaker 4: Amen. 00:22:00 Speaker 1: You can listen to the Chosen People with Isle Eckstein ad free by downloading and subscribing to the prey dot Com app today. This prey dog comproduction is only made possible by our dedicated team of creative talents. Steve Gattina, Max Bard, Zach Shellabarger and Ben Gammon are the executive producers of the Chosen People with Yile Eckstein, edited by Alberto Avilla, narrated by Paul Coltofianu. Characters are voiced by Jonathan Cotton, Aaron Salvato, Sarah Seltz, Mike Reagan, Stephen Ringwold, Sylvia Zaradoc, Thomas Copeland, Junior, Rosanna Pilcher, and Mitch Leshinsky, and the opening prayer is voiced by John Moore. Music by Andrew Morgan Smith, written by Aaron Salvato, bre Rosalie and Chris Baig. Special thanks to Bishop Paulinier, Robin van Ettin, Kayleb Burrows, Jocelyn Fuller, Rabbi Edward Abramson, and the team at International Fellowship of Christians and Jews. You can hear more Prey dot com productions on the Prey dot Com app, available on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store. If you enjoyed The Chosen People with Yil Eckstein, please rate and leave a review.