Then Harbona, one of the eunuchs attending the king, said, “A pole reaching to a height of fifty cubits stands by Haman’s house. He had it set up for Mordecai, who spoke up to help the king.”
The king said, “Impale him on it!”
Esther 7:9 (NIV)
Evil eventually implodes. It is inherently unstable.
This is a lesson that I’ve learned on my journey. The first place I remember learning it was in The Lord of the Rings. It’s a recurring theme throughout the trilogy, but I first noticed it in the character of Gollum. He’s a despicable creature, driven from the start by selfish hunger for the Ring. Despite the opportunity to kill the creature as an act of justice, Gandalf wisely refuses. Mercy, he suggests, may prove wiser than vengeance—because the story isn’t done yet.
Evil eventually implodes—and when it does, it often finds its own unforeseen justice. Were it not for Gollum’s selfish intent and lust for the Ring, it would never have been destroyed.
I thought about this as I meditated on today’s short, but thrilling climactic chapter in Esther’s story. The entire story of Esther is a study in “reversals,” and today’s chapter is full of them as the evil Haman’s plot quickly implodes on him.
| Haman’s Plan | Actual Outcome |
|---|---|
| Mordecai will be impaled | Haman is impaled |
| Esther will die | Esther triumphs |
| Haman gains honor | Mordecai gains honor |
| Haman controls the king | The king destroys Haman |
In a wonderful ironic cosmic twist, Haman is impaled on his own spike that had been set up to kill Mordecai.
Evil eventually implodes. It is inherently unstable.
In the quiet this morning, I take solace in this simple truth as each morning Wendy and I eat our breakfast, peruse the news, and discuss the evils of the world.
Evil often looks unstoppable—until the moment it collapses.
For six chapters Haman appears untouchable:
- He has royal authority.
- He controls the narrative.
- He manipulates the king.
- He has the gallows ready.
But beneath the surface, the story is quietly turning.
God’s providence works like underground water.
Silent.
Invisible.
Patient.
Until suddenly the earth gives way.
Haman’s downfall happens in minutes.
Years of arrogance.
Then one moment of collapse
The hard part is in the waiting and the discerning. It’s one of the places where I find that God’s ways are not my ways. Blessing those who curse me and praying for my enemies doesn’t feel like justice, and God asks that I leave the justice to Him and the larger Great Story.
Like Gandalf understanding that Gollum may yet have a role to play in the tale of the Ring.
But I don’t want to wait. I want justice now.
There are seasons in life when it feels like Haman is winning.
The arrogant rise.
The cruel prosper.
The faithful seem powerless.
Esther reminds me that history has trap doors built into it. The proud eventually step on them. Evil implodes.
I am asked to do what Esther did:
Wait.
Discern the moment.
Speak when the time is right.
And when the moment arrives, a single courageous and well-crafted sentence can change everything.

If you know anyone who might be encouraged by today’s post, please share.










