20 Mardoqueu consignou por escrito todos esses acontecimentos. Enviou cartas a todos os judeus das províncias do rei Assuero, próximas ou longínquas,
21 para lhes ordenar que celebrassem cada ano o dia catorze e o dia quinze do mês de Adar,
22 como sendo dias em que tinham sido postos a salvo dos ataques de seus inimigos, e mês em que sua angústia tinha sido trocada em alegria e sua dor em felicidade. Deviam, pois, nesses dias oferecer alegres banquetes, dar-se presentes e praticar generosidade com os pobres.
23 Os judeus erigiram em costume o que tinham feito na primeira vez e o que Mardoqueu lhes tinha mandado.
24 Porque Amã, filho de Amedata, o agagita, o opressor dos judeus, tinha resolvido perdê-los, e lançado {contra eles} o pur, isto é, a sorte, para exterminá-los e destruí-los.
25 Mas quando Ester se apresentou diante do rei, este ordenou por escrito que a perversa maquinação, tramada contra os judeus, recaísse sobre a cabeça de seu autor e que este e seus filhos fossem suspensos à forca.
26 É por isso que se chamam esses dias Purim, da palavra pur. Assim, conforme o conteúdo dessa carta, conforme o que eles mesmos tinham visto e o que lhes tinha acontecido,
27 os judeus instituíram e estabeleceram para si, para sua posteridade e para seus adeptos, o costume irrevogável de celebrar anualmente esses dois dias, segundo a forma prescrita e no tempo marcado.
28 Esses dias deviam ser recordados e celebrados de geração em geração, em cada família, em cada província e em cada cidade. Jamais poderiam ser abolidos esses dias dos Purim entre os judeus, nem sua recordação se apagar entre seus descendentes.
29 A rainha Ester, filha de Abigail, e o judeu Mardoqueu escreveram uma segunda vez com insistência para confirmar a carta sobre os Purim.
30 Depois enviaram a todos os judeus das cento e vinte e sete províncias do rei Assuero cartas com palavras de paz,
31 e a recomendação de celebrarem fielmente esses dias dos Purim no tempo marcado, como o judeu Mardoqueu e a rainha Ester os tinham instituído, e como eles tinham estabelecido, tanto para si mesmos, como para seus descendentes, com os jejuns e as lamentações.
32 Desse modo, a ordem de Ester confirmou a instituição dos Purim, e tudo isso foi consignado num livro.
20 And Mordecai sent letters to all the Jews in every division of the kingdom of Ahasuerus, near and far,
21 Ordering them to keep the fourteenth day of the month Adar and the fifteenth day of the same month, every year,
22 As days on which the Jews had rest from their haters, and the month which for them was turned from sorrow to joy, and from weeping to a good day: and that they were to keep them as days of feasting and joy, of sending offerings to one another and good things to the poor.
23 And the Jews gave their word to go on as they had been doing and as Mordecai had given them orders in writing;
24 Because Haman, the son of Hammedatha the Agagite, the hater of all the Jews, had made designs for their destruction, attempting to get a decision by Pur (that is, chance) with a view to putting an end to them and cutting them off;
25 But when the business was put before the king, he gave orders by letters that the evil design which he had made against the Jews was to be turned against himself; and that he and his sons were to be put to death by hanging.
26 So these days were named Purim, after the name of Pur. And so, because of the words of this letter, and of what they had seen in connection with this business, and what had come to them,
27 The Jews made a rule and gave an undertaking, causing their seed and all those who were joined to them to do the same, so that it might be in force for ever, that they would keep those two days, as ordered in the letter, at the fixed time every year;
28 And that those days were to be kept in memory through every generation and every family, in every division of the kingdom and every town, that there might never be a time when these days of Purim would not be kept among the Jews, or when the memory of them would go from the minds of their seed.
29 Then Esther the queen, daughter of Abihail, and Mordecai the Jew, sent a second letter giving the force of their authority to the order about the Purim.
30 And he sent letters to all the Jews in the hundred and twenty-seven divisions of the kingdom of Ahasuerus, with true words of peace,
31 Giving the force of law to these days of Purim at their fixed times, as they had been ordered by Mordecai the Jew and Esther the queen, and in keeping with the rules they had made for themselves and their seed, in connection with their time of going without food and their cry for help.
32 The order given by Esther gave the force of law to the rules about the Purim; and it was recorded in the book.