God made a promise embedded in the Torah's harshest chapter of curses, and the rabbis of undefined Rabbah turned it into one of the most powerful statements of divine loyalty in all of midrash (rabbinic interpretive commentary)ic literature.
The verse reads: "And despite this, even when they are in the land of their enemies, I have not spurned them and have not rejected them, to destroy them, to violate My covenant with them, as I am the Lord their God" (Leviticus 26:44). Shmuel broke this single verse into a map of Jewish history across four empires. "I have not spurned them" referred to Babylonia. "I have not rejected them" referred to Media. "To destroy them" referred to Greece. "To violate My covenant with them" referred to the evil kingdom, meaning Rome. And the final phrase, "as I am the Lord their God," pointed to the future, when God's faithfulness would be fully revealed.
Rabbi Hiyya offered a different historical mapping, more specific and more personal. "I have not spurned them" referred to the reign of Vespasian, the Roman emperor who destroyed the Second Temple. "I have not rejected them" referred to the persecution under Trajan. "To destroy them" described the days of Haman, when all Jews were marked for annihilation. "To violate My covenant with them" covered the Roman period broadly. And "as I am the Lord their God" pointed forward to the days of Gog and Magog, the final war before redemption.
Both readings deliver the same message. No matter how many empires rise against Israel, no matter how close to total destruction they come, the covenant holds. The midrash insists that even the Purim story, for all its terror, was never outside God's plan. The verse does not say "I will rescue them." It says something more intimate: "I have not spurned them." Not rescue, but refusal to let go.