Saturday, August 31, 2013

Daniel 2

The Dead Sea scrolls contain Daniel 2:2-6 and 2:9-11, 19-49.

(1) One night during the *second year of his reign, Nebuchadnezzar had *a dream that disturbed him so much that he couldn't sleep.

  • *second year: This would be the second FULL year of his reign. Some commentators say this happened while Daniel was in his three-year training course; others say that it was soon after he was finished. By Babylonian reckoning, the year 602 B.C. could be both the second year of Nebuchadnezzar’s reign and after three years of training for the Hebrew youths.
  • **a dream: dreams (plural) in the original. He'd probably gotten used to pleasant dreams of all his accomplishments and victories and plans for further expanding and beautifying the city of Babylon.
    • Daniel 1:17b: God gave Daniel special ability in understanding the meanings of visions and dreams.
    • Daniel 7:1: Earlier, during the first year of King Belshazzar’s reign in Babylon, Daniel had a dream and saw visions as he lay in his bed. He wrote down the dream, and this is what he saw.
  • Nebuchadnezzar has a dream in chapter 4 about a large tree, which Daniel interprets for him.
  • Dreams and visions are quite common in Scripture where God reveals secrets and warnings in dreams, even to Gentiles:
    • Genesis 15:12: That evening, as the sun was going down, Abram fell into a deep sleep. He saw a terrifying vision of darkness and horror.
    • Genesis 20:3-7: But that night God came to Abimelech in a dream and told him, “You are a dead man, for that woman you have taken is already married!” But Abimelech had not slept with her yet, so he said, “Lord, will you destroy an innocent nation? Didn’t Abraham tell me, ‘She is my sister’? And she herself said, ‘Yes, he is my brother.’ I acted in complete innocence! My hands are clean.” In the dream God responded, “Yes, I know you are innocent. That’s why I kept you from sinning against me, and why I did not let you touch her. Now return the woman to her husband, and he will pray for you, for he is a prophet. Then you will live. But if you don’t return her to him, you can be sure that you and all your people will die.”
    • Genesis 28:11-12: At sundown he arrived at a good place to set up camp and stopped there for the night. Jacob found a stone to rest his head against and lay down to sleep. As he slept, he dreamed of a stairway that reached from the earth up to heaven. And he saw the angels of God going up and down the stairway.
    • Genesis 37:5-10: One night Joseph had a dream and promptly reported the details to his brothers, causing them to hate him even more. "Listen to this dream," he announced. "We were out in the field tying up bundles of grain. My bundle stood up, and then your bundles all gathered around and bowed low before it!" "So you are going to be our king, are you?" his brothers taunted. And they hated him all the more for his dream and what he had said. Then Joseph had another dream and told his brothers about it. "Listen to this dream," he said. "The sun, moon, and eleven stars bowed low before me!" This time he told his father as well as his brothers, and his father rebuked him. "What do you mean?" his father asked. "Will your mother, your brothers, and I actually come and bow before you?"
    • Genesis 40:8: And they replied, "We both had dreams last night, but there is no one here to tell us what they mean." "Interpreting dreams is God's business," Joseph replied. "Tell me what you saw."
    • Genesis 41:1-8, 15-16, 37-44: Two full years later, Pharaoh dreamed that he was standing on the bank of the Nile River. In his dream he saw seven fat, healthy cows come up out of the river and begin grazing in the marsh grass. Then he saw seven more cows come up behind them from the Nile, but these were scrawny and thin. These cows stood beside the fat cows on the riverbank. Then the scrawny, thin cows ate the seven healthy, fat cows! At this point in the dream, Pharaoh woke up. But he fell asleep again and had a second dream. This time he saw seven heads of grain, plump and beautiful, growing on a single stalk. Then seven more heads of grain appeared, but these were shriveled and withered by the east wind. And these thin heads swallowed up the seven plump, well-formed heads! Then Pharaoh woke up again and realized it was a dream. The next morning Pharaoh was very disturbed by the dreams. So he called for all the magicians and wise men of Egypt. When Pharaoh told them his dreams, not one of them could tell him what they meant. ... Then Pharaoh said to Joseph, “I had a dream last night, and no one here can tell me what it means. But I have heard that when you hear about a dream you can interpret it.” “It is beyond my power to do this,” Joseph replied. “But God can tell you what it means and set you at ease.” ... Joseph’s suggestions were well received by Pharaoh and his officials. So Pharaoh asked his officials, “Can we find anyone else like this man so obviously filled with the spirit of God?” Then Pharaoh said to Joseph, “Since God has revealed the meaning of the dreams to you, clearly no one else is as intelligent or wise as you are. You will be in charge of my court, and all my people will take orders from you. Only I, sitting on my throne, will have a rank higher than yours.” Pharaoh said to Joseph, “I hereby put you in charge of the entire land of Egypt.” Then Pharaoh removed his signet ring from his hand and placed it on Joseph’s finger. He dressed him in fine linen clothing and hung a gold chain around his neck. Then he had Joseph ride in the chariot reserved for his second-in-command. And wherever Joseph went, the command was shouted, “Kneel down!” So Pharaoh put Joseph in charge of all Egypt. And Pharaoh said to him, “I am Pharaoh, but no one will lift a hand or foot in the entire land of Egypt without your approval.”
      • Notice the parallels between Joseph and Daniel: Both unjustly became slaves in a foreign pagan land. Both were imprisoned under false pretenses. Both were freed from prison. Both interpreted dreams. Both are highly praised in Scripture by God. Both were raised to high positions in a pagan society. Both foretold the future.
    • Genesis 46:2: During the night God spoke to him in a vision. “Jacob! Jacob!” he called. “Here I am,” Jacob replied.
    • Numbers 12:6: And the LORD said to them, "Now listen to me! Even with prophets, I the LORD communicate by visions and dreams.
    • 1 Samuel 3:3-11: The lamp of God had not yet gone out, and Samuel was sleeping in the Tabernacle near the Ark of God. Suddenly the Lord called out, “Samuel!” “Yes?” Samuel replied. “What is it?” He got up and ran to Eli. “Here I am. Did you call me?” “I didn’t call you,” Eli replied. “Go back to bed.” So he did. Then the Lord called out again, “Samuel!” Again Samuel got up and went to Eli. “Here I am. Did you call me?” “I didn’t call you, my son,” Eli said. “Go back to bed.” Samuel did not yet know the Lord because he had never had a message from the Lord before. So the Lord called a third time, and once more Samuel got up and went to Eli. “Here I am. Did you call me?” Then Eli realized it was the Lord who was calling the boy. So he said to Samuel, “Go and lie down again, and if someone calls again, say, ‘Speak, Lord, your servant is listening.’” So Samuel went back to bed. And the Lord came and called as before, “Samuel! Samuel!” And Samuel replied, “Speak, your servant is listening.” Then the Lord said to Samuel, “I am about to do a shocking thing in Israel.
    • 1 Kings 3:5: That night the LORD appeared to Solomon in a dream, and God said, "What do you want? Ask, and I will give it to you!"
    • Job 33:15-16: He speaks in dreams, in visions of the night when deep sleep falls on people as they lie in bed. He whispers in their ear and terrifies them with his warning.
    • Daniel 7:1: Earlier, during the first year of King Belshazzar's reign in Babylon, Daniel had a dream and saw visions as he lay in his bed. He wrote the dream down, and this is what he saw.
    • Matthew 1:20: As he considered this, he fell asleep, and an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream. "Joseph, son of David," the angel said, "do not be afraid to go ahead with your marriage to Mary. For the child within her has been conceived by the Holy Spirit.
    • Matthew 2:12-13: When it was time to leave, they returned to their own country by another route, for God had warned them in a dream not to return to Herod. After the wise men were gone, an angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream. "Get up and flee to Egypt with the child and his mother," the angel said. "Stay there until I tell you to return, because Herod is going to try to kill the child."
    • Matthew 2:19-20: When Herod died, an angel of the Lord appeared in a dream to Joseph in Egypt and told him, "Get up and take the child and his mother back to the land of Israel, because those who were trying to kill the child are dead."
    • Matthew 27:19: When he was set down on the judgment seat, his wife sent unto him, saying, Have thou nothing to do with that just man: for I have suffered many things this day in a dream because of him.
    • Acts 10:3: One afternoon about three o'clock, he had a vision in which he saw an angel of God coming toward him. "Cornelius!" the angel said.
    • Acts 10:9-10: The next day as Cornelius's messengers were nearing the city, Peter went up to the flat roof to pray. It was about noon, and he was hungry. But while lunch was being prepared, he fell into a trance.
    • Acts 16:9: That night Paul had a vision: A man from Macedonia in northern Greece was standing there, pleading with him, “Come over to Macedonia and help us!”
    • Acts 18:9: One night the Lord spoke to Paul in a vision and told him, “Don’t be afraid! Speak out! Don’t be silent!

(2) He called in his *magicians, **enchanters, ***sorcerers, and ****astrologers, and he demanded that they tell him what he had dreamed. As they stood before the king,

  • *magician: This is from the Hebrew word "engraving tool." This probably refers to the magical texts and charms found in cuneiform tablets. Magicians is the translation of a Hebrew word with a root meaning of stylus or a pen, according to Leupold, and hence could refer to a scholar rather than a magician in the ordinary sense. The magicians (Hebrew hartummim) were evidently scholars who could divine the future by using various means.
  • **Enchanters (assapim) claimed to communicate with the dead.
  • **Sorcerers (mekassepim) are those who practice sorcery or incantations and cast spells.
  • ***Astrologers (kasdim) is also translated “enchanters,” referring to the power of necromancy or communications with the dead according to Leupold but is understood as “astrologers,” by Young.
  • The Chaldeans in the KJV refer here to the priestly caste that studied the heavens to determine the future. This segment of Babylonian society predated the Babylonians. They were the "old guard" ... and proud of it.
  • These men made their living on their supposed ability to contact the gods and gain secrets from the spirit realm or read the future in the stars. If they were what they claimed to be, they should be able to tell Nebuchadnezzar both the dream and its interpretation. Their inability demonstrated that they were fakes.

(3) he said, "I have had a dream that troubles me. Tell me what I dreamed, for I must know what it means."

  • Nebuchadnezzar probably did not forget his dream at all. As a new king, he possibly testing his father’s old advisors to see if they were any good and could be trusted to give good advice.

(4) Then the astrologers answered the king in *Aramaic, "Long live the king! Tell us the dream, and we will tell you what it means."

  • *Aramaic: Daniel 2:4b to 6:28 inclusive is written in the Aramaic or Syriac language. The remaining portion of the Book of Daniel was written in Hebrew. Chapters 8 through 12, which are written in Hebrew like the rest of the Old Testament, focus on future prophecy specifically dealing with the nation of Israel, thus the language returns to Hebrew. That which was of supreme interest to the Gentiles was written in their own language.
  • Among the most spectacular discoveries in the Dead Sea Scrolls is the transition in the book of Daniel from Hebrew to Aramaic and then back again to Hebrew.

(5) But the king said to the astrologers, "I am serious about this. If you don't tell me what my dream was and what it means, you will be *torn limb from limb, and your houses will be demolished into **heaps of rubble!

  • *torn limb from limb: Nebuchadnezzar is serious, his threat is literal and the Chaldeans (the "wise men") had seen this done to others - not a nice way to go to have your arms and legs torn from your body! Jeremiah mentions he roasted some alive:
    • Jeremiah 29:22: Their terrible fate will become proverbial, so that whenever the Judean exiles want to curse someone they will say, 'May the LORD make you like Zedekiah and Ahab, whom the king of Babylon burned alive!'
  • **heaps of rubble: This means that the authorities would go into their houses and kill everyone there - including the children. Then they would knock down the walls and leave a pile of ruins. Then, they would bring in wagon loads of sewage and excrement and dump it on the ruins. Also, since burial was important for the Chaldeans, these people were not allowed to be buried.

(6) BUT if you tell me what I dreamed and what the dream means, I will give you many wonderful gifts and honors. Just tell me the dream and what it means!"

(7) They said again, "Please, Your Majesty. Tell us the dream, and we will tell you what it means."

  • The dream manuals, of which several examples have come to light, consist of historical dreams and the events that followed them, arranged systematically for easy reference. Since these books had to try to cover every possible eventuality they became inordinately long; only the expert could find his way through them, and even he had to know the dream to begin with before he could search for the nearest possible parallel. The unreasonable demands of the king and the protests of the interpreters in verses 3-11 are in keeping with his character and the known facts concerning dream books.
  • A Babylonian dream guide was discovered in the ruins of the city of Nineveh among tablets from the library of the emperor Ashurbanipal (668–627 BC).

  • Dream Interpretation Manual in the British Museum - about 1275 BC.

(8) The king replied, "I can see through your trick! You are trying to stall for time because you know I am serious about what I said.

  • If they were in reality what they presented themselves to be, they should be able to tell Nebuchadnezzar both the dream and its interpretation.

(9) If you don't tell me the dream, you will be condemned. You have conspired to tell me lies in hopes that something will change. But tell me the dream, and then I will know that you can tell me what it means."

(10) The astrologers replied to the king, "There isn't a man alive who can tell Your Majesty his dream! And no king, however great and powerful, has ever asked such a thing of any magician, enchanter, or astrologer!

  • You can almost smell the fear in their voices and hear their knees knocking!

(11) This is an impossible thing the king requires. No one except the gods can tell you your dream, and *they do not live among people."

  • When these "advisers" confessed that no one "except the gods," could reproduce this dream, they acknowledged that they had no power from the gods and that justified the king's charge that they were guilty of lies.
  • *they do not live among people: Yet, Jesus did and does - He is Immanuel, God with us (Matthew 1:23).
  • Isaiah 41:21-23: “Present the case for your idols,” says the Lord. “Let them show what they can do,” says the King of Israel. “Let them try to tell us what happened long ago so that we may consider the evidence. Or let them tell us what the future holds, so we can know what’s going to happen. Yes, tell us what will occur in the days ahead. Then we will know you are gods. In fact, do anything - good or bad! Do something that will amaze and frighten us.

(12) The king was furious when he heard this, and he sent out orders to execute all the wise men of Babylon.

  • Why didn't he have them killed right then and there? Because not all were there and it would be messy to do it in the throne room.

(13) And because of the king's decree, men were sent to find and kill Daniel and his friends.

  • This was to be a formal execution conducted by the proper officials at an appointed time and place. Therefore, the first task of these officials was to assemble all those who were condemned to be killed at a public execution.
  • Daniel and his three friends were members of the wise men's group in Babylon, and even though they were not present when this decree was issued, they were still a part of the group, so they had to be executed along with the rest of the wise men in Babylon. This is a perfect example of the innocent suffering with the guilty.

(14) When Arioch, the commander of the king's guard, came to kill them, Daniel handled the situation with wisdom and discretion.

  • The term "commander of the king's guard" is literally "the chief slaughter" or "executioner."
  • Notice how far God allows this crisis to go. It goes all the way to the officials of the Royal Palace Guards knocking on Daniel's door to arrest him and execute him. But God's hand was in this from the beginning. He first wanted to reveal and make known the incompetence and lack of power that the wise men and their religions possessed. Then and only then would He, as Almighty God, reveal His power and faithfulness to a young spiritually mature believer named Daniel - a slave and a nobody.

(15) He asked Arioch, "Why has the king issued such a harsh decree?" So Arioch told him all that had happened.

  • So, Daniel was elsewhere and had no idea what was going on - he and his friends were apprentices and not part of the court as yet. God had not even warned him!

(16) Daniel went at once to see the king and requested more time so he could tell the king what the dream meant.

  • What courage from such a young man! He knew God was on his side.
  • Held in high esteem by Nebuchadnezzar, Daniel was granted an audience and he asked for time to do exactly what the king had requested. His calmness rubbed off on Nebuchadnezzar. Remember that Nebuchadnezzar wouldn't give the others extra time.
  • God had perfectly prepared the stage of history as well as Daniel for this moment. Daniel knew that all things are possible with God. It was apparent that God was with Daniel. Deep down Daniel must have realized that God had a plan and a purpose for his life as He does for every believer.
  • Notice that Daniel did not ask the king to change his mind concerning the execution, or that he would reveal his dreams. He only asked for a little more time.

(17) Then Daniel went home and told his friends Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah what had happened.

(18) He urged them to ask the God of heaven to show them his mercy by telling them the secret, so they would not be executed along with the other wise men of Babylon.

  • Daniel now discovers the "why" of his probable questions when brought to this foreign, pagan land - "why me?", "why here?", etc. Just as you have been planted where you are for God's great purposes, so Daniel and his friends were "planted" in Babylon at the exact time God needed them to be there to accomplish His great purpose.
  • Daniel had confidence that God could do an unprecedented miracle. Joseph had interpreted dreams with God’s help, but had not reconstructed the dreams.

(19) That night the secret was revealed to Daniel in a vision. Then Daniel praised the God of heaven,

(20) saying, "Praise the name of God forever and ever, for he alone has all wisdom and power.

(21) He determines the course of world events; he removes kings and sets others on the throne. He gives wisdom to the wise and knowledge to the scholars.

(22) He reveals deep and mysterious things and knows what lies hidden in darkness, though he himself is surrounded by light.

  • Jeremiah 33:3: Ask me and I will tell you remarkable secrets you do not know about things to come.

(23) I thank and praise you, God of my ancestors, for you have given me wisdom and strength. You have told me what we asked of you and revealed to us what the king demanded."

  • Now Daniel understands. Though the kingdom of Israel is broken up and dispersed, God’s plans for His people remain intact. He is the first to know what God is planning for the world and His people from the captivity forward. The curtain has been drawn on history. The script is written; the stage and characters are set. Everything is ready for the actors; however, they will perform their parts of their own free will. The first member of the cast, with the leading role, is Nebuchadnezzar.
  • We're not told what they prayed; instead we get the praise after the prayer. This is not about the prayer. This is about the praise.

(24) Then Daniel went in to see Arioch, who had been ordered to execute the wise men of Babylon. Daniel said to him, "Don't kill *the wise men. Take me to the king, and I will tell him the meaning of his dream."

  • *Where else do we find "wise men" in the Bible? Who were the wise men looking for where the King of the Jews was born? See my notes at the end of this study.

(25) Then Arioch quickly took Daniel to the king and said, "I have found one of the captives from Judah who will tell Your Majesty the meaning of your dream!

  • Arioch claimed credit for finding Daniel when, in reality, Daniel approached him.

(26) The king said to Daniel (also known as Belteshazzar), "Is this true? Can you tell me what my dream was and what it means?"

(27) Daniel replied, "There are no wise men, enchanters, magicians, or fortune-tellers who can tell the king such things.

  • Arioch had focused on Daniel as the solution to the king's problem. Nebuchadnezzar viewed him the same way. Daniel, however, quickly redirected the king's attention from himself and placed it where it belonged, on God who revealed the future. No human being, neither the Babylonian wise men nor himself, could provide what the king required.

(28) But there is a God in heaven who reveals secrets, and he has shown King Nebuchadnezzar what will happen *in the future. Now I will tell you your dream and the visions you saw as you lay on your bed.

  • *in the future: in the latter days - not "in the last days!" In that passage, Daniel uses a phrase which is really the key to this dream and even to the book itself. It is the phrase, "in the future." Daniel indicates that what has been shown to the king is a vision of the future.
  • Arioch tries to glorify himself and Daniel for the answer to the king's dream. But Daniel refused to take credit, recognizing that the credit went to God, who revealed this dream to Daniel.
  • With absolute confidence and skill, Daniel unfolded the dream while informing the king that God in heaven has the whole world in His hands and that it is He who rules the future. Nebuchadnezzar might have been surprised at having his dream revealed, but Daniel knew that God was able to reveal mysteries. After all, Yahweh had declared through the prophet Isaiah a century earlier:
  • This implies that the God of Daniel is far superior to the gods of the Chaldeans and that He is the God who not only knows secrets, but is able to reveal them also.
  • Genesis 40:8: And they replied, “We both had dreams last night, but no one can tell us what they mean.” “Interpreting dreams is God’s business,” Joseph replied. “Go ahead and tell me your dreams.”

(29) "While Your Majesty was sleeping, you dreamed about coming events. The revealer of mysteries has shown you what is going to happen.

(30) And it is not because I am wiser than any living person that I know the secret of your dream, but because God wanted you to understand what you were thinking about.

  • God has given Daniel the opportunity to reveal YHWH to Nebuchadnezzar as a greater god than his gods. Nebuchadnezzar thought his gods were more powerful because, he thought, his gods had defeated the gods of Judah.

(31) "Your Majesty, in your vision you saw in front of you a huge and powerful statue of a man, shining brilliantly, frightening and awesome.

  • Statue
  • The enormous, dazzling statue (Mlu tselem, image, form or idol) signifies the dawn, duration, deterioration and doom of “the times of the Gentiles” - the period covered by the statue, including the time we're in right now.

(32) The head of the statue was made of fine* gold, its **chest and arms were of silver, its ***belly and thighs were of bronze,

  • *gold: Marduk, the chief god of Babylon, was called “the god of gold.” Gold was used extensively in the city’s buildings, images and shrines. Herodotus, the Greek historian who was at Babylon ninety years after the era of Nebuchadnezzar, was astonished at the amount of gold there. Even the walls and buildings were overlaid with gold.
  • **chest and arms: Daniel 8:20: The two-horned ram represents the kings of Media and Persia. One arm refers to the Medes, and the other arm refers to the Persians. The silver represents the Medo-Persian Empire.
  • ***belly and thighs:
    • This is the Greek Empire, under Alexander the Great. Alexander was tutored by Aristotle until the age of 16. By the age of thirty, he had created one of the largest empires of the ancient world. He was undefeated in battle and is considered one of history's most successful commanders. Alexander broke the power of Persia in a series of decisive battles. He subsequently overthrew the Persian King Darius III and conquered the entirety of the Persian Empire. At that point, his empire stretched from the Adriatic Sea to the Indus River. Alexander died in Babylon in 323 BC. The Greek Empire lasted from 330 BC to 63 BC.
    • The "belly" refers to Alexander the Great. The "thighs" refers to the Hellenistic Monarchies that existed after Alexander died, and his kingdom was divided.
    • Daniel 8:21-22: The shaggy male goat represents the king of Greece, and the large horn between his eyes represents the first king of the Greek Empire. The four prominent horns that replaced the one large horn show that the Greek Empire will break into four kingdoms, but none as great as the first.

(33) its legs were of iron, and its feet were a combination of iron and clay.

  • Babylon (B.C. 606-538).
    Medo-Persia (B.C. 538-331).
    Greece (B.C. 331-168).
    Rome (B.C. 168-A.D. 476).
    The feet of iron (strength-monarchy) and clay (weakness-democracy-socialism and anarchy?) (A.D. 476–?)
  • Daniel 7:7,23: Then in my vision that night, I saw a fourth beast - terrifying, dreadful, and very strong. It devoured and crushed its victims with huge iron teeth and trampled their remains beneath its feet. It was different from any of the other beasts, and it had ten horns. ... Then he said to me, “This fourth beast is the fourth world power that will rule the earth. It will be different from all the others. It will devour the whole world, trampling and crushing everything in its path.
  • In A.D. 284 , Emperor Diocletian restored efficient government to the empire after the near anarchy of the 3rd century. He divided the Empire into two legs (just as Daniel had predicted when he interpreted Nebuchadnezzar's dream nine centuries earlier). His reorganization of the fiscal, administrative and military machinery of the empire temporarily shored up the decaying empire in the West and laid the foundation for the forthcoming Byzantine Empire of the East. In A.D. 312, the Emperor Constantine relocated the capital of the empire to its eastern leg, to Byzantium, naming it Constantinople (the "New Rome"). After Constantine's death in 395, Emperor Theodosius divided the empire between his two sons and it was never again reunited. (It was Theodosius who made Christianity the sole religion of the empire, and subsequently Constantinople assumed preeminence over the West. In the late 5th century, the western leg began to disintegrate, but the eastern leg, commonly dubbed the "Byzantine Empire," endured until 1453 when it finally was overrun by the Muslims. Think about this - the Kaiser in the west and the Czar in the east. The Roman Church in the east, the Orthodox churches (Greek, Russian, Serbian, etc.) in the east.
  • There are a number of Biblical texts that strongly suggest that the coming world leader, commonly called the Antichrist, will emerge from the Roman Empire. Hitler in the west may have been Satan's attempt to bring anti-Christ and Stalin in the east.
  • The preciousness of the metal deteriorates from the top or gold to the clay of the feet, and there is a corresponding lower specific gravity; that is, the gold is much heavier than the silver, the silver than the brass, the brass than the iron, and the clay in the feet is the lightest material of all. The approximate specific gravity of gold is 19, silver 11, brass 8.5, and iron 7.8. The gold head has twice the weight of similar amounts of the other metals. The weight of brass varies according to the amount of tin or zinc which is added to the copper. While the materials decrease in weight, they increase in hardness with the notable exception of the clay in the feet. The image is obviously top heavy and weak in its feet.
  • Since Roman history provides no fulfillment of this federation of kings (which seems to number ten, because of the number of toes, and passages like Daniel 7:24 and Revelation 17:12). this prophecy must still be future.
  • Since the fall of the Roman Empire, there has never been a world-dominating empire equal to Rome. Many have tried - the Huns, Islam, the so-called Holy Roman Empire, Napoleon, Spain, Great Britain, Hitler, Stalin - but none have succeeded. Each of these had amazing power and influence, but nothing compared to that of the Roman Empire. The Roman Empire, in some form or another, will be revived under the leadership of the final fallen dictator, the Antichrist.
  • His feet part iron and part of clay -This is still future. This refers to the revived Roman Empire of the Tribulation period. The clay nations are weaker nations which will be dominated by the iron nations.
  • "There was no empire in world history that so crushed all of its enemies as Rome did. They were not satisfied just to take over a country and make them pay taxes, they slaughtered them. Rome crushed the peoples so that they would never even consider rebelling." (Hocking)
  • Look at the western world - our culture, laws, architecture, etc. are all based on the Roman empire.
  • Babylonian empire
  • Medo-Persian empire
  • Grecian empire
  • Roman empire
    Above four maps are from Decoding Daniel by Bob Conway: www.decodingdaniel.com/index.html
  • Daniel 7:17: “These four huge beasts represent four kingdoms that will arise from the earth.

(34) But as you watched, a rock was cut from a mountain by supernatural means. It struck the feet of iron and clay, smashing them to bits.

  • The rock is identified for us clearly in Scripture. Christ is the rock (Isaiah 8:14; Psalm 118:22; Acts 4:11). The Stone smites the image, not in head (Babylonian times) nor the body (Persian and Grecian times) nor the legs (Roman times in which Christ was born as a babe) but on the feet and toes (yet future).
  • Genesis 49:24: But his bow remained taut, and his arms were strengthened by the hands of the Mighty One of Jacob, by the Shepherd, the Rock of Israel.
  • Isaiah 8:14: He will keep you safe. But to Israel and Judah he will be a stone that causes people to stumble and a rock that makes them fall. And for the people of Jerusalem he will be a trap that entangles them.
  • Isaiah 28:16: Therefore, this is what the Sovereign Lord says: “Look! I am placing a foundation stone in Jerusalem, a firm and tested stone. It is a precious cornerstone that is safe to build on. Whoever believes need never be shaken.
  • Psalm 118:22: The stone rejected by the builders has now become the cornerstone.
  • Matthew 21:44: Anyone who stumbles over that stone will be broken to pieces, and it will crush anyone on whom it falls."
  • Acts 4:10-11: Let me clearly state to you and to all the people of Israel that he was healed in the name and power of Jesus Christ from Nazareth, the man you crucified, but whom God raised from the dead. For Jesus is the one referred to in the Scriptures, where it says, 'The stone that you builders rejected has now become the cornerstone.'
  • 1 Corinthians 10:4: and all of them drank the same spiritual water. For they drank from the spiritual rock that traveled with them, and that rock was Christ.
  • 1 Peter 2:6: As the Scriptures express it, "I am placing a stone in Jerusalem, a chosen cornerstone, and anyone who believes in him will never be disappointed. " Yes, he is very precious to you who believe. But for those who reject him, "The stone that was rejected by the builders has now become the cornerstone."
  • The fifth kingdom will be another attempt by man to rule the world apart from God. The Nba (“rock” or “stone”) is none other than the Lord Jesus Christ, “the stone the builders rejected has become the capstone” (Psalm 118:22; Matthew 21:42; 1 Peter 2:8). “Rock” is a symbolic name applied to the Messiah.
  • This Rock, Jesus Christ, smashes the feet of this image and breaks them to pieces and destroys all that they represent. This is also taught in Revelation 19:11-21, in which the second advent of Jesus Christ is the context. Jesus Christ will return during the War of Armageddon.

(35) The whole statue collapsed into a heap of iron, clay, bronze, silver, and gold. The pieces were crushed as small as chaff on a threshing floor, and the wind blew them all away without a trace. But the rock that knocked the statue down became a great mountain that covered the whole earth.

  • This describes a single, decisive event that shatters the image representing the glory of man's rule on earth. Since the Church or the gospel have not, in a single decisive event, shattered the reign of human kingdoms, this event is still in the future.
  • This isn’t the gradual salvation of the world by the church; “Smashing is not salvation. Crushing is not conversion. Destroying is not delivering nor is pulverizing the same as purification.” (Hislop)
  • Every empire of the past has left various influences up the present. But when the Rock hits the feet of the image, or when Jesus Christ comes at His second advent, He crushes the feet and the rest of the image is also destroyed. This means that all of the influences of all of the empires of the past are destroyed.

(36) "That was the dream; now I will tell Your Majesty what it means.

(37) Your Majesty, you are a king over many kings. The God of heaven has given you sovereignty, power, strength, and honor.

  • Nebuchadnezzar is “a king over many kings,” because like no other monarch after him, he had absolute authority and unlimited power. He was subject to neither men, nor their laws, and so he prefigures Christ.

(38) He has made you the ruler over all the inhabited world and has put even the animals and birds under your control. You are the head of gold.

  • "Nebuchadnezzar's kingdom was likened unto gold because it was an absolute monarchy, God's ideal government. Nebuchadnezzar was not, however, God's ideal monarch!" (Talbot)
  • The empires succeeding Babylon were inferior to Nebuchadnezzar's head of gold in the sense of their centralization of absolute power. Nebuchadnezzar was an absolute monarch, the succeeding empires progressively less so. They were larger and lasted longer than Babylon, but none held as much centralized power as Nebuchadnezzar did.
  • It took courage for Daniel to speak this way to the king. He declared that it was the God of heaven, not the Babylonian gods nor the king himself, who had made Nebuchadnezzar the ruler of the world. Daniel made it clear that the God of heaven is sovereign.
  • The Ancient Near East regarded kings and their kingdoms as being synonymous with each other. Hence, the head of gold represents Babylon as well as Nebuchadnezzar. This dual concept is important to remember when interpreting apocalyptic imagery in the Bible.

(39) "But after your kingdom comes to an end, *another great kingdom, inferior to yours, will rise to take your place. After that kingdom has fallen, yet a **third great kingdom, represented by the bronze belly and thighs, will rise to rule the world.

  • *another great kingdom: At the end of the book, Daniel is no longer under the Babylonian empire but is now serving under the Medio-Persian empire, that divided kingdom which followed Babylon as the ruler of the world.
  • **third great kingdom: It is identified for us in Chapter 8 as the kingdom of Greece, under Alexander the Great. History has confirmed this, exactly as the book predicts.

(40) Following that kingdom, there will be a *fourth great kingdom, as strong as iron. That kingdom will smash and crush all previous empires, just as iron smashes and crushes everything it strikes.

  • *fourth great kingdom: We usually call it the Roman Empire, but it is very striking that it is never so called in the Bible. It is never identified by name though it includes the Roman Empire, and there is no doubt about that. It began in Rome as certain predictive passages in the New Testament make very clear. In Revelation, we have a clear identification of this empire with the city of Rome, seated upon its seven hills, so there is no question but what this fourth empire began with Rome. But, since the period encompassed by the image covers all of time down to the second coming of Jesus Christ, the fourth kingdom must include far more than what we call in history, the Roman Empire. That is why it is never so named in the Bible. We will be much closer if we simply refer to is as "the West." That is the way we identify it today, "the Western nations." The prophecy centers upon what happens to these nations, especially as they near the end.
  • Here is where we of the Western hemisphere enter the picture. The Roman government was marked by a passion to establish colonies and then to defend these colonies by military power. That characteristic of Rome has continued throughout the history of the West. Western nations have been colonizing nations who have reached to the uttermost parts of the earth. With the colonizing came the necessity for great military power to protect the trade routes and the colonies from being overwhelmed by others. Thus the Western nations became mighty militarily, protecting the colonies which they had established. The USA does the same thing, just not as openly.
  • In the West, the empire centered on Rome. It first mastered the whole of the Mediterranean area and Western Europe and even after the fall of Rome itself continued to dominate as the kingdoms of Europe, the monarchies of France, of Germany, Spain, Great Britain and Portugal. These, in turn, began to reach into the western hemisphere after Christopher Columbus discovered the New World. The interesting thing now is that every single nation of this western hemisphere was begun by one of the nations of the Roman empire. Our entire Western world is Roman to the core. You can see that even in our own history. We have a senate which is one of the fundamental bases of our government, and which we copied directly from the Roman senate. The very republican form of the United States government is based upon the republic of Rome. Our courts, our laws, our military, all reflect the courts and laws and military forms of the Roman Empire - even our architure. We even derived our national symbol from Rome. The American eagle is known throughout the world as were the Roman eagles in the days of Rome's power and Hitler's eagle.
  • Some 40 years from this, Daniel had a vision describing the same succession of empires. Daniel saw it from God’s perspective, and Nebuchadnezzar saw it from man’s perspective. Nebuchadnezzar saw these empires as an impressive image; Daniel saw them as fierce beasts.
  • When Nebuchadnezzar dreamed his dream, Media and Persia were not a threat to Nebuchadnezzar; Greece was barely anything, and Rome was merely a little village on the banks of the Tiber. Yet, the details of Daniel’s interpretation fit these empire perfectly. So much so, liberal scholars deny the authenticity of Daniel.

(41) The feet and toes you saw that were a combination of iron and clay show that this kingdom will be divided.

  • The feet of mixed iron and clay signify democratic rule - the rule of the people is an inferior quality of government. Today all races, religions, and rationalizations are clamoring for a hearing, insisting upon their rights and now are watching the chaos from the Arab spring.
  • The legs are separated from the feet and toes in Daniel’s interpretation. No hint is given as to the duration of the intervening period, which also occurs between the sixty-ninth and seventieth sevens of Daniel 9:26-27. The fourth empire would have two distinct stages of existence: Ancient Roman Empire (iron legs) and Revived Roman Empire (feet and toes of mixed iron and clay).
  • The toes are only mentioned by Daniel in his interpretation (2:41-43). The toes represent the tenfold division of the final form of the Roman Empire. Such a division has never occurred in history. These toes are the same as the ten horns (kings) of Revelation 17:12. Out of this predicted ten-nation confederacy, the Antichrist will arise and he will seek to rule the world prior to the second coming of Christ.

(42) Some parts of it will be as strong as iron, and others as weak as clay.

  • As we look back in history we can see that World War I marked the beginning of the end of an era. The end of that war was characterized by the fall of crowned heads all over the world. Many monarchies ended then, either abruptly and completely, or they were transformed into representative monarchies in which the king became merely a figurehead, exercising no power or authority at all. World War II completed the picture; the age of kings ended in that interim period. From that time on there has been clearly emerging a new age, a new condition among nations. It is described for us in Verses 42-43, when we come to the very toes of the feet of the image.
  • Literally, it is (in the King James), "they shall mingle together with the seed of men,"

(43) This mixture of iron and clay also shows that these kingdoms will try to strengthen themselves by forming alliances with each other through intermarriage. But this will not succeed, just as iron and clay do not mix.

  • King James Version is closer to the original: And whereas thou sawest iron mixed with miry clay, they shall mingle themselves with the seed of men: but they shall not cleave one to another, even as iron is not mixed with clay.
    • The early church fathers and the Jewish scholars believed this referred to a new eruption of fallen angels once again impregnating human women.
    • In Chuck Missler's "The Book of Daniel - Set of DVDs", he felt that Daniel 2:43 could be referring to the fallen angels mingling with the seed of men. He points out the "they" in this passage does not make sense to be describing humans.
    • Essentially, the argument is that the “they” are the fallen angels or the sons of God who will end up “mingling themselves with the seed of men.”
  • Chapters 2 and 7 explain the succession of four gentile empires that would exert control over Jerusalem and the Jews until God's kingdom is established.

(44) "During the reigns of those kings, the God of heaven will set up a kingdom that will never be destroyed; no one will ever conquer it. It will shatter all these kingdoms into nothingness, but it will stand forever.

  • Micah 4:1-4: In the last days, the Temple of the LORD in Jerusalem will become the most important place on earth. People from all over the world will go there to worship. Many nations will come and say, "Come, let us go up to the mountain of the LORD, to the Temple of the God of Israel. There he will teach us his ways, so that we may obey him." For in those days the LORD's teaching and his word will go out from Jerusalem. The LORD will settle international disputes. All the nations will beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks. All wars will stop, and military training will come to an end. Everyone will live quietly in their own homes in peace and prosperity, for there will be nothing to fear. The LORD Almighty has promised this!
  • Revelation 11:15-17: Then the seventh angel blew his trumpet, and there were loud voices shouting in heaven: "The whole world has now become the Kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ, and he will reign forever and ever." And the twenty-four elders sitting on their thrones before God fell on their faces and worshiped him. And they said, "We give thanks to you, Lord God Almighty, the one who is and who always was, for now you have assumed your great power and have begun to reign.
  • In the time of those kings, the God of heaven will establish His kingdom on earth. It will never be destroyed, nor will it be left to another people. It will crush the remnants of the previous kingdoms and put an end to them, but it will itself endure forever. That is the meaning of the vision of the rock cut out of a mountain, but not by human hands—a rock that broke the iron, the bronze, the clay, the silver and the gold to pieces (Daniel 2:44-45).
  • The book of Daniel is about how the Gentile kingdoms of our world are all headed to the climactic Gentile kingdom of Antichrist which will end up smashed like a bug.

(45) That is the meaning of the rock cut from the mountain by supernatural means, crushing to dust the statue of iron, bronze, clay, silver, and gold. "The great God has shown Your Majesty what will happen in the future. The dream is true, and its meaning is certain."

  • The empire of Nebuchadnezzar has long ago crumbled into dust. Even the great capital of Babylon is today an uninhabited desolation of ruins that Hussein was busy rebuilding. But the dream that this king dreamed is still being fulfilled in our day, and it is this that makes it so significant to us. We have not yet reached the end of Nebuchadnezzar's dream and its meaning.
  • The remarkable thing about this dream is not these four divisions of man's kingdoms, but the strange, final kingdom which comes out of heaven as a stone cut without hands, and which strikes the feet of the image to destroy it. It symbolizes what the Bible universally declares, that all the kingdoms of men will end at the appearing of God's kingdom.
  • Nothing was left but the stone. The image was pounded into powder. It was smashed and swept from the earth. The Stone rolled on and on until it filled the earth.

(46) Then King Nebuchadnezzar bowed to the ground before Daniel and worshiped him, and he commanded his people to offer sacrifices and burn sweet incense before him.

  • In "Daniel: The Key to Prophetic Revelation", John F. Walvoord says, “An interesting parallel is found in Josephus, recording the instance where Alexander the Great bowed before the high priest of the Jews. When Parmenion, one of his generals, asked him why, when ordinarily all men would prostrate themselves before Alexander the Great, he had prostrated himself before the high priest of the Jews, Alexander replied, "It was not before him that I prostrated myself, but the God of whom he has the honor to be high priest.”
  • Why didn't Daniel refuse the sacrifices, etc. - or did he and we're not told?

(47) The king said to Daniel, "Truly, your God is the God of gods, the Lord over kings, a revealer of mysteries, for you have been able to reveal this secret."

  • Nebuchadnezzar understood from Daniel’s interpretation that “there is a God in heaven who reveals mysteries.” He's simply saying that Daniel's is the greatest god of them all. We find in chapter four a greater response from Nebuchadnezzar.

(48) Then the king appointed Daniel to a high position and gave him many valuable gifts. He made Daniel ruler over the whole province of Babylon, as well as chief over all his wise men.

  • Daniel was involved in every matter that came before the king and was a chief advisor to him in all of his affairs.

(49) At Daniel's request, the king appointed Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego to be in charge of all the affairs of the province of Babylon, while Daniel remained in the king's court.

  • God prepared for the arrival of thousands of exiled Judaeans (in 597 and 586 B.C.) to Babylon by placing men in authority who were sympathetic to their needs (like Joseph).

Application:

  • Daniel and his friends prayed together in the midst of crisis. The power of praying with other Christians in order to gain knowledge, understanding and wisdom from above cannot be overstated. The world offers many solutions to life’s problems, but God has the answers!
  • God placed Daniel in the court of Nebuchadnezzar, the most powerful monarch of history, to be a testimony and witness of His existence and power. The LORD uses those of His people who are faithful and prepared to give an answer. How might God use you?
    Proverbs 3:5-8: Trust in the Lord with all your heart; do not depend on your own understanding. Seek his will in all you do, and he will show you which path to take. Don’t be impressed with your own wisdom. Instead, fear the Lord and turn away from evil. Then you will have healing for your body and strength for your bones.
  • Dare to be a Daniel! (audio of sermon by C. H. Spurgeon).
  • Nothing happens by accident. In himself, Nebuchadnezzar was a brilliant, volatile, cruel man who had little regard for human life. Yet God used this pagan ruler to reveal his plan for human history. God can make even the wrath of man to praise him. When we are being mistreated by evil people, it is hard (if not impossible) to see God’s hand at work. Daniel 2 reminds us that God stands in the shadows working out his plan even in the darkest moments of life.
  • What is our part in all this? If we stand, as I believe this passage clearly suggests, at the termination of civilization as we know it; if we are approaching the end of man's day and God's program which the prophets have long predicted is at last to be established, then Peter suggests that it is our privilege now to rejoice in that "chosen and precious stone." The question that impinges upon us in this hour is, What is our relationship to that stone? Is he the foundation for our life, or is he coming to destroy all that we have built? Is the coming of the Lord to us a thrill, or is it a threat? Is he coming as a friend, or as a foe?
  • Voddie Baucham: "Now it is a terrible thing at times because there are things that happen to us that are awful. There are things that happen to us and to those around us and people who we love the are absolutely unthinkable. But here is what I know. God is good. He can’t help but be good. And whatever has come to pass was for God’s glory and ultimately because I am his, it is for my good. I believe that because I trust the sovereign God. Folks, this is the only way that you have hope in the midst of dire circumstances. It is the only way. And this is not theoretical. This is Daniel in the midst of exile. Daniel has probably seen members of his family killed. Daniel has been hauled off in chains. He is a slave. He sits here in the midst of a pagan culture serving a pagan king, reading pagan literature, reading things that probably makes his flesh crawl. He is despised. He is a little thing. He is of absolutely no importance in this culture. He is not a big man. He is not an important man. He is a slave. He is not free. He can’t go run on the hills that they ran on when he was a boy. He is not even free to sing the songs of his youth, to worship God in the sanctuary. This is Daniel’s lot in life and yet God uses this man and his circumstances to say there is hope. Daniel’s heart is leaping for joy. He is in exile and he is never going to get out. But he is not going to get torn limb from limb today and God has just reminded everyone of who is sovereign. You need that, saints. You need that, because there are people who have authority over you and there are people who will lord that authority over you. There are people who will mistreat you and who will abuse you, but here is what you need to know. God is sovereign over them. The reason for your hope is the same as the reason for Daniel’s hope that we see here in this section. The reason for your hope is the fact that all wisdom comes from God, that God is sovereign over the affairs of men, that you have absolutely no hope of comprehending what is in the mind of God apart from God’s revelation. But, praise be to God, he has revealed himself and that is an act of mercy."

The three kings from the east in Matthew - Who were they?

  • Who were the "wise men from the east?" These wise men in Matthew came from Parthia (Persia), the enemy of Rome. They were descendents of the Babylonian wise men. We're not told whether they were Jews. Matthew 2:1-12 (KJV): Now when Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judaea in the days of Herod the king, behold, there came wise men from the east to Jerusalem, Saying, Where is he that is born King of the Jews? for we have seen his star in the east, and are come to worship him. When Herod the king had heard these things, he was troubled, and all Jerusalem with him. And when he had gathered all the chief priests and scribes of the people together, he demanded of them where Christ should be born. And they said unto him, In Bethlehem of Judaea: for thus it is written by the prophet, And thou Bethlehem, in the land of Juda, art not the least among the princes of Juda: for out of thee shall come a Governor, that shall rule my people Israel. Then Herod, when he had privily called the wise men, enquired of them diligently what time the star appeared. And he sent them to Bethlehem, and said, Go and search diligently for the young child; and when ye have found him, bring me word again, that I may come and worship him also. When they had heard the king, they departed; and, lo, the star, which they saw in the east, went before them, till it came and stood over where the young child was. When they saw the star, they rejoiced with exceeding great joy. And when they were come into the house, they saw the young child with Mary his mother, and fell down, and worshipped him: and when they had opened their treasures, they presented unto him gifts; gold, and frankincense and myrrh. And being warned of God in a dream that they should not return to Herod, they departed into their own country another way.
  • About sixty years before the birth of Christ, the Romans defeated the Parthians for control over what we call the Ancient Near East. This land mass includes Israel, Jerusalem, and Bethlehem. Jesus' birth took place only a few hundred miles from the Parthian borders. Most likely, the wise men came from the capital city, somewhere towards the northern part of the Empire. How did they know about Jesus? How did these advisors to the king of Parthia know that an important king was going to be born to the Jews?
  • One of the scrolls the exiles would have had was a copy of the book of Genesis. Genesis 3:15 gives the very first description of the Savior who was to come. Genesis 3:15 indicates that mankind's deliverer would be born of a woman, so the wise men knew to look for someone newly-born when “He” came. Therefore, the Wise Men came, looking for a baby.
  • They may have had a copy of the scroll of Numbers, thanks to Daniel and Jeremiah. Numbers 24:17 says that a star will rise out of Israel. Balaam's prophecy said that a star would rise out of the land of Jacob simultaneous with the rising of Israel's scepter. (A scepter is the emblem of a king.) These wise men would also have had access to the book of 2 Chronicles. In 2 Chronicles, God promises Solomon that a descendent of his father David will rule forever. From this, the wise men knew that when this one born of a woman came, he would be born of kingly lineage. Specifically, he would be a son of David. They also had the scroll written by Daniel, the long-deceased chief Wise Man (or, chief of the Magi.) Daniel 7:13 describes the Messiah as given authority, honor, and sovereignty over all the nations of the world, so that people of every race and nation and language would obey him. His rule is eternal—it will never end. His kingdom will never be destroyed.. In the middle of the suffering servant description, Isaiah 53 describes how this king-God-man will die. When the wise men come to Jesus, they bring three gifts: Gold, which is the gift for royalty, a gift for a king. Incense, which was for divinity, a gift you give a God. And myrrh, which is a funeral gift, a gift used for burial.
  • What was the "star" that led the wise men to Jesus Christ\? Was it a physical star at all? Whatever it was, the "star" was definitely of miraculous origin; it was no ordinary, physical star. For instance, it had the ability to move. Matthew writes that the star "went ahead of them and stopped over the place where the child was" (Matthew 2:9). No star we have ever seen can do that! Even shooting stars - really meteors burning up in the atmosphere - cannot change directions and stop over a specific place!
  • Herod got panicky. When suddenly these Persian king makers appeared in Jerusalem no doubt traveling in full force and they rode Persian steeds not camels. And when they came in they didn't come alone, the estimates of history are they came with Persian cavalry. When they came charging into the city of Jerusalem and Herod peeked out his little palace window he flipped. These are powerful men and to make it worse his army was out of the country on a mission. And the Bible says Herod was troubled. Herod had the title "King of the Jews" - which he bought. Israel was a buffer state in the middle of two huge contending empires. And all of a sudden, these arch-enemy Persians arrive in the city and he is panicked and they say we're coming to find the new king. The "wise men" of Persia were the king makers - they're the ones who crowned a king! By the way, the Magi knew that the people of Israel were on their side, not Rome's. And so, they came into town and started asking the people where this new king was.

NOTES:

Friday, August 16, 2013

Daniel 1

Daniel 1

Living in the world, but not of the world. How to live godly lives in an ungodly world.

The background to this chapter: Judah fails to observe the sabbath for the land every 7 years, the king ignores the prophet Jeremiah's warnings and doesn't learn the lesson of the northern tribes being carried away. As a result, Judah is defeated, the temple is plundered and at least four innocent God-fearing teenagers are ripped away from the homes, their families, everything they have known, from their land and forced to march from Jerusalem to Babylon, probably in chains - all not their own personal fault. I wonder if they were wondering "Why us?", "Why has God abandoned us?", "Why are we being shipped off to a pagan king, being forced to learn their language and their customs?", "What is going to happen to my family?", "Will this nightmare ever end?", "Will I survive?"

Daniel was contemporary with Jeremiah and Ezekiel:

  • Jeremiah prophesied in Jerusalem before and during the Babylonian exile (626-528 B.C.)
  • Ezekiel prophesied in Babylon among the exiles (592-570 B.C.)
  • Daniel prophesied in the capital of Babylon (605-586 B.C.)

Judah’s captivity was a divine judgment for the sins of this nation. Daniel’s prayer, recorded in chapter 9, reveals his grasp of this fact. Daniel was fully convinced that it was God who gave Jehoiakim king of Judah, into the hands of Nebuchadnezzar. It was this knowledge which enabled Daniel to deal with his own circumstances in the godly manner evident throughout the Book of Daniel.

Will they be assimilated? Will they abandon the Hebrew God and worship the Babylonian "gods?" Will they blame God for their troubles? Will they just become like everybody else? Will they abandon their moral values and what they were taught as children? Will they work hard at pleasing the king and his attendants so they can be "successful" even if it means becoming just like them and compromising everything God had planned for them?

But, we read that they not only don't blame or abandon God, but they still worship Him and allow God to work in their lives even in a pagan world and even under threats even to their lives, peer pressure, loneliness, etc. THEY DO NOT COMPROMISE! What a lesson for us and for our children! Today, many children raised in godly homes go off to college, are corrupted by their professors and their peers and are ruined.

Daniel was probably between the age of 14-17 when the Babylonians came into Judah and carried his people away as captives. He was now forced to live in a pagan environment, much like our own, where he was constantly being tempted to compromise his convictions. Yet, Daniel chose not to give in to the demands of the culture. The United States is becoming more and more like Babylon every day.

1 John 2:15-17: Stop loving this evil world and all that it offers you, for when you love the world, you show that you do not have the love of the Father in you. For the world offers only the lust for physical pleasure, the lust for everything we see, and pride in our possessions. These are not from the Father. They are from this evil world. And this world is fading away, along with everything it craves. But if you do the will of God, you will live forever.

Romans 12:2: Don't copy the behavior and customs of this world, but let God transform you into a new person by changing the way you think. Then you will know what God wants you to do, and you will know how good and pleasing and perfect his will really is.

(1) During the third year of King *Jehoiakim's reign in Judah, **King Nebuchadnezzar of ***Babylon came to Jerusalem and ****besieged it with his armies.

  • *Jehoiakim – King of Judah. His real name is Eliakim ("whom God will raise up"). He reigned 11 years and was a son of Josiah. His father was murdered by Pharaoh Neco and his brother, Jehoahaz, reigned for three months before being taken prisoner by Pharaoh Neco. Pharaoh Neco then set Eliakim (Jehoiakim - "he whom Jehovah has set up") up as king.
  • **Nebuchadnezzar:
    • Nebuchadnezzar was not really king yet because his father Nabopolassar (626-605 b.c.) did not die until the summer of 605 b.c. He was the crown prince in charge of the military campaign.
    • Nebuchadnezzar defeated the Egyptians at Charchemish, and then he pursued their fleeing army all the way down to the Sinai. Along the way (or on the way back), he subdued Jerusalem, who had been loyal to the Pharaoh of Egypt.
    • ***Babylon was a long descendant of the city built by the descendants of Noah before they were dispersed by God with the judgment of languages. The name Babel means, “confusion” in the Hebrew. Those who settled in that area eventually became a great nation that spread throughout the eastern world. Shinar is another name for the land of Babylon as translated in the KJV.
  • ****besieged:
    • This specific attack is documented by the Babylonian Chronicles, a collection of tablets discovered as early as 1887, held in the British Museum. In them, Nebuchadnezzar’s presence in Judah is documented.
    • Nebuchadnezzar conducted three campaigns against Judah:
      • In the first onslaught he carried off Daniel and his three companions as well as some articles from the temple and other nobles.
      • In the second attack he carried off Ezekiel.
      • In the third and devastating holocaust he burned the city and temple.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:6-7: Then King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon came to Jerusalem and captured it, and he bound Jehoiakim in chains and led him away to Babylon. Nebuchadnezzar also took some of the treasures from the Temple of the LORD, and he placed them in his palace in Babylon.
  • 2 Kings 23:36-37: Jehoiakim was twenty-five years old when he became king, and he reigned in Jerusalem eleven years. His mother was Zebidah, the daughter of Pedaiah from Rumah. He did what was evil in the LORD's sight, just as his ancestors had done.
  • 2 Kings 24:1: During Jehoiakim's reign, King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon invaded the land of Judah. Jehoiakim surrendered and paid him tribute for three years but then rebelled.:
  • Isaiah 39:1-8: Soon after this, Merodach-baladan son of Baladan, king of Babylon, sent Hezekiah his best wishes and a gift. He had heard that Hezekiah had been very sick and that he had recovered. Hezekiah welcomed the Babylonian envoys and showed them everything in his treasure-houses -- the silver, the gold, the spices, and the aromatic oils. He also took them to see his armory and showed them all his other treasures -- everything! There was nothing in his palace or kingdom that Hezekiah did not show them. Then Isaiah the prophet went to King Hezekiah and asked him, "What did those men want? Where were they from?"Hezekiah replied, "They came from the distant land of Babylon." "What did they see in your palace?" asked Isaiah."They saw everything," Hezekiah replied. "I showed them everything I own -- all my treasures." Then Isaiah said to Hezekiah, "Listen to this message from the LORD Almighty: The time is coming when everything you have -- all the treasures stored up by your ancestors -- will be carried off to Babylon. Nothing will be left, says the LORD. Some of your own descendants will be taken away into exile. They will become eunuchs who will serve in the palace of Babylon's king." Then Hezekiah said to Isaiah, "This message you have given me from the LORD is good." But the king was thinking, "At least there will be peace and security during my lifetime."
  • Jeremiah 7:16-20: "Pray no more for these people, Jeremiah. Do not weep or pray for them, and don't beg me to help them, for I will not listen to you. Do you not see what they are doing throughout the towns of Judah and in the streets of Jerusalem? No wonder I am so angry! Watch how the children gather wood and the fathers build sacrificial fires. See how the women knead dough and make cakes to offer to the Queen of Heaven. And they give drink offerings to their other idol gods! Am I the one they are hurting?" asks the LORD. "Most of all, they hurt themselves, to their own shame." So the Sovereign LORD says: "I will pour out my terrible fury on this place. Its people, animals, trees, and crops will be consumed by the unquenchable fire of my anger."
  • Jeremiah 24:1: After King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon exiled Jehoiachin son of Jehoiakim, king of Judah, to Babylon along with the princes of Judah and all the skilled craftsmen, the LORD gave me this vision. I saw two baskets of figs placed in front of the LORD's Temple in Jerusalem.
  • Jeremiah 25:1-11: This message for all the people of Judah came to Jeremiah from the LORD during the fourth year of Jehoiakim's reign over Judah. This was the year when King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon began his reign. Jeremiah the prophet said to the people in Judah and Jerusalem, "For the past twenty-three years -- from the thirteenth year of Josiah son of Amon, king of Judah, until now -- the LORD has been giving me his messages. I have faithfully passed them on to you, but you have not listened. "Again and again, the LORD has sent you his prophets, but you have not listened or even tried to hear. Each time the message was this: 'Turn from the evil road you are traveling and from the evil things you are doing. Only then will I let you live in this land that the LORD gave to you and your ancestors forever. Do not make me angry by worshiping the idols you have made. Then I will not harm you.' "But you would not listen to me," says the LORD. "You made me furious by worshiping your idols, bringing on yourselves all the disasters you now suffer. And now the LORD Almighty says: Because you have not listened to me, I will gather together all the armies of the north under King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon, whom I have appointed as my deputy. I will bring them all against this land and its people and against the other nations near you. I will completely destroy you and make you an object of horror and contempt and a ruin forever. I will take away your happy singing and laughter. The joyful voices of bridegrooms and brides will no longer be heard. Your businesses will fail, and all your homes will stand silent and dark. This entire land will become a desolate wasteland. Israel and her neighboring lands will serve the king of Babylon for seventy years.
  • Jeremiah 29:4-7: The LORD Almighty, the God of Israel, sends this message to all the captives he has exiled to Babylon from Jerusalem: "Build homes, and plan to stay. Plant gardens, and eat the food you produce. Marry, and have children. Then find spouses for them, and have many grandchildren. Multiply! Do not dwindle away! And work for the peace and prosperity of Babylon. Pray to the LORD for that city where you are held captive, for if Babylon has peace, so will you."
  • Jeremiah 32:26-32: Then this message came to Jeremiah from the LORD: "I am the LORD, the God of all the peoples of the world. Is anything too hard for me? I will hand this city over to the Babylonians and to Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, and he will capture it. The Babylonians outside the walls will come in and set fire to the city. They will burn down all these houses, where the people caused my fury to rise by offering incense to Baal on the rooftops and by pouring out drink offerings to other gods. Israel and Judah have done nothing but wrong since their earliest days. They have infuriated me with all their evil deeds," says the LORD. "From the time this city was built until now, it has done nothing but anger me, so I am determined to get rid of it. "The sins of Israel and Judah -- the sins of the people of Jerusalem, the kings, the officials, the priests, and the prophets -- stir up my anger.
  • Jeremiah 36:1-32: During the fourth year that Jehoiakim son of Josiah was king in Judah, the LORD gave this message to Jeremiah: "Get a scroll, and write down all my messages against Israel, Judah, and the other nations. Begin with the first message back in the days of Josiah, and write down every message you have given, right up to the present time. Perhaps the people of Judah will repent if they see in writing all the terrible things I have planned for them. Then I will be able to forgive their sins and wrongdoings." So Jeremiah sent for Baruch son of Neriah, and as Jeremiah dictated, Baruch wrote down all the prophecies that the LORD had given him. Then Jeremiah said to Baruch, "I am a prisoner here and unable to go to the Temple. So you go to the Temple on the next day of fasting, and read the messages from the LORD that are on this scroll. On that day people will be there from all over Judah. Perhaps even yet they will turn from their evil ways and ask the LORD's forgiveness before it is too late. For the LORD's terrible anger has been pronounced against them." Baruch did as Jeremiah told him and read these messages from the LORD to the people at the Temple. This happened on the day of sacred fasting held in late autumn, during the fifth year of the reign of Jehoiakim son of Josiah. People from all over Judah came to attend the services at the Temple on that day. Baruch read Jeremiah's words to all the people from the Temple room of Gemariah son of Shaphan. This room was just off the upper courtyard of the Temple, near the New Gate entrance. When Micaiah son of Gemariah and grandson of Shaphan heard the messages from the LORD, he went down to the secretary's room in the palace where the administrative officials were meeting. Elishama the secretary was there, along with Delaiah son of Shemaiah, Elnathan son of Acbor, Gemariah son of Shaphan, Zedekiah son of Hananiah, and all the others with official responsibilities. When Micaiah told them about the messages Baruch was reading to the people, the officials sent Jehudi son of Nethaniah, grandson of Shelemiah, and great-grandson of Cushi, to ask Baruch to come and read the messages to them, too. So Baruch took the scroll and went to them. "Sit down and read the scroll to us," the officials said, and Baruch did as they requested. By the time Baruch had finished reading, they were badly frightened. "We must tell the king what we have heard," they said. "But first, tell us how you got these messages. Did they come directly from Jeremiah?" So Baruch explained, "Jeremiah dictated them to me word by word, and I wrote down his words with ink on this scroll." "You and Jeremiah should both hide," the officials told Baruch. "Don't tell anyone where you are!" Then the officials left the scroll for safekeeping in the room of Elishama the secretary and went to tell the king. The king sent Jehudi to get the scroll. Jehudi brought it from Elishama's room and read it to the king as all his officials stood by. It was late autumn, and the king was in a winterized part of the palace, sitting in front of a fire to keep warm. Whenever Jehudi finished reading three or four columns, the king took his knife and cut off that section of the scroll. He then threw it into the fire, section by section, until the whole scroll was burned up. Neither the king nor his officials showed any signs of fear or repentance at what they heard. Even when Elnathan, Delaiah, and Gemariah begged the king not to burn the scroll, he wouldn't listen. Then the king commanded his son Jerahmeel, Seraiah son of Azriel, and Shelemiah son of Abdeel to arrest Baruch and Jeremiah. But the LORD had hidden them. After the king had burned Jeremiah's scroll, the LORD gave Jeremiah another message. He said, "Get another scroll, and write everything again just as you did on the scroll King Jehoiakim burned. Then say to the king, 'This is what the LORD says: You burned the scroll because it said the king of Babylon would destroy this land and everything in it. Now this is what the LORD says about King Jehoiakim of Judah: He will have no heirs to sit on the throne of David. His dead body will be thrown out to lie unburied -- exposed to hot days and frosty nights. I will punish him and his family and his officials because of their sins. I will pour out on them and on all the people of Judah and Jerusalem all the disasters I have promised, for they would not listen to my warnings.'" Then Jeremiah took another scroll and dictated again to his secretary Baruch. He wrote everything that had been on the scroll King Jehoiakim had burned in the fire. Only this time, he added much more!
  • Many people study about the Babylonian captivity and fail to understand the divine reason for it. In the 26th Chapter of Leviticus, we have recorded the law of the sabbatical, year, in which the Children of Israel were instructed to let the land rest every seventh year. During that year they were neither to sow nor reap but were to live by the old store which GOD had provided for them during the six years. But for 490 years (7 x 70) which would include a total of seventy sabbatical years, they failed to do this. In due time, GOD allowed King Nebuchadnezzar to come and take them into Babylonian captivity, which captivity lasted for seventy years, which was exactly time enough to balance the budget, as it were. They refused to let the land rest one year in seven and, therefore, GOD allowed them to be dispossessed of the land until their trespass was atoned for. Another reason GOD allowed them to be taken into Babylonian captivity was because they had fallen into idolatry.

(2) The *Lord gave him victory over King Jehoiakim of Judah. When Nebuchadnezzar returned to Babylon, he took with him some of the sacred objects from the Temple of God and placed them in the treasure-house of his god in the land of Babylonia.

  • *Lord: Adonai
  • This shows God's control of history! This is a recurrent theme in Daniel. In the ancient world every army fought under the banner/name of their god. Success in battle showed the supremacy of one god over another. However, the Bible clearly asserts that it was because of Israel's and Judah's sins and rebellion against YHWH that YHWH engineered the invasion of the promised land.
  • New archaeological findings in the ruins of Ashkelon, Philistia's main seaport, are providing evidence that Nebuchadnezzar's conquest of his enemies was utterly merciless. If Judah's kings had heeded the warnings of the prophet Jeremiah about imitating Ashkelon and embracing Egypt, Jerusalem's destruction might have been avoided. Instead, the Jews ignored both the religious rantings of Jeremiah and the unequivocal real-world implications of Ashkelon's fall.
  • This campaign of Nebuchadnezzar was interrupted suddenly when he heard of his father’s death and raced back to Babylon to secure his succession to the throne. He traveled about 500 miles in two weeks - remarkable speed for travel in that day. Nebuchadnezzar only had the time to take a few choice captives (such as Daniel), a few treasures and a promise of submission from Jehoiakim.
  • This first siege of Jerusalem begins the 70-year "Servitude of the Nation."
  • Nebuchadnezzar took only "part of the vessels," as he did not intend wholly to overthrow the state, but to make it tributary, and to leave such vessels as were absolutely needed for the public worship of Jehovah. Later, all were taken away and were restored under Cyrus ( Ezra 1:7 ).
    • Ezra 1:7-11: King Cyrus himself brought out the valuable items which King Nebuchadnezzar had taken from the LORD's Temple in Jerusalem and had placed in the temple of his own gods. Cyrus directed Mithredath, the treasurer of Persia, to count these items and present them to Sheshbazzar, the leader of the exiles returning to Judah. These were the items Cyrus donated: gold trays - 30; silver trays - 1,000; silver censers - 29; 10 gold bowls - 30; silver bowls - 410; other items - 1,000 11 In all, 5,400 gold and silver items were turned over to Sheshbazzar to take back to Jerusalem when the exiles returned there from Babylon.
    • Notice in the above list, nothing about the ark of the covenant, the menorah or the table of the showbread.
  • In Deuteronomy chapter 28, God had promised Israel that if she went astray He would send her into exile. And now, almost a thousand years later, a patient and long suffering God is fulfilling His promise. The exile is not a proof that God’s plan has failed; it’s a proof that God’s plan has been fulfilled. It is Daniel’s belief that God is in control that enables Him to do so well in captivity. He knows that there is nothing incidental in human life and there is nothing accidental in human life, and it is that that gives Daniel confidence to be such a productive believer in the city of his exile.

(3) Then the king ordered Ashpenaz, who was in charge of the palace officials, to bring to the palace some of the young men of Judah's royal family and other noble families, who had been brought to Babylon as captives.

  • This was a very difficult time for these teenagers. They were forcibly taken away from home, and perhaps made to march the hundreds of miles to the alien land of the idolaters. They were taken away from their religious center and from parental control and influence of other godly adults. They had to endure all this, and probably many other horrors, in their impressionable years. It is enough for the young to have to cope with the mental and physical changes connected with adolescence, with the attendant temptations and snares, but these young Judaeans had to cope with much more.

(4) "Select only strong, healthy, and good-looking young men," he said. "Make sure they are well versed in every branch of learning, are gifted with knowledge and good sense, and have the poise needed to serve in the royal palace. Teach these young men the *language and literature of the Babylonians. "

  • *language: The language of the Chaldeans referred to here is Akkadian, an East Semitic cuneiform language.
  • This may indicate that they were not made eunuchs (castrated).
  • Babylon was the capital of ancient learning. “Here were the great libraries of the Semitic race. Here were the scholars who copied so painstakingly every little omen or legend that had come down to them out of the hoary past. Here were the men who had calculated eclipses, watched the moon’s changes, and looked nightly from observatories upon the stately march of constellations over the sky.” Evidently, what these young men studied was the history and literature of this ancient part of the world. This included the old Akkadian and the ancient Sumerian cultures from which the Babylonian had developed. Learning the language of a people is one of the best ways to absorb the worldview of its people. Thus, Nebuchadnezzar was seeking to make them thoroughly Babylonian.
  • Christians may have to study things that do not agree with God’s Word, but should never, in the end, abandon their faith. Understanding the world is far different from embracing and living according to the world.

(5) The king assigned them a daily ration of the best food and wine from his own kitchens. They were to be trained for a three-year period, and then some of them would be made his advisers in the royal court.

  • To eat food from the king’s table was an honor and a privilege. It was the finest food available. Joseph, for example, honored his brothers by feeding them from the food at his table (Genesis 43:34). David provided a place at his table for Mephibosheth, the son of his friend Jonathan (2 Samuel 9). This was no McDonalds®. They were given the opportunity to eat gourmet food at every meal.

(6) Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah were four of the young men chosen, all from the tribe of Judah.

  • These are the only Hebrew names given. The corrupting influences of Babylon may have been too much for many others, and they were useless in God’s hands.

(7) The chief official renamed them with these Babylonian names: *Daniel was called Belteshazzar. **Hananiah was called Shadrach. ***Mishael was called Meshach. ****Azariah was called Abednego.

  • *Daniel (Hebrew God is my judge) renamed Belteshazzar (Chaldean meaning "Bel's prince"). The name Belteshazzar was given to Daniel in honor of Bel the god of Nebuchadnezzar. Nebuchadnezzar thus made a desperate but vain attempt to obliterate the name of the Lord and all remembrance of Him.
  • **Hananiah (Hebrew Yahweh is gracious) renamed Shadrach (Chaldean meaning "Command of the moon god")
  • ***Mishael (Hebrew Who is like Yahweh) renamed Meshach (Chaldean meaning "Who is what Aku is?" - the earth god)
  • ***Azariah (Hebrew Yahweh has helped) renamed Abednego (Chaldean meaning "servant of Nebo/Nabu" - the fire god)
  • Although Nebuchadnezzar changed the names of these Hebrew teenagers, he could not change their nature.
  • Pharaoh gave Joseph the name “Zaphenath-paneah” (Genesis 41:45). Joseph did not reject this name, nor is there even so much as a hint that God considered the name defiling to Joseph.
  • In the Old Testament Scriptures, name-giving was most significant when God gave the name. In some cases, God gave a person’s name before or at the time of birth. This was the case with the Lord Jesus (Luke 1:31). Also, God changed the names of some individuals. He changed Abram’s name to Abraham, and that of Sarai, his wife, to Sarah (Genesis 17:4-5, 15). The change of a person’s name had to do with a change God was bringing about in their destiny. Since only God can change a person’s destiny, it is only His name-giving that is of the greatest significance.

(8) But Daniel made up his mind not to defile himself by eating the food and wine given to them by the king. He asked the chief official for permission to eat other things instead.

  • What can they do? They feel all the pressure and they hear all the familiar arguments that any person hears today to try to get them to give up acting on the basis of faith. They surely hear the argument, in whatever form it took in those days, "When in Rome, do as the Romans do." "Everybody else is doing this; what difference does it make what you eat? After all, they are prisoners in a country far away from home. Their own country has been laid waste. Who will know, or care, what they do? They feel that pressure. But these young men stand fast and God honors them. God gives them the grace to stand despite that pressure, and as a result they are exalted and given positions of authority and responsibility in that kingdom.
  • Daniel could not avoid being captured by the Chaldean (Babylonian) army, he could not prevent the Gentile king changing his name, he could neither hinder his own confinement, nor the confinement of his companions in the court of the Chaldeans, he could not prevent the King from dictating certain foods and drink - BUT he could refuse to change his life and he could refuse to eat THE FORBIDDEN FOOD.
  • What shaped these young men? What enabled them to resist the temptation to compromise and lose a luxurious and famous career, at a time when he had absolutely nothing, just so he could remain faithful to God?
  • The God they served was not the same as the gods of other nations. Their God was not a local deity, who was bound to Jerusalem and who had not jurisdiction outside His own territory. To them, God was the same abroad as at home - something Jonah had learned. Daniel and his friends considered the knowledge of God to be more important than their education, more important even than life itself.
  • God always has a remnant who serve him. They are a minority, but they will stand for God's truth and for holiness. They were like pious Joseph of old, who would not sin though he was in Egypt (Genesis 39:9). Notice the similarity between Daniel's experience and character and Joseph's throughout this chapter.
  • Verse 8 is obviously a key verse for anyone facing pressure from the ways of Babylon. Daniel resolved, or as the KJV says, Daniel purposed in his heart not to defile himself. They couldn't change his heart! He was not swayed by the lure of Babylon even though he lived right in its midst. So, think about the effect that the world has on your life? Is there a difference between the desires of your life and of those who don’t know the Lord? Because it is fair to say that non-Christians watch you a lot more than you think. And they watch and are interested in your actions more than your words.
  • Proverbs 25:26 states: If the godly compromise with the wicked, it is like polluting a fountain or muddying a spring. If Daniel had given up his convictions and just become like the other Babylonians (as they wanted), then the Bible says he would have become like a muddied spring or a polluted well. That is, he would have become someone that once had the ability to give life and sustain the thirsty… but now was useless for that which it had been created!
  • This is the crucial event of his life. Although it might not have appeared important at the time, what Daniel did shaped the next 60 years.
  • There are several attractive features in the way Daniel made his proposal. First, he was tactful in the way he spoke. He didn’t demand anything, he simply made a request. Second, he was obedient in following the chain of command. Third, his request was reasonable. The test would be over in ten days and didn’t require the preparation of unusual food. Fourth, it was easy to evaluate. The guard simply eyeballed the four versus the others and drew his own conclusions.
  • These young men faced a situation common to every modern Christian youth. They could be a part of the crowd and submit to peer pressure to get ahead. Or they could do what they knew would please their God though it might involve persecution and cost them advancement opportunities.

(9) Now God had given the chief official great respect for Daniel.

  • God is at work in the background! How often has that been for us, and still is?
  • We see this very same thing happened to Joseph, when he was captive in Egypt, in the following verse. Genesis 39:21 "But the LORD was with Joseph there, too, and he granted Joseph favor with the chief jailer." God is in control of everyone.

(10) But he was alarmed by Daniel's suggestion. "My lord the king has ordered that you eat this food and wine," he said. "If you become pale and thin compared to the other youths your age, I am afraid the king will have me beheaded for neglecting my duties."

(11) Daniel talked it over with the attendant who had been appointed by the chief official to look after Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah.

(12) "Test us for ten days on a diet of vegetables and water," Daniel said.

  • The “pulse” in the KJV of verses 12 and 16 included barley, wheat, rye and probably peas and beans.
  • Daniel did not rebel against the restrictions that his elders placed upon him. Instead, he courteously requested permission to abstain, and then, having received an encouraging response, he offered a positive alternative course of action.

(13) "At the end of the ten days, see how we look compared to the other young men who are eating the king's rich food. Then you can decide whether or not to let us continue eating our diet."

(14) So the attendant agreed to Daniel's suggestion and tested them for ten days.

(15) At the end of the ten days, Daniel and his three friends looked healthier and better nourished than the young men who had been eating the food assigned by the king.

  • God gave the young men better (fatter, i.e., healthier) appearances by natural or by supernatural means. The result of the test encouraged their supervisor to continue feeding them a diet of things grown in the ground. This is the meaning of the rare Hebrew word translated "vegetables" or "pulse". God blessed these three young men because they followed His will, not because they ate vegetables instead of meat.

(16) So after that, the attendant fed them only vegetables instead of the rich foods and wines.

(17) God gave these four young men an unusual aptitude for learning the literature and science of the time. And God gave Daniel special ability in *understanding the meanings of visions and dreams.

  • *understanding the meanings of visions and dreams: Just as Joseph had been given the gift of interpreting dreams. But, the parallel doesn't stop there. Both were very young men, unjustly taken captives and made slaves, yet both rose to the top in a Gentile world!
  • We’ll read in Chapter 2 that God gave this gift to Daniel so he could tell Nebuchadnezzar that Daniel's God is the true God.

(18) When the three-year training period ordered by the king was completed, the chief official brought all the young men to King Nebuchadnezzar.

  • By the time they completed their education, they were probably nearly twenty years of age. In addition to their natural intellectual ability and their evident careful application to their studies, God added His grace.

(19) The king talked with each of them, and none of them impressed him as much as Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah. So they were appointed to his regular staff of advisers.

(20) In all matters requiring wisdom and balanced judgment, the king found the advice of these young men to be *ten times better than that of all the **magicians and ***enchanters in his entire kingdom.

  • *Ten is the number of completeness
  • As Keil puts it, Daniel “needed to be deeply versed in the Chaldean wisdom, as formerly Moses was in the wisdom of Egypt (Acts 7:22), so as to be able to put to shame the wisdom of this world by the hidden wisdom of God.”
  • **Magicians in our English Version, "magicians," comes from mag, that is, "a priest." The Magi formed one of the six divisions of the Medes.
  • ***enchanters," from a root, "to conceal," practicers of the occult arts.
  • The fact that Daniel called these other officials magicians (Hebrew hartummim, astrological diviners) and conjurers (Hebrew assapim, enchanters, NIV) has raised questions about whether the four Hebrew youths practiced occult arts. If they refused to eat non-kosher food because of religious conviction, they presumably would not have participated in divination and magic, which the Mosaic Law also expressly forbade (Deut. 18:10-12). Probably we should understand that they excelled in the matter of offering wise advice to their king.

(21) Daniel remained there until the first year of *King Cyrus's reign.

  • *King Cyrus (from the Persian name "Kurush", meaning" throne") - king of Persia.
    Isaiah 45:1-5: This is what the LORD says to Cyrus, his anointed one, whose right hand he will empower. Before him, mighty kings will be paralyzed with fear. Their fortress gates will be opened, never again to shut against him. This is what the LORD says: "I will go before you, Cyrus, and level the mountains. I will smash down gates of bronze and cut through bars of iron. And I will give you treasures hidden in the darkness -- secret riches. I will do this so you may know that I am the LORD, the God of Israel, the one who calls you by name. "And why have I called you for this work? It is for the sake of Jacob my servant, Israel my chosen one. I called you by name when you did not know me. I am the LORD; there is no other God. I have prepared you, even though you do not know me,
  • Here we are told that Daniel lived through the entire period of the seventy years' Babylonian captivity. But that was not all; for not only did he live to see the faithful remnant in Judah return to their own land, after seventy years, as God had foretold; but Daniel also continued to live in Babylon “in the third year of Cyrus” (Daniel 10:1), still being mightily used of God, still receiving prophecies from God for His people.
  • The Persian king Cyrus’ first year in control of Babylon was 539 B.C.

NOTES: