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Introduction and summary of
Daniel
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Who and what? Daniel, whose name means "God is judge," is perhaps the best-known of the Hebrew prophets. The book by his name is half historical narrative (chs. 1 - 6) and half apocalyptic prophecy (chs. 7 - 12). Where is it? Twenty-seventh Old Testament book, between Ezekiel and Hosea, Daniel is both a major prophet (content) and a minor prophet (length). When and why? Daniel served in the sixth century before Christ, while God's people were captive in Babylon and Medo-Persia. While Daniel was still a youth, Nebuchadnezzar's armies attacked Jerusalem, took temple treasures, and carried away some of the best youth (including Daniel) to Babylon to serve the king (1:1-7). Nine years later, Nebuchadnezzar returned to sack the city and destroy the temple with fire. Daniel is a man about whom nothing negative is recorded (others are Joseph and the sinless Jesus). Bible critics have found much fault with his book, however, though the New Testament endorses its miracles (Hebrews 11:33, 34), its prophecies (Matthew 24:15), and its report of angels (Luke 1:19, 26). |
Two of a kind
Chapters 1 and 12: Daniel begins with a northern king's attack on God's holy mountain, resulting in a time of testing in which Daniel and his friends seek to be pure and undefiled (1:1, 8ff). At the end of the test, the faithful few were approved and promoted in the royal palace (1:14ff). So also the book's conclusion: Under attack from the north, God's remnant people, though tested and purified, will stand in judgment at the end of time and be rewarded by the King in the brightness of eternity (11:40ff; 12:1, 2-4, 10, 13, 14).
Chapters 2 and 7: Using a four-metalled man (ch. 2) and four wild animals (ch. 7), God shows His people's future under Babylon, Medo-Persia, Greece, Rome, and the kingdom of God.
Chapters 3 and 6: Facing commands to worship false gods (ch. 3) and to cease prayer to Yahweh (ch. 6), Shadrach, Meshach, Abednego, and Daniel prove it is better to obey God than man.
Chapters 4 and 5: God exhibits sovereignty over proud monarchs, bringing Nebuchadnezzar to insanity and back (ch. 4) and delivering Belshazzar to his enemies (ch. 5).
Chapters 8 and 9: These include intriguing and puzzling predictions involving periods in Israel's history: 2300 days
(ch. 8) and 70 weeks (ch. 9).Chapters 10 and 11: The last great vision of Daniel is introduced and recorded here and concluded in 12.
Apocalyptic: Daniel's prophetic style, named for its colorful imagery, numerics, and dramatic historical intervention seen in visions and dreams. The book of Revelation is called The Apocalypse.
Dreams or visions:
Other mysterious elements: secrets, puzzles (4:9; 5:12, 16); magicians, astrologers, soothsayers, sorcerers (2:2ff; 5:7); watchers (4:13, 17, 23); part of a man's hand writing on a wall (5:5, 24); a horn with eyes and a mouth (7:8, 20).
The angelic is prominent: fourth man in the fire (3:25); angels who shut lions' mouths (6:22); angels who fight unseen forces of evil (10:5-20, esp. 13, 20).
Picturesque animals: lion, bear, leopard, terrible beast (7:3-7). These correspond to the four sections of the metal image and represent the kingdoms of Babylon, Medo-Persia (2:37, 38; 5:30, 31), Greece and Rome. A ram and male goat represent the kingdoms of Medo-Persia and Greece (8:3-8; 20, 21).
Horns play a major role on some beasts. The terrible beast had ten, three of which are rooted out by an eleventh horn with a man's eyes and a big mouth (7:7, 8, 19-27). This little horn persecutes God's people and changes His truths, until it is judged (7:24-26). Also, the ram had two uneven horns, and the male goat's notable horn was broken and replaced by four others, one of which produced another little horn, similarly vicious (8:3, 5, 8-12).
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Numerics
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Messianic previews:
A man who prays: Daniel . . .
A God who rules: Daniel's God . . .
Prophecy's sure word:
The four dominant empires (chs. 2 and 7) came and went with wonderful accuracy. Descriptions of Alexander the Great's Grecian kingdom and of Antiochus Epiphanes (ch. 8) are also recorded history, as is the 490 years from Jerusalem's rebuilding until the Messiah's death (ch. 9). Most predictions in the last great prophecy (chs. 10 - 12) were fulfilled in ancient Persia and Greece (11:1, 2ff). We wait for the grand finale (ch. 12) at Christ's return.
| Daniel in a sentence: While he and his brethren are captives in Babylon, Daniel remains faithful to God under test, gains official position there, interprets the kings' dreams, and receives four visions of wide historical/political scope to encourage God's people under oppression. |