Daniel 10-12

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Introduction

Well what a wild ride has the book of Daniel been. We have had a number of our preachers introduce their sermon by saying that they find their passgage a challenge. Even our Bishop said that he was a bit surprised by being asked to give Chapter 8 a go. And for good reason. It is a very strange book in lots of ways.
As we come to the end of the book of Daniel I am wondering just how relevant is Daniel to us living in Australia in 2020
The book tells the story of Daniel and his three friends sdrach mesach and abendigo as they struggle to maintain hope in the face of oppression and exile at the hands of a forigen power who has conqured their country and taken them away from their city to live in their capital city. This story plays out across the first half of the book in Chapter 1-6. Then in the second half of Daniel in Chapters 7-12, we see a series of comlicated dreams and interpretations.

The First half of the Book is usually the most rellatable part of the book.

The personal struggles of Daniel and his friends in the first half of the book are generally the most popular and relatable section of the book.
Daniel shadrac meshac and abendigo are forced to choose success in their career or being faithful to God. They choose God and it turns out to be a great choice. even though they don’t eat the food of the royal court and just eat vegies they turn out to be the healthiest and wisest servants in the court.
The first half of Daniel has some of the best known Bible stories, in the sunday school classics about Daniel in the lions den in chapter 3 and the story of the firey furnace in chapter 6. These much loved bible stories bring to life the main themes of the book, hope and patience in the face of oppression and adversity, faithfulness to God in the face of death penalty. We see the hope, patience and faithness of daniel and his friends.
Apart from the weird dream of the King in Chapter 2 this section seems to be a bit more practical to the modern reader. But even this dream is encouraging to us today because when Daniel interprets the dream God wins again and Daniel is shown to choose the best way by trusting in God. Even the King changes his mind.
The first half of the book also shows us the reason God’s people suffer. We see this in chapters 4-5. It is because kingdoms are arrogant and violent and spread injustice. But Chapters 4-5 exposes the weakness of even the most power human kingdoms.
The pride and injustice of the kings is judged by God. In Chapter 4 King Nebuchnezza is turned mad by God but he is humble and repeants and Gid heals his mind. But in Chapter 5 Belzear is stuck in pride and when he is judged by a supernatural hand that appears writing on a wall he does not repent and is assacinated that very night.
Despite the crazy circumstances we can feel that again Daniel’s hope in God is justified as God ultimately judge and depose bad rulers. Some people think that we have pretty much learnt everything we need to know by Chapter 6.

It can be harder to see the relevance of the second half of the book

Many find the second half of the book seems obscure and even irrelivant to many modern readers. Even though the dreams continue the theme that God will judge and overthrow all unjust human powers, gthat he will be king and his people will be suceed in the end, it can seem a bit repetitaive and drawn out. And all the strange animals in the visions can be really hard to understand and harder to remember.
In Chapter 7 Daniel has his first dream. It is about 4 wild beasts, a lion a bear a winged leopard and a super beast with horns Straight away it reminds us of the kings dream in chapter 2 and for good reason. Just like the statue made of 4 metals represented that 4 kingdoms would come and go so the beats represents 4 kingdoms. The message is the same, no earthly power lasts forever.
We should wait for God to bring about his rule and reign with love and justice and vindicate his suffering people. This may cause us to ask so what, why are we going over this again.
Well the main reason is that this dream starts a new question that is going to be answereed in the second half of the book.
The question is when is all of this going to happen. When is God going to end injustice of human powers. This question makes this second section just as relevant to us as the first half of the book.
The question begins to be answered in the very next chapter.
In chapter 8 daniel has another vision about the two beasts in his last dream Sarah beautifully painted these strange creatures for us. This time the are imagined as a ram, who is the meades and the persians, the second is a image of ancient greece. out of the goat comes another horns one of the horns symbolises the evil king of chapter 7. He will attack jerusalem and exalt himself above God and defile the temple with idols, but he will be destroyed by God an he will exalt his people.
Chapter 8 really builds my faith and hope and dispells doubt because hundreds of years after this was written it all came to pass. Meads and persons were replaced by Alexander the greek, he died his generals rushed to take the territories and became kings in the power vacum that was left. Antichos arose in Jerusalem and put idols in the temple and persecuted Gods people. This is amazing and encourages me that the other prohesies will come true to.
In chapter 9 daniel is confused about when this will hapen and he consults the scroll of jeramiah 25 where God said the exile would only last 70 years. Which is almost up and asks God to fullfill his promise soon to restore the people to jerusalem, Gabrielle tells him again that Israel’s sin has continued so they will have to stay in exile and oppression 7 times longer than Jerimiah forsaw.
Daniel is very upset by this and he has one more final vsiosn in chapter 10-12. This is where we finally have the questions all answered, when is God going to judge and the relevance to us is that we must be hopeful, faithful and patient as we wait for this prohecy to be fullfilled. In our time or in the future.

So as we come to Chapter 10-12 what more is there to say about the Book of Daniel. And maybe more importantly what does God want us to take away from his word today?

Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible Chapter 10

1. third year of Cyrus—two years after Cyrus’ decree for the restoration of the Jews had gone forth, in accordance with Daniel’s prayer in Da 9:3–19. This vision gives not merely general outlines, or symbols, but minute details of the future, in short, anticipative history. It is the expansion of the vision in Da 8:1–14. That which then “none understood,” he says here, “he understood”; the messenger being sent to him for this (Da 10:11, 14), to make him understand it. Probably Daniel was no longer in office at court; for in Da 1:21, it is said, “Daniel continued even unto the first year of King Cyrus”; not that he died then. See on Da 1:21.

angle appears to Daniel
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible Chapter 10

The tenth through twelfth chapters more fully describe the vision in the eighth chapter by a second vision on the same subject, just as the vision in the seventh chapter explains more fully that in the second.

Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible Chapter 10

The tenth chapter is the prologue; the eleventh, the prophecy itself; and the twelfth, the epilogue. The tenth chapter unfolds the spiritual worlds as the background of the historical world (Job 1:7; 2:1, &c. Zec 3:1, 2; Rev 12:7), and angels as the ministers of God’s government of men. As in the world of nature (Jn 5:4; Rev 7:1–3), so in that of history here; Michael, the champion of Israel, and with him another angel, whose aim is to realize God’s will in the heathen world, resist the God-opposed spirit of the world. These struggles are not merely symbolical, but real (1 Sa 16:13–15; 1 Ki 22:22; Eph 6:12).

Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible Chapter 10

16. touched my lips—the same significant action wherewith the Son of man accompanied His healing of the dumb (Mk 7:33). He alone can give spiritual utterance (Is 6:6, 7; Eph 6:19), enabling one to “open the mouth boldly.” The same one who makes dumb (Da 10:15) opens the mouth.

Daniel recievs a vision of a war
3 week fast
Daniel 10:10–14 NIV
10 A hand touched me and set me trembling on my hands and knees. 11 He said, “Daniel, you who are highly esteemed, consider carefully the words I am about to speak to you, and stand up, for I have now been sent to you.” And when he said this to me, I stood up trembling. 12 Then he continued, “Do not be afraid, Daniel. Since the first day that you set your mind to gain understanding and to humble yourself before your God, your words were heard, and I have come in response to them. 13 But the prince of the Persian kingdom resisted me twenty-one days. Then Michael, one of the chief princes, came to help me, because I was detained there with the king of Persia. 14 Now I have come to explain to you what will happen to your people in the future, for the vision concerns a time yet to come.”
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible Chapter 10

prince of Grecia shall come—Alexander the Great, who conquered Persia, and favored the Jews [CALVIN]. Rather, as the prince of Persia is an angel, representing the hostile world power, so the prince of Grecia is a fresh angelic adversary, representing Greece. When I am gone forth from conquering the Persian foe, a fresh one starts up, namely, the world power that succeeds Persia, Greece; Antiochus Epiphanes, and his antitype Antichrist, but him, too, with the help of Michael, Israel’s champion, I shall overcome [GEJER].

Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible Chapter 11

Da 11:1–45. This chapter is an enlargement of the eighth: THE OVERTHROW OF PERSIA BY GRECIA: THE FOUR DIVISIONS OF ALEXANDER’S KINGDOM: CONFLICTS BETWEEN THE KINGS OF THE SOUTH AND OF THE NORTH, THE PTOLEMIES AND SELEUCIDAE: ANTIOCHUS EPIPHANES.

michael
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible Chapter 11

kingdom … divided toward … four winds—the fourfold division of Alexander’s kingdom at his death (Da 8:8, 22), after the battle of Ipsus, 301 B.C.

Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible Chapter 11

JEROME’S view is simpler; for the narrative seems to continue the history of Antiochus, though with features only in type applicable to him, fully to Antichrist.

sanctuary of strength—not only naturally a place of strength, whence it held out to the last against the besiegers, but chiefly the spiritual stronghold of the covenant-people (Ps 48:1–3, 12–14). Apollonius “polluted” it with altars to idols and sacrifices of swine’s flesh, after having “taken away the daily sacrifice” (see on Da 8:11).

place … abomination that maketh desolate—that is, that pollutes the temple (Da 8:12, 13). Or rather, “the abomination of the desolater,” Antiochus Epiphanes (1 Maccabees 1:29, 37–49). Compare Da 9:27, wherein the antitypical desolating abomination of Rome (the eagle standard, the bird of Jupiter, sacrificed to by Titus’ soldiers within the sacred precincts, at the destruction of Jerusalem), of Mohammed and of the final Antichrist, is foretold. 1 Maccabees 1:54, uses the very phrase, “the fifteenth day of the month Casleu, in the hundred forty-fifth year, they set up the abomination of desolation on the altar”; namely, an idol-altar and image of Jupiter Olympius, erected upon Jehovah’s altar of burnt offerings. “Abomination” is the common name for an idol in the Old Testament. The Roman emperor Adrian’s erection of a temple to Jupiter Capitolinus where the temple of God had stood, A.D. 132; also the erection of the Mohammedan mosque of Omar in the same place (it is striking, Mohammedanism began to prevail in A.D. 610, only about three years of the time when Popery assumed the temporal power); and the idolatry of the Church of Rome in the spiritual temple, and the final blasphemy of the personal Antichrist in the literal temple (2 Th 2:4) may all be antitypically referred to here under Antiochus the type, and the Old Testament Antichrist.

11:31
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible Chapter 11

33. they that understand—who know and keep the truth of God (Is 11:2).

instruct many—in their duty to God and the law, not to apostatize.

yet they shall fall—as Eleazar (2 Maccabees 6:18, &c.). They shall be sorely persecuted, even to death (Heb 11:35, 36, 37; 2 Maccabees 6, 7). Their enemies took advantage of the Sabbath to slay them on the day when they would not fight. TREGELLES thinks, from comparison with Da 11:35, it is the people who “fall,” not those of understanding. But Da 11:35 makes the latter “fall,” not an unmeaning repetition; in Da 11:33 they fall (die) by persecution; in Da 11:35 they fall (spiritually) for a time by their own weakness.

flame—in caves, whither they had retired to keep the Sabbath. Antiochus caused some to be roasted alive (2 Maccabees 7:3–5).

many days—rather, “certain days,” as in Da 8:27. JOSEPHUS [Antiquities, 12.7.6, 7] tells us the persecution lasted for three years (1 Maccabees 1:59 4:54; 2 Maccabees 10:1–7).

34. a little help—The liberty obtained by the Maccabean heroes for the Jews was of but short duration. They soon fell under the Romans and Herodians, and ever since every attempt to free them from Gentile rule has only aggravated their sad lot. The period of the world times (Gentile rule) is the period of depression of the theocracy, extending from the exile to the millennium [ROOS]. The more immediate reference seems to be, the forces of Mattathias and his five sons were originally few (1 Maccabees 2:1–5).

many shall cleave to them—as was the case under Judas Maccabeus, who was thus able successfully to resist Antiochus.

with flatteries—Those who had deserted the Jewish cause in persecution, now, when success attended the Jewish arms, joined the Maccabean standard, for example, Joseph, the son of Zecharias, Azarias, &c. (1 Maccabees 5:55–57; 2 Maccabees 12:40 13:21). MAURER explains it, of those who through fear of the Maccabees’ severity against apostates joined them, though ready, if it suited their purpose, to desert them (1 Maccabees 2:44 3:58).

Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible Chapter 11

holy mountain—Jerusalem and Mount Zion. The desolation of the sanctuary by Antiochus, and also the desecration of the consecrated ground round Jerusalem by the idolatrous Roman ensigns, as also by the Mohammedan mosque, and, finally, by the last Antichrist, are referred to. So the last Antichrist is to sit upon “the mount of the congregation” (Is 14:13), but “shall be brought down to hell” (compare Note, see on Da 7:26; 2 Th 2:8).

Notes

In chapter 1 we are introduced to Daniel and his friends who have been taken from Jerusalem by the Babylonians and taken inot exile with their people to Babylon.
Daniel and his friends choose faithfulness to God over success in Babyon. But they end up suceeding as God protects them from danger time and time again first shadrac meshac and abendigo saved from the firery furnace in chapter 3 and then Daniel in chapter 7 who is saved from the lions den.
The book is about how they maintain hope while they are in exile in babylon, the land of their conqurers.
Chapter 2 Kings Dream of Statue. Sets the pattern for all the visions to come. 4 types of kingdoms symbolises a sequence of 4 kingdoms, the first being babylon. stone shatters statue and turning into a mountain and this vision sets up the story line for all the visions to follow.
All these kingdoms will come and go and will fill world with violence but one day God’s kingdom will come and it will establish God’s reign and this kindom will last forever.
We see how Kingdoms become arogant in their power and how God judges them in chapter 4 and 5. In chapter 4 Nebuchadnezza’s pride results inn Gods judgment and he becomes made like a beast of the field until he repents. Chapter 4 iscontrasted with chapter 5 where his son belshazzar who does not repent after he sees the hand write on the wall warning him to humble himself like his father did. He does not and as a result he is assisnated that very night.
In chapter 6 we see the opposite where the humble mand of God Daniel is thrown into a lions den. And is resced by God.
Chapter 7 is the center of the book and the pair of chapter 2 and the chapter revolves around another dream, this time it is daniels. It is where all the themes of the book come together. Daniel cannot understand the dream until th eangle gabrielle explains it to him. He sees 4 beasts that the angel tells him represent 4 kingdoms. This si the same as the statue in chapter 2 that represented 4 kingdoms.
one was a lion bear, a winged lepord, arrogant kindom, last one has horns and this one represents a particulariliy evil empire, has horns a symbol of kings and one horn is the worst because he exaults himself above God. This king persecutes God’s people who are represented in the dream by a figure who is described as the son of man. He is an image of God’s people and also their king. God appears and destroys the arrogant king and sets up the son of man to rule with him in heaven to rule over the nations.
So there are 3 stories of faithfulness despite increadible odds. to give hope to God’s suffering people in chapters 1, 3 and 6.
The reason God’s people suffer is shown to us in chapter 4-5 because kingdoms are arrogant and violent and spread injustice.
Chapter 2 and 7 encourage pateince that we should wait for God to bring about his rule and reign with love and justice. and vindicate his suffering people. This raises a question. When is God going to do this?
this is the subject of the 3 final chapters.
In chapter 8 daniel has another vision about the final two beasts in his last dream Sarah beautifully painted these strange creatures for us.. This time the are imagined as a ram, who is the meades and the persians, the second is a image of ancient greece. out of the goat comes another horns one of the horns symbolises the evil king of chapter 7. He will attack jerusalem and exalt himself above God and defile the temple with idols, but he will be destroyed by God an he will exalt his people.
In chapter 9 daniel is confused about when this will hapen and he consults the scroll of jeramiah 25 where God said the exile would only last 70 years. Which is almost up and asks God to fullfill his promise soon to restore the people to jerusalem, Gabrielle tells him again that Israel’s sin has continued so they will have to stay in exile and oppression 7 times longer than Jerimiah forsaw.
Daniel is very upset by this and he has one more final vsiosn in chapter 10-
1-6 and 7-12
Chapter 2 and 7 help us to understand 8-12
Today we are going to have a have a look at chapter 10-12 end our series
we see the visions that fortell the future continue.

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