Lord of History
The Book of Daniel demonstrates the absolute sovereignty of Yahweh over the course of History, empires, and nations. Its opening passage introduces the Book's key theme: God reigns supreme over the kingdoms of the Earth, both the just and the unjust. This proposition is presented implicitly in events, and explicitly in direct statements. Moreover, the accurate predictions of the prophet Daniel to the rulers of Babylon and the “kingdom of the Medes and Persians” influenced the course of events and political decisions.
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The Book opens by announcing the overthrow of the king of Judah and the removal of the golden vessels from the Temple to the “Land of Shinar.” Yahweh judged the Jewish nation for its sins by giving the Babylonian ruler sovereignty over it.
- (Daniel 1:1-2) – “In the third year of the reign of Jehoiakim king of Judah, came Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon to Jerusalem, and laid siege against it; and the Lord gave into his hand Jehoiakim king of Judah and a part of the vessels of the HOUSE of God, and he brought them into the land of Shinar, into the HOUSE of HIS GODS, and the vessels brought he into the treasure- HOUSE of HIS GODS.”
In the
Hebrew text, “house” is repeated three times, and “his god” twice
for emphasis. The name ‘Nebuchadnezzar’ includes the name of the Mesopotamian
god Nabu, the deity associated with literature, learning, and wisdom. From a human perspective, the pagan gods
of Babylon had triumphed over the God of Israel - (Isaiah 46:1).
The term “Shinar” is the ancient name of
Mesopotamia, the site of the Tower of Babel. In the Book of Genesis,
men spoke a single language and attempted to unite under one political order.
Yahweh thwarted them by confounding their language and
scattering the resultant disparate groups across the Earth - (Genesis
11:1-9).
KING OF BABEL
Effectively,
the new “king of Babel,” Nebuchadnezzar, was attempting to reverse the earlier
decree of Yahweh against “Babel” by seizing His “house,”
gathering the scattered nations to “Shinar,” and imposing the language
of Babylon on one and all.
Judah’s
tribute to “Babel” included many high-ranking Jewish exiles sent there for
education in its wisdom, language, and laws so they could serve the empire. The victory of Babylon was a national catastrophe for
the Jewish nation. It lost its independence, and a few years later, the kingdom
itself and the dynastic rule of the House of David were destroyed.
Nevertheless,
Daniel declared that it was “the Lord” who GAVE all
this into the hands of the pagan ruler and enemy of Israel. The Hebrew
verb rendered “gave” is applied repeatedly in the first chapter of Daniel.
In verse 9,
for example, God GAVE Daniel “favor and sympathy with the
prince of the eunuchs,” and in verse 17, He GAVE him and
his Jewish companions “knowledge and skill in all learning and wisdom.” Furthermore,
Daniel was “GIVEN” understanding in “all visions and dreams.”
Nebuchadnezzar
put Daniel and his friends to the test and “found them ten times better than
all the scribes and enchanters that were in his realm” - Therefore, they
were promoted to serve the king in his court. Despite the disaster that had befallen Israel,
Yahweh used the exiles from Jerusalem to direct the course of History.
THE KING’S DREAM
In the “second
year of Nebuchadnezzar,” the
king dreamed a dream that
troubled him, and he commanded the wise men of his court to reveal the
contents AND the meaning of his dream. Naturally, they were unable to do
so:
- “There is not a man upon the earth who can declare the matter of the king…there is none who can declare it before the king except the gods whose dwelling is not with flesh” – (Daniel 2:1-12).
Enraged, he
ordered the destruction of all the wise men of Babylon. But before that command
could be executed, Daniel requested an audience with the king to make the dream
and its interpretation known, then he prayed for the revelation of “this
mystery.” Yahweh responded in a night vision and revealed the dream to
Daniel.
He is the God “Who changes times and seasons, removes kings and sets up kings… He is the One Who reveals the deep and hidden things…for the matter of the king have you made known to us” - (Daniel 2:13-23).
When Daniel
revealed the dream and its interpretation, God showed Nebuchadnezzar “what
things must come to pass in latter days.” In his dream, he saw a large
image with a golden head, breast and arms of silver, belly and thighs of brass,
and legs of iron. Its feet were partly of iron and partly of clay. Next, he saw
a stone “cut out without hands” that struck the image on its feet and
broke it into pieces, until it was blown away by the wind “like the chaff.”
Then, the stone became a “great mountain and filled the whole earth.”
The golden
head represented Nebuchadnezzar, the ruler to whom God gave the “kingdom,”
singular. The silver breast symbolized an inferior kingdom that would
succeed him, likewise, the brass belly and thighs would “rule over all the
earth,” and each in its turn. The stone carved “without hands”
represented the final kingdom established by God, one that would “break in
pieces and consume all” the preceding realms. In this, “God had shown
the king what things must come to pass after these things.”
In
response, the king prostrated himself before Daniel, gave him gifts, and
exalted him to govern the province of Babylon. He declared
Daniel’s God to be “a God of gods, Lord of kings, and the revealer of mysteries.”
Thus, the mighty pagan king acknowledged Yahweh as sovereign over the kingdoms of
the Earth - (Daniel
2:46-49).
The God of
Israel had revealed the future of the World Empire. He was
and is the one Who “sets up and removes” rulers to achieve His purpose.
Through Daniel, Yahweh presented the future course of empires until the final
overthrow of the World Empire and its replacement by the Kingdom of God.
The rise and fall of political powers are under the firm control of the God of Daniel.
THE GOLDEN IDOL
The story
in Chapter 3 is the sequel to Nebuchadnezzar’s dream in which he attempts to
implement it by “making an image of gold.” It measured six cubits wide
and sixty cubits high. However, in his version, the entire image was covered in
gold, not only its head. He intended to glorify his achievements and declare to
one and all that his kingdom was an everlasting realm.
At his
command, all the “satraps, nobles, pashas, chief judges, treasurers, judges,
lawyers, and all provincial governors were assembled to the dedication of the
image… and they stood before it.” All were to “render homage to the
image that the king had set up.”
Any man who refused was cast immediately into the “fiery furnace” - (Daniel 3:1-6).
The great golden image
represented the absolute sovereignty of the Babylonian king over all the “peoples,
races, and tongues” of the Earth. Presumptuously, he demanded that all
venerate the image which he “set up.”
The
Aramaic verb rendered “set up” is the same one used in Chapter 2 for the
God who “sets up” kings, “set up” the image with the golden head,
and “set up” His everlasting kingdom - (Daniel 2:21-44).
In Chapter
3, nine times the text declares that Nebuchadnezzar “set up” his image, a deliberate contrast to the prerogatives
that belong to Yahweh alone. Thus, the pagan ruler claimed the authority and the
allegiance that belonged to the “Most-High God, the very One Who granted
the Babylonian ruler sovereignty over the nations- (Daniel 3:1-18).
When
Nebuchadnezzar heard that Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-Nego
had “refused” to render homage to his golden image, he gave them a stark
choice - Give allegiance to the image or suffer a fiery death. After all,
“Who is the god that shall deliver you out of my hand?” Then they were
cast into the “fiery furnace” but miraculously survived - (Daniel 3:20-25).
Awestruck,
the king summoned the three men to exit the furnace and addressed them as the
“servants of the Most-High God.” Because they survived unscathed,
he “blessed the God of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-Nego,” the same God who
had “changed the king’s word” by delivering His “servants who trusted
in Him.”
Consequently,
Nebuchadnezzar issued a decree to “all peoples, nations and tongues”
that anyone who spoke disparagingly of this God would be cut in pieces, “for
there is no other god who is able thus to deliver.”
As in Chapter
2, praise and acknowledgment of Yahweh are found on the lips of the powerful
pagan king, and once again, the ruler of the World Empire acknowledged
the sovereignty of God and the universal extent of His realm.
DOWNFALL
Chapter 4
begins and ends with Nebuchadnezzar, the sole ruler of the World Empire,
acknowledging the sovereignty of Yahweh over History. Eight times the term “earth”
occurs, usually linked with Babylonian sovereignty over it. In contrast, “heaven”
occurs sixteen times in reference to the vastly superior sovereignty of Yahweh.
And once again, the king learned that God alone rules the course of History.
Nebuchadnezzar
had another dream that caused him anxiety. Again, he
summoned the wise men of Babylon to interpret it. And as before, only
Daniel could do so. In it, a large tree at the center of the Earth grew
until its height reached the “heavens” and it was visible from the
extremities of the Earth. The animals were fed by it, and the birds of the air
sheltered in its branches - (Daniel 4:4-18).
The king
saw a “holy watcher” descend from heaven who commanded the complete
removal of the tree so that nothing remained visible. It was then “cut
down,” its branches “lopped off,” its leaves “stripped,” and
its fruit “scattered across the earth.” Only the “tip of its root”
remained in the ground.
The king’s
heart was changed from that of a human to that of a beast until “seven times
passed over him.” He became a pitiful tethered animal dependent on others
for care. In this way, all “the living would know that the Most-High rules
in the kingdom of men, and gives it to whomever he will, and sets up over it
the lowest of men.”
Daniel interpreted the dream, and once more, thereby, the servant of Yahweh exercised sovereignty over the king of Babylon. God gave true sovereignty to the “lowest of men,” in this case, Daniel. The mighty king of Babylon had become little more than a pawn in a larger drama.
The tree
represented Nebuchadnezzar, whose “greatness and dominion extended to the
end of the earth.” The command to cut it down was the “decree of the
Most-High.” Men drove the king out of society to live among wild animals
for “seven seasons” until he learned that “the Most-High gives the
kingdom of men to whomever he pleases”; afterward, his kingdom was restored.
And just as the dream foretold, Nebuchadnezzar declared:
- “Blessed is the Most-High who lives forever! I praise and honor the One whose dominion is an everlasting dominion, and his kingdom endures from generation to generation. Before Him, all the inhabitants of the earth are accounted as nothing, and according to his own pleasure, He deals with the Host of Heaven and the inhabitants of the earth.”
History
remembers Nebuchadnezzar as a great builder of magnificent buildings and a
successful conqueror who established an empire from the Persian Gulf to the
gates of Egypt. Scripture remembers him as a tool employed by Yahweh to
achieve His ends, despite the plans and whims of the pagan ruler.
In
Scripture, “Babylon” symbolizes the World Empire set in its hostility
to God. Chapter 4 provides an object lesson in the hollowness of the boasts of
empires, emperors, tyrants, and kings. God alone installs and removes rulers
and regimes as He sees fit.
BABYLON’S DEMISE
Chapter 5
opens on the last evening of the final ruler of Babylon, Belshazzar. On that
fateful night, he hosted a feast during which he and his retinue drank wine
from the vessels removed by Nebuchadnezzar from Jerusalem, all while “praising
the gods of gold, silver, brass, iron, wood, and stone.”
In that
same hour, a hand began to “write over against the lampstand upon the
plaster of the wall.” Disturbed by the sight, Belshazzar summoned the
enchanters, soothsayers, and the “wise men of Babylon” to interpret
the writing. As with the dreams of Nebuchadnezzar, none of them could interpret
the writing.
Daniel was
summoned. Belshazzar offered him rewards if he could interpret the sign. The
prophet of Yahweh retorted that he would interpret it regardless of any gifts
from the king.
Daniel then
reminded him how Nebuchadnezzar had received the “kingdom, greatness, glory
and majesty” from the Most-High God, and authority over “all peoples,
nations, and tongues.” Nevertheless, when that king’s heart “was lifted
up,” he was deposed, deprived of his glory, and driven from the sons of
men, “until he came to know that the Most-High God rules over the kingdom of
men and sets up over it whomever he pleases.”
In
contrast, Belshazzar had not humbled his heart, “though he knew all this.”
Instead, he exalted himself against the “Lord of heaven” by profaning
the vessels of the Temple. Rather than honor the Most-High God, he praised
false gods and idols, “that neither see nor hear nor know.”
The
supernatural writing read, ‘Mene, Mene Tekel Upharsin.’ Mene is the
equivalent of the Hebrew “talent,” tekel equates to the
Jewish shekel, and peres to the “half-pieces” or
the “half-mina.” The last term is a wordplay on the name “Persia,”
the power that was about to overthrow Babylon, and on the Aramaic verb for “divide”
- (from the consonantal stem p-r-s). The terms signified that:
- “God has numbered your kingdom and brought it to an end” - (mene).
- “You are weighed in the balances and found wanting” - (tekel).
- “Your kingdom is divided and given to the Medes and Persians” - (peres).
Once more,
the sovereignty of Yahweh was on full display as the World Empire was
transferred from Babylon to the kingdom of the “Medes and Persians.”
Despite this
dark prediction, Belshazzar ordered Daniel proclaimed the “third ruler in
the kingdom.” However, that very night, the “Medes and Persians”
captured the city and slew Belshazzar. One World Empire fell - The next
one arrived on the world scene. Through the words of the Jewish captive,
Yahweh had deposed one mighty empire and “set up” another of even
greater magnitude.
THE NEXT IMPERIAL POWER
In Chapter
6, the governor of the World
Empower appointed Daniel first among three ministers of state; however,
certain officials sought to discredit him. Unable to find fault with his
performance, they fabricated a charge of disloyalty based on his religious
practices.
A new law was
devised that forbade anyone from petitioning any “god or man for thirty days”
except Darius, which was signed into the “law of the Medes and Persians.”
According to Persian tradition, once written, the law could not be altered
by anyone, not even the king. Thus, the trap was set.
Daniel’s accusers
“found him making petition before his God,” and then informed the king. This
distressed Darius who valued the services of Daniel, so he determined to save him.
Despite his vast power, he was only able to postpone his execution until
sunset, being constrained by the “law of the Medes and Persians.”
The
Prophet was thrown to the lions. The king passed the night anxiously, rising
early the next day to see if Daniel had survived the night - “Is the
God whom you serve able to deliver you from the lions?” Indeed, he was
alive. God’s angel had shut the lions’ mouths so they could do him no harm. He
was found “blameless” before God and Darius. He was removed from the pit
and his accusers were cast in instead, where they died an immediate and
horrible death.
Having altered
the unalterable Persian law, Darius issued the decree to “all the peoples,
nations, and tongues that dwell in all the earth” to fear and revere the “God
of Daniel… His kingdom shall not be destroyed, and his dominion shall be
even unto the end.” The plot to exploit the law of the “Medes and
Persians” for evil instead caused the demise of the very men who conspired
to destroy Daniel - (Daniel 6:25-28).
Thus, the
first half of Daniel demonstrates the absolute sovereignty of Yahweh
over the course of History. The plans, intentions, and dictates of even the
most powerful rulers cannot thwart His purposes, and He uses the humblest of
His servants to declare His sovereignty over the kingdoms of the Earth.
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