Overview of Daniel
The Book of Daniel is a well-structured literary work, not a collection of folk stories or random and unrelated visions. At its beginning, the key themes of the Book are presented in brief, then worked out in detail in its subsequent chapters, and each new vision builds on the preceding ones.
The historical stories in the first six chapters
lay the foundation for the visions and their interpretations in the last six
chapters. Even the dream of King Nebuchadnezzar about the “great image”
with a “head of gold” anticipates the detailed vision of the “four
beasts ascending from the sea” described in Chapter 7.
[Photo by Jakob Braun on Unsplash] |
Each vision includes one or more common subjects. For example, the cessation of the daily sacrifice is mentioned in the visions of the Ram and the Goat, the Seventy Weeks, and the Kings of the North and South, as well as in the conclusion to the book - (Daniel 8:10-13, 9:26-27, 11:31, 12:11).
The name ‘Daniel’ means “God is my judge.”
He first appears as a young Jewish exile just arrived in Babylon from
Jerusalem. No information is provided on his family history, though he
was from the nobility - “Of the seed royal and the nobles.”
At the time of his deportation, Daniel was probably
in his teenage years. He received his final vision in the third year after the
overthrow of Babylon by the “Medes and Persians,” approximately
536 B.C. That means his prophetic “career” was spent in the city of
Babylon over seventy years. There is no record that he ever
returned to Judah. Presumably, he died in Babylon at an advanced age.
Daniel was given the Babylonian name
‘Belteshazzar,’ which means “Bel protects [the king].” ‘Bel’ is the Akkadian
form of ‘Ba’al’ (“lord, master”) that was applied in Mesopotamia to the
patron deity of the city of Babylon, Marduk.
Daniel is classified as a prophet in Jewish
and Christian tradition. In the Book, he is a “wise man” with great “discernment.”
In the royal court, he was noted as a great interpreter of dreams -
(Daniel 1:17, 2:13, 5:11-12).
He was a devout Jew living in a pagan
culture. At times, certain members of the inner court were hostile to him,
though he remained loyal to the God of Israel. His ability to interpret dreams
won him high praise and an important position in the civil service of the
Empire. Later, he served in the court of “Darius the Mede” after the fall
of the Neo-Babylonian Empire - (Daniel 5:31-6:1).
DANIEL AND POLITICAL POWER
The Book describes the role of the prophet in
affecting events in the affairs of the Babylonian and Persian
empires. His visions concerned the changing World Empire and the control
of the God of Israel throughout History.
Daniel epitomizes the faithful Jew who lived
by Divine grace in a pagan society. He persevered despite the downfall of the
Jewish nation and his vulnerability to powerful forces. Yahweh provided him
with wisdom to confound his opponents. Though powerless, God used his
pronouncements to kings to change history.
Daniel served in important positions in the
governments of Nebuchadnezzar, Belshazzar, and “Darius the Mede.” Nebuchadnezzar
made him the “chief of the wise men” and governor of
the province of Babylon. Belshazzar appointed him as the third
ruler of his kingdom. After Babylon fell, “Darius the Mede” placed him
over the provincial governors of his domain - (Daniel 2:48, 5:29, 6:1-3).
All the events in the Book occurred during
the Seventy-Year Captivity of the Jewish nation, a judgment of Yahweh to
punish Judah for her sins.
THE CAPTIVITY
Nebuchadnezzar defeated the remnants of the
Assyrian Empire and subjugated the nations of northern Palestine around
605 B.C., including the Kingdom of Judah. The region was known as the
“Hatti-land” by the Babylonians (“All the kings of the Hatti-land came before
Nebuchadnezzar and he received their heavy tribute” – from the Chaldean
Chronicle, quoted from Exile and Return by Charles Pfeiffer, Baker
Books, 1962, p. 12).
In the case of Judah, “heavy tribute”
was imposed including the deportation of many Jews to serve in the Babylonian
civil service. In the assessment of the Book of Daniel, the Seventy-Year
Captivity of Judah began with the subjugation of Jerusalem by
Nebuchadnezzar in 605 B.C. - (Daniel 1:1-4).
The rise of Nabopolassar to the Babylonian throne in 626 B.C.
marked the start of the Neo-Babylonian Empire. It endured until 539 B.C. when
it was overthrown by the “Kingdom of the Medes and the Persians,” the
Achaemenid Empire under the rule of Cyrus the Great. Daniel includes chronological references that
coordinate key events with the reigns of the kings of Judah, Babylon,
Persia, and Greece - (Daniel 1:1-2, 1:21, 6:28-31, 11:1-4).
The Book applies a theologically loaded term to the period it covers, the “indignation,” the divinely ordained period of correction. When Daniel speaks of the “time of the end,” he means the end of the “indignation,” not the end of History or the world. The “indignation” also provides another chronological marker that connects several of his visions - (Daniel 8:17-19, 11:36).
In the Hebrew Bible, “indignation”
refers to the indignation of God with Israel for her sins and the
resultant punishment. In Daniel, it began with the overthrow and
captivity of Judah by Nebuchadnezzar, the period the Book calls the “desolations
of Jerusalem.” It was during this period that the “Little Horn” waged
war against the “saints” for “time, times, and part of a time,”
and desecrated the Temple of Jerusalem with the “Abomination that Desolates”
- (Daniel 7:24-28, 9:1-3, 9:18-27, 12:1-7).
Based on the internal evidence, the Book was
composed after the start of the Captivity and completed by the early years of
the Persian Empire. The range provided is from the “third year of the reign
of King Jehoiakim” (606 B.C.) to the “third year of Cyrus king of Persia”
or 536 B.C. - (Daniel 1:1-2, 1:21, 5:31-6:1, 10:1).
The Babylonian Captivity developed over
several stages, beginning in 605 B.C. with the subjugation of Jerusalem. It
culminated in the destruction of the city and Temple in 587-586 B.C., and there
were at least three deportations of Jewish exiles to Babylon - (606, 598, 587 B.C.).
The historical sections describe events in
the lives of Daniel and three of his companions. The dream visions in the
second half of the Book were received between the first year of Belshazzar’s
reign and the third year of Cyrus the Great.
FOURFOLD PATTERN
The visions are built on a framework of four successive kingdoms that would
precede the inauguration of the Kingdom of God. Three of the four
kingdoms are identified by name - Babylon, the “Medes and Persians”,
and Greece. Though not named, the fourth kingdom was one of the four
divisions of the Greek Empire that arose after the death of its first king,
Alexander the Great - (Daniel 2:24-45, 8:20-25, 11:1-4).
The theme of the Book is that God rules
over the kingdoms of this world and gives rulership to whomever He pleases, “even
to the lowest of men.” Despite appearances and human machinations, His
purposes are not thwarted by even the mightiest of empires.
Chapters 1, and 8 through 12, were written
in the Hebrew Language. The section in Chapters 2 through 7 was composed in the
Aramaic dialect of the Persian Empire. The switch to Aramaic occurs in Daniel
2:4 when the “Chaldeans spoke to the king in the Syrian language,”
meaning Aramaic. The change back to Hebrew occurs in Daniel 8:1. The change
is too specific to be accidental or the product of later copyists.
The Hebrew and Aramaic sections point to a
date of composition during the Babylonian Captivity. The man who wrote the book
was familiar with both languages and used grammatical and idiomatic
features peculiar to the Mesopotamian region.
The several stories in the Aramaic section of
the Book show how God gave Daniel “knowledge and skill in all learning and
wisdom,” and enabled him to use the language and learning of the Chaldeans to
prove that Yahweh rules over the political realms of the world.
The use of the Aramaic language fits the
historical setting. By the time of Nebuchadnezzar, it was the de facto language
of diplomacy and commerce among the nations of the Near East, and it became
the common tongue of many Jews by the end of Judah’s Captivity - (2 Kings
18:17-37, Ezra 4:11-22, 5:7-17, 6:6-12, 7:11-26, Nehemiah 8:8).
The contents of the Aramaic section concern
events that occurred during the Babylonian Empire, and in the first years of
the “Kingdom of the Medes and the Persians.” In contrast, the visions described
in the Hebrew section of Daniel were about events that would transpire after
the fall of the Neo-Babylonian Empire.
[Ziggarut by Sam Moghadam Khamseh on Unsplash] |
IN REVELATION
Verbal allusions from Daniel are
used repeatedly in the Book of Revelation, and that source material
often sheds light on the symbolism of Revelation. For example, the “Little
Horn” that “made war with the saints and prevailed against them” is
echoed in the visions of the “Beast from the Sea” that waged war “against
the saints.” John’s single “Beast” combined the characteristics of
all four of Daniel’s “Beasts from the Sea” - (Daniel 7:1-8, Revelation
11:7, 13:1-2).
However, Revelation does not simply
quote verses from Daniel. It reinterprets them in consideration of the Death
and Resurrection of Jesus. Events predicted in Daniel for “latter
days” become “what things much come to pass soon” in Revelation.
Daniel was told to “seal” the Book “until
the time of the end,” whereas, John was commanded NOT “to seal
the scroll, for the season is at hand” - (Daniel 2:27-28, 12:4, Revelation 1:1-3,
22:10).
Thus, the events Daniel foresaw that would occur in the future, John witnessed unfolding in his day. In Revelation,
descriptions of visions are often accompanied by explicit and more detailed
explanations than those provided in Daniel.
RELATED POSTS:
- Unsealing the Scroll - (Daniel was commanded to seal the Scroll, but the angel sent by Jesus commanded John NOT to do so since the season is now – Revelation 22:10)
- Empires Rise and Fall - (Imperial arrogance is the legacy of the Tower of Babel, humanity’s first but certainly not last attempt to establish the World Empire)
- He Removes Kings - (Yahweh, the God of Israel, changes the times and seasons, removes kings, and sets up kings to achieve His purposes)
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