RDean Daniel Lesson 1
Spiritual Success Despite a Pagan World
Tonight we begin our study of
Daniel. Daniel, the name, comes from the
writer of the book, Daniel, who’s one of the most significant figures in the
Old Testament, if not one of the greatest leaders in all of human history. He is a man who was born a Jew, born into the
royal family of Israel, he was not in the lineage of the king but he was
certainly related to the king according to Josephus and a number of other
sources. He was part of the royal family
captives that were taken from Jerusalem to Babylon in 605 BC. His name, Daniel, means God is judge or God
is my judge, depending on how you understand the “i” in Daniel, that’s usually
a first person common singular suffix in Hebrew, but sometimes it can also be
inserted to make the spelling of the word or the pronouncing of the word
flow.
So that it can mean God is my
judge or God is judge, which certainly fits the theme of this book, which is to
demonstrate that Jesus Christ controls history, that God controls history and
that despite all of the powerful kingdoms on the earth, despite all the
machinations of political leaders and warriors and generals and empires that
God is the One who controls the destiny of man.
So there are some fantastic lessons for us to learn in this book and in
our study of Daniel.
Most of us at one time or
another in our lives have wrestled with the fact that we are trying to live out
our Christian beliefs in the midst of a society and a culture that is hostile to
much of what we believe, if not outright antagonistic. We are put under pressure from family
members, from peers, from society at large to compromise our positions, not to
take a stand. A classic example is what
occurred recently in the hearings for Attorney General. Ashcroft was asked if he would set aside his
religious convictions in his application of the law, and the individual who
asked that question demonstrated his own compromise in every level of values to
do that. Your religious systems informs
everything that we do and what we do often reveals more about what we believe
than what we say we believe. So somebody
who says that they can set aside their so-called religious convictions and vote
different from what they say they believe demonstrates what they really believe
and their religious convictions are really not that significant.
Often, as believers, we get
skeptical some times and when we look at our political leaders and we look at
Washington and we see men of conviction, men whose convictions we agree with go
to Washington and the next thing you know they’re compromising here, they’re
making a deal there and it seems like it’s not long before they’re no longer
taking the stand that they said they would take. Recently I read a well-known Christian author
who made the comment that he did not see how any believer who was serious about
his Christian life could ever be a politician because he had to compromise so
much. Well, he wasn’t thinking of
Daniel.
Daniel is a man who didn’t
compromise on anything and God honored him and blessed him and raised him to
not only the second highest position in the Babylonian Empire, but once the
Persians came in and destroyed the Babylonian Empire Daniel was again elevated
to one of the highest positions in the Persian Empire. I don’t think that at any other time in
history that’s ever happened, where somebody served in the second highest
position in one empire and then served in the second highest position in a
subsequent empire, and yet Daniel did that.
He was a man that had incredible integrity and demonstrates that we
should not compromise at any point, and whether or not it has negative
consequences should not be a factor. I
am reminded of what Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-nego said when they were to bow
down before the idol of Nebuchadnezzar in Daniel 3, they said our God can
deliver us and even He doesn’t, we’re still not going to bow down. And that should be the attitude of every
believer, that we are going to apply the Word of God and we are going to
uncompromisingly stand for the Word of God, whether we are honored or whether
God blesses us or whether we survive or not, God can deliver us but even if he
doesn’t we’re still going to take our stand.
So this is a book that gives
us a tremendous amount of confidence in God’s control of history and it also
teaches us a lot about how a believer can be a success in life, and by that I
don’t mean financial success or material success or career success, but success
in the spiritual life, how a believer can be a success, maintain happiness,
stability and tranquility in life without compromising doctrine at all.
This book is one that has
come under tremendous attack; I don’t think there is another book in all of the
Bible that has been attacked by critics more than the book of Daniel. Daniel, the book of Daniel, the message of
Daniel, represents the greatest offense to modern man contained in all of
Scripture. It’s for that reason that the
critics believe that this book, more than any other, must be crushed, for the
critics correctly realize that if the book of Daniel is left to stand to be
what it claims to be in the Scripture, to have the prophetic statements that it
claims to have, then if Daniel is allowed to stand then the case against
Christianity is destroyed. Daniel is
that crucial.
Therefore the most vehement
attacks have been vented against this book in academic circles. If you’ve ever been involved in a college
classroom or some other academic environment where Christianity has been
attacked, it is probably Daniel that is at the forefront of that attack. It has borne the brunt of liberal attacks
throughout the centuries and it represents the key issues in every
non-Christian attack against Christianity, especially liberal rationalism
because the assumption of the liberal rationalist is that God is not actually
involved in human history, God does not intervene, there is no supernatural involvement
by God in history at all. And where
Daniel gives that the lie is in all of the detailed prophecies, one of which we
studied several times and that is the prophecy of Daniel’s seventy weeks in
Daniel 9, where that prophecy predicts to the day the entrance of Jesus Christ
into Jerusalem.
And that is only one of many
prophecies and if those are indeed prophecies that are telling the future,
wherein the book of Daniel you have Daniel predicting the defeat of the
Babylonian Empire by the Persians, the defeat of the Persians by the Greeks, the
subsequent four-fold division of the Greek Empire, the rise of the Seleucid
Empire, one of those heirs to the Greek Empire, and the attack of Antiochus
Epiphanes on the Jews and the defilement of the temple. All of that is
predicted in detail in Daniel and if that is true and if Daniel is what he
claims to be, that is writing history ahead of time, which is what prophecy is,
then that shows that God does indeed interact in human history, He is involved
and He is the God who is over all of the nations.
One Christian scholar has
correctly noted that: “The book of Daniel is especially fitted to be a
battlefield between faith and unbelief.
It admits of no half-measures. It
is either divine or an imposter.” That
is written by E. B. Pusey. Now if you
were a thinking Christian and you ever get involved in any kind of an academic
discussion over the Scriptures, then you need to have an understanding of many
of these issues in Daniel because this is the place where you will be
attacked. As a believer we always need
to know how to defend ourselves against these attacks. Peter tells us that we are to be always ready
to give an answer for the hope that is in us, so if somebody asks you how do
you know that these are accurate prophecies, you need to be able to answer them
to some degree. You may include as part
of that answer giving them a tape but for the most part we need to be able to
give an answer, to know this information and to be able to defend what we
believe, and not come across as some air-head Christian who just says well I
believe that because that’s what my church believers, which is how most
Christians try to answer attacks.
E. J. Young, another
well-known Old Testament scholar writes: “The book of Daniel purports to be
serious history; it claims to be a revelation from the God of heaven which
concerns the future welfare of men and nations.” Now if Daniel is not what it claims to be,
then the Bible is just another human book and has no real value or significance
or at least no more than any other book. But this book can be defended against its
attacks and just because it is attacked and assaulted doesn’t mean that there
are any real problems.
The reason this book offends
so many people and brings so many attacks is for one simple reason. The prophecies are so clear, the details are
so precise, and the prophecies that have been fulfilled already have been so
completely fulfilled. The argument of
the book of Daniel shows the existence of a supernatural God who reveals
Himself clearly and distinctly to men centuries before these events in human
history take place. Prophecies that the
God of history makes come to pass 100%, though many of the prophecies in Daniel
have not yet been fulfilled, those which have have come to pass 100% and the
non-Christian finds that to be completely offensive because what it means to them
is that they are wrong and that there is a God who will hold them
accountable.
People who attack Daniel hate
the concept of a personal infinite God who speaks to His creatures and who
espouses absolutes and will hold them accountable to those absolutes. There are no reasons, there are no
intellectual reasons, there are not historical reasons why this book should not
be considered as authoritative as any other book in the canon. The only reasons that have ever been brought
to bear against Daniel being part of the canon and being what it claims to be
are those that come from the liberal rationalist whose hidden presupposition is
that God just can’t do this, God is not going to act in such a way as to
intervene in human history.
Daniel is a book that has had
tremendous impact throughout history.
Probably no other book is more well-known for its prophecy, other than
Revelation although Daniel is usually read more by people than Revelation. People are familiar with the stories of
Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah, otherwise known as Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-nego. People are familiar with the story about
Daniel in the lion’s den; people are to some degree familiar with the image
that New Testament constructs. These are
things that are passed on and told in stories that are well-known, so the book
of Daniel is very popular. But not only
has Daniel had an impact on believers because of his live testimony and because
of the doctrine that’s here, but Daniel has also had an impact on the thinking
of the non-Christian world.
Daniel wrote in the time
period in the middle of the 6th century BC, between 5586 BC and 536
BC, the 6th century BC. Now
at that same time there were many strange things that happened throughout the
world, many significant events took place during this time frame and one cannot
help but think that there must be some correlation. For example, it was during the 6th
century BC that Zoroastrianism arose in Persia.
It was also during this time that there was a major reformation in
Hinduism which led to its increased popularity in India Confucianism arose in
China; Buddha started his quest and Buddhism was born in the 6th
century BC. Judaism, in its legalistic
form, what would come to be known as Pharisaism by the New Testament also had
its origin in the late 6th century BC. And at this same time you have the
pre-Socratics; Thales, Anaximander, and others in Greek philosophy laid the
foundation for great thought. All of
this happened in the 6th century.
I think as we go through our
study of Daniel we’ll see that it’s no coincidence but the existence of Daniel
and what God revealed to Daniel about the history of mankind played an
important role and that these other events are related because of the angelic
conflict to what was revealed to Daniel because it was at that time, and in
this book, and through these revelations that even Satan himself and the angels
understood the broad panorama of human history in a way they never did
before. So I think, it’s a bit of
speculation, but I think that as God revealed these things to Daniel in the
Middle East, then Satan immediately put into action a number of different ploys
in order to move, to block God’s actions in human history. And that’s why centuries and centuries and
centuries had gone by when there was no development whatsoever, no new
religious developments, nothing had happened on the scene, everything was
stable and static and then all of a sudden in the 6th century, wham,
all over the world there are these major religious shifts and innovations
taking place. And what’s happening with
Israel? We’ve studied this again and
again. Israel is the center point of
God’s plan for human history and what’s happening in the nation Israel? We have a man, Daniel, through whom God is
giving fantastic revelation.
Daniel not only had an impact
on the thinking in the ancient world but he had impact on the thinking in the
modern world. According to well-known
historian, R. G. Collingswood, in his book The
Idea of History, Daniel was the foundation of Hegel’s thought. Now Georg Hegel was a German philosopher in
the mid to early 19th century and he wrote a lot about history. And in his concept of history there were four
basic kingdoms in history: the Oriental kingdom, which would be tantamount to
Persia; the kingdom of Greece, the kingdom of Rome and then the kingdom of
Germany. And of course, Hegelian thought
and this whole concept of the kingdom of Germany being the last kingdom had a
role and eventually its influence on German thought and influencing the
philosophy of German nationalism that developed eventually into Nazism and the
rise of Adolph Hitler. Hegel’s
philosophy had a tremendous impact on a man by the name of Karl Marx and his
followers.
It’s interesting that the
most ardent opponent in the last 150 years of Christian, communism, obtains its
very philosophy of history, ultimately, from Scripture, and then it, of course,
perverts it. The whole concept of
historical progress in Marxism was stolen from the Bible and corrupted by Marx
and it took the idea of an ultimate, perfect kingdom that would be divinely
initiated, was then perverted to become a future utopic human kingdom, but
Marxism and Hegelianism got their ideas ultimately from Daniel.
So Daniel is one of the most
significant books for many, many reasons that are written and contained within
the canon of Scripture. As we go through
this, you might want to get R. B. Thieme’s books on Daniel 1-6, and read along
for some additional help. That just
covers 1-6; they never got around to publishing 7-12 so we’ll have to make do
with the first six chapters.
Now as I stated in the
introduction there are many attacks on the book of Daniel by the liberal
critics. I’m not going through a
detailed lecture on that, I’ll just the highpoints as we go along. And before we get very far we have to deal
with the first problem. For those of you
who are a little more interested in these I’ll try to make a note of these when
we hit them, so that you can keep a record of these various problems that are
raised by the liberal critics of Daniel.
The first problem has to do
with the date of Daniel. When was Daniel
written? The issue here is was it
written many years later as history rather than prophecy. If Daniel actually wrote between 586–536 BC,
then when he wrote about the kingdoms of Persia, Greece and subsequent
kingdoms, then that would be true prophecy.
But if he didn’t write until some four hundred years later, in
approximately 150 BC as the liberal critics suggest, then he wasn’t writing
before the fact, he was writing after the fact, and this then becomes a case of
pious forgery and it was really somebody writing to try to falsely substantiate
faith, writing events afterwards. So
this is one reason why the liberals always choose to go after Daniel. They believe that it is the Achilles heel of
the Bible. If you can destroy the
credibility of Daniel, then you have destroyed the credibility of the rest of
Scripture.
Now the attack on Daniel goes
back to Porphyry who was a 3rd century AD, that’s about two hundred
years after Christ, Porphyry was a 3rd century AD student of Origen who
came under the influence of Neo-Platonism, which was a school of Greek
philosophy, and he not only abandon Christianity but he became a hostile enemy
to Christianity and even as far back as the 3rd century AD Porphyry
understood that if you destroyed the credibility of Daniel then you have
destroyed Christianity so he wrote a fifteen volume work to discredit
Daniel. Unfortunately it was burned by Theodosius so we don’t know what his reasoning was or what his
attacks were but that book was completely destroyed; there are no extant copies
of it.
The attacks against Daniel
are universally accepted by liberals and anybody who goes to college and takes
a Western Civilization course is probably going to run into a professor who is
going to start assaulting Daniel. It
happened to me in my first year of college and I think it’ll happen to just
anybody if they have a professor who has studied in the schools of liberal
higher learning. So we have to be
prepared, and as parents that’s one thing you need to do is prepare your
children so that when they go off to college then they are able to withstand
the intellectual assaults against Christianity.
I can’t tell you how many people I knew who were believers but who never
had the foundations, were never given the information. When they got to college
and they got into sociology classes and biology classes, more often it was in
the liberal arts classes than in the science classroom, their Christian beliefs
came under the assault in the classroom and they had never heard the correct
answers, they had never heard the information that substantiated the claims of
Scripture and their faith came under severe assault and in many cases they were
shipwrecked.
Scripture tells us that
Daniel was a historic person who went into captivity in 605 BC. In order to understand Daniel we’re going to
have to make sure we understand the framework of not only Jewish history but
also Babylonian and Persian history; we’ll become experts by the time this is
over with, in ancient history. And it’s
not just ancient history because everything that happened then is used to teach
things that are going on today.
So let’s just review the last
four kings in Judah, the southern kingdom of Judah. Josiah was the last good king in the south
and he was killed in 609 BC when he tried to stop Pharaoh Neco from going north
to assist the Assyrians in defeating Nebuchadnezzar at the battle of
Carchemish. And he was succeeded by
Jehoahaz, who reigned for all of eight months before he was dethroned. He was one of the worst kings in the southern
kingdom, and he was succeeded by Jehoiakim.
Jehoahaz was the third son of Josiah; Jehoiakim was the second son of
Josiah, and in 605 BC Nebuchadnezzar had defeated Pharaoh Neco at the battle of
Carchemish up on the Euphrates River and was following him in hot pursuit down
through Syria and on down through Israel.
All of a sudden he came to a
high mountain and he saw a beautiful city in the distance, he sent out his
scouts to find out what it was and it was Jerusalem, so he let his pursuit team
continue to chase Neco and he turned the majority of the army around and laid
siege to Jerusalem. He was successful
and before he could conclude his conquest of Judah his father, Nabopolassar,
died, and so Nebuchadnezzar had to make haste back to Babylon to secure his
succession to the throne and before he left he decided he wanted so secure his
conquest of Jerusalem so he called for fifty members of the royal family to be
given to him as hostages, or as captives, and he would take them back to
Babylon with him and train them in all of the education of the Babylonians so
that they could serve in the government there.
Daniel was among those captives, there were fifty taken, they were
members of the royal family. They
weren’t necessarily direct heirs to the kingship but they were all Jewish
aristocrats and they were all members of the royal family.
So its 605 BC that Daniel is
taken to Babylon. The Babylonian
captivity itself doesn’t start until 586 BC when Nebuchadnezzar comes back, and
that’s his third invasion of the land, when he completely destroys Jerusalem
and destroys the temple. That captivity
lasted until 536 BC and Daniel’s life covers that entire period. He was probably close to 90 when he finally
died, but he lived long enough to see the first group of Jews return to the
land.
So that gives you a bit of an
overview as to the history of this time frame.
Now after the Babylonian captivity there’s the subsequent rise… of
course right before that there’s the rise of the Persian Empire, following that
the rise of the Greek Empire and the Seleucids and then the Hasmonean Empire,
the Maccabean Revolt and the rise of the Roman Empire, all of which was
foreseen by Daniel and was written down ahead of time in this book.
Now the question is whether
or not this was written ahead of time as prophecy or whether it’s written
afterward as history. Why is this
important? First of all it’s important
because the sovereignty of God is at stake. We can see that God who can accurately predict
the future can also control the future.
He can tell us not only what will come to pass but He can then oversee
human history and orchestrate things behind the scenes without compromising
human volition to bring about that which He has decreed. So it emphasizes the sovereignty of God over
the affairs of man and the fact that Jesus Christ controls history, that no
matter how dark things may look, no matter how disastrous the horizon of events
may seem, Jesus Christ is in control of history and if he controls macro
history He controls the history of our lives and no matter how horrible things
might seem to us at some point in our lives we know that God is the One who is
still in control.
The second reason it’s
important is because the nature of the Bible is at stake. If the Bible gives real predictive prophecy,
then we can be sure it comes from God.
If not it’s just another human book and has no more value than any other
human book.
And third it’s important
because the nature of Jesus Christ is at stake.
In Matthew 23 Jesus assumes the veracity of Daniel, that Daniel was a
historical figure who lived and wrote in the 5th century BC and that
Daniel’s prophecies were accurate and correct.
If He was wrong then He was fallible and He was not undiminished deity
and true humanity and He was not the perfect God-man.
So the importance of the
dating is that involved first the sovereignty of God; secondly the nature of
Scripture, and third, the nature of Jesus Christ and His veracity.
Now in terms of the liberal
argument, remember the liberal argument is that Daniel really wasn’t written in
586 BC to 536 BC, it was really written in 165 BC and by then all these events
or most of them had taken place, and so it’s not prophecy, it’s history. What kind of arguments do they use to
substantiate their position? The first
has to do with how they divide up the Bible.
They look at the Hebrew Bible and the Old Testament was set up into
three divisions. The Torah, the Nabiim
and the Kethubim; the Torah means instruction, Torah is Hebrew for instruction,
it refers to the first five books of the Pentateuch, the basic instruction
manual for the Old Testament. It’s the
foundation for everything else in the Old Testament. That’s why, second to Daniel, Genesis 1-11 is
the other area of Scripture that is most under attack.
If you can destroy the
validity of Genesis 1-11 then you’ve destroyed the rest of the Bible because
every other doctrine, every major teaching in Scripture is built on the
veracity of Genesis 1-11. If it didn’t
happen historically that way then there is no need for salvation from sin
because the penalty for sin is death, not just spiritual death, that’s the
penalty, but the consequence is physical death and there was no physical death
before sin, and if there was, as evolution proclaims… remember death is the
mechanism of evolution. How would you
like to believe in a system for the development and advance of human history
that is built on death and suffering. That’s what the whole evolutionary theory
does, it’s built on death and suffering, and death for the evolutionist is
normal, it’s natural, it’s part of the every day order of things. For the Christian death is abnormal, it is
the result of sin and it needs to be dealt with by Christ on the cross. If death, physical death, didn’t enter into
human history as a result of Adam’s sin, then there is no need for Christ to go
to the cross and die physically. His
spiritual death paid the penalty of sin; His physical death enabled Him to have
victory over physical death in the resurrection, that’s Paul’s whole argument
in 1 Corinthians 15:8 and following.
So the Torah is the
instruction that lays the foundation, followed by the Nabiim, the prophets,
that’s what Nabiim means, the prophets, and they gave the prophetic commentary
on past and future history. And the
Kethubim were the writings. We’ve looked
at this chart; this is how the Hebrew canon was organized; not your familiar
English Bible but the Hebrew Bible. You
had three divisions, the Torah: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and
Deuteronomy. The Nabiim, consisting of
the former prophets, Joshua through Kings, remember in the Old Testament they
didn’t have 1 and 2 Kings, they were divided that way because of the lengths of
the scrolls. Joshua, Judges, Samuel and
Kings and then the latter prophets, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel and The Twelve,
we separate The Twelve into distinct Minor Prophets but in the Jewish canon
it’s just The Twelve.
And then the Kethubim; we
would think because of the organization of our English Bible that Daniel would
be part of the Nabiim, the prophets, because there is so much prophecy in
Daniel. But Daniel is not included by
the Jews in the Nabiim. In the English
Bible he comes after Ezekiel and before The Twelve, so that’s where we would
put him. We would think of Daniel as a
prophecy book. But the Jews did not view
Daniel as a prophet but as a seer, as a wise man, so he was therefore listed
among the Kethubim, the writings, which were the writings of the wisdom
sayings, the chokmah is the Hebrew
word, chokmah meaning wisdom or the
application of doctrine, Psalms, Proverbs, Job, Song of Solomon, Ecclesiastes,
Daniel. Daniel is listed among the
Kethubim.
Now the liberal wants to
suggest that the reason Daniel is listed in the Kethubim is because these three
sections developed chronologically in the history of Israel. First there was the Torah and those five
books were written and canonized; then the Prophets and those books were
written and canonized, and then the Kethubim. The problem is that in the Jewish arrangement
of the canon that they assume is false. The
arrangement of the Jewish canon was not based on chronology but was based on
its subject matter, on its topics. These
things were arranged topically, so that Genesis to Deuteronomy all covered…
they were first chronologically as well but they covered the foundational
instruction for the life of Israel, that the priest would teach and instruct
the people on how to have a relationship with God, how to come before God, how
to serve God. Then the Nabiim modified;
that because of Israel’s disobedience there was necessity for
modification. And the Kethubim was the
wise sayings; it had to do with application.
And that’s why Daniel fits
there. Daniel is not just about prophecy
but it is the example of how a man applied doctrine in one of the most pagan
empires, really in two of the most pagan empires, the most hostile environment
for doctrine that you can ever imagine.
Few of us have ever or will ever face the kind of manipulation, the kind
of pressure, the kind of overt hostility that Daniel faced in Babylon and later
in Persia in his role there in both of those empires. And yet Daniel demonstrates for us the wise
application of Scripture and shows how a believer can advance to the second
highest position in the land without compromising doctrine. He shows us the importance of making doctrine
the highest priority in our lives.
Another argument that the
critics use against Daniel to try to demonstrate late date, there was a
manuscript written that was discovered at Qumran that is dated about 165,
liberals, of course, tried to redate it, make it a little later, about 125, but
even many liberals now admit that it has to be dated at least, no earlier, than
165 BC. Their argument is basically
circular. They don’t tell you that, it’s
not readily apparent but it’s a circular argument. Daniel can’t be predictive because predictive
prophecy would mean that God intervenes in history, God doesn’t intervene in
history so therefore it can’t be predictive prophecy. That’s how they argue; they’re assuming their
conclusion in their premise. It’s called
begging the question to logical fallacy.
But people get away with it because they never make it evident. But the presupposition of all the liberal
attacks on the Scripture are that God really can’t act that way. Well how do you know that? Because reason tells us that; their ultimate
authority is reason.
So they argue that Daniel
must be late because its prophecies are too detailed to be real; it’s
impossible for prophecy to be that accurate according to the liberals, they
must be made up. But we discovered in
1948 at Qumran, at the Wadi Qumran in the Dead Sea that there were seventeen
different manuscripts of Daniel. We know
there’s seventeen different manuscripts by studying the handwriting, it’s clear
that they were copied by seventeen different people. The study of the handwriting reveals
that. And one of the most significant
fragments of the book of Daniel covers the section from Daniel 2:4 where the
text shifts from Hebrew to Aramaic, Daniel is not written in all Hebrew, unlike
most Old Testament books, it’s written in two different languages. It’s written in Hebrew and in Aramaic, and
from Daniel 2:4 down through about chapter 8 it’s written in Aramaic, because
that subject matter of those chapters is on God’s plan for Gentile
nations. So part of this fragment, which
starts in 2:4 and goes down through the Aramaic section can’t be dated any
later than about 165 BC. However,
analysis of the paleography, that is the handwriting, demonstrates that the day
cannot be any later than 200 BC. Now if
you have to move the date of this manuscript, and this isn’t the original, this
is just a copy, if you have to move the date back and it can’t be any later
than 200, then that means that the original has to be a minimum of fifty, a
hundred or a hundred and fifty years earlier.
Now to show the total
inconsistency of the liberal, the liberal has used that same evidence and
accepted that same evidence, as far as the dating of 1 and 2 Chronicles is
concerned. The liberals used to say 1
and 2 Chronicles came after the Maccabean Empire, sometime around 100 to 150 BC
but the study of the handwriting, the paleography of Chronicles also
demonstrated, of those manuscripts at Qumran, also demonstrated that they were
much older. So now they agree more with
the conservative to move the date much earlier so that they would put
Chronicles into the same era as Ecclesiastes and some of the Psalms. Well, if they accept that reasoning for
Chronicles and Psalms, then they ought to accept it for Daniel, but they
won’t. Why? Because if they are forced to accept Daniel
as being what it claims to be, then it destroys liberalism and it destroys
liberal theology, and autonomous man, who is in rebellion against his sovereign
Creator cannot stand to think that he is supposed to be obedient to a God who
controls human history.
So when we look at this, we
have to ask the question: why then is Daniel so important? And why is Daniel included in this one
section called the Writings? That is
because of the evidence of applied doctrine in the man’s life and this gives us
a clue as to the purpose of the book. It
is designed to teach the importance of doctrine, not just prophecy, not just
God’s control of human history, but the importance and priority of doctrine in
the believer’s life. Daniel is written
to teach us how to live a spiritually skillful life in the midst of a hostile,
pagan, idolatrous environment. It’s
written to show us that you don’t need to compromise, you don’t need to give in
to some sort of expedient course of action, and you don’t have to go along to
get along just to advance in life, that God is the one who’s in control of the
believer’s promotion or not, not mankind.
It’s not your job, it’s not your employer, it’s not your culture, it’s
not the political system, it’s God who is in control, not man. So this gives the believer confidence in the
control of God in every detail of the believer’s life.
Furthermore, we see that as
wisdom literature we see its importance because it addresses every area of
life. Scripture doesn’t just address
salvation and the spiritual life, prayer and other so-called spiritual
practices, but the Bible has something to say about everything in life:
economics, philosophy, politics, history, literature, the greatest literature
that’s ever been written is contained in the pages of Scripture. The Bible addresses everything at some
level. So we’re forced in Daniel to pay
attention to a believer living his life in the midst of a hostile
environment. The kingdom of man becomes
a major theme; the concept of kingdom is a major theme in the book of Daniel
and we see how the believer is living in the kingdom of man surrounded by human
viewpoint, surrounded by paganism and in many cases pressured to try to conform
to the pagan thinking around him.
Daniel faced one of the most
concentrated doses of paganism of any believer in history. And yet you know what? Daniel survived and Daniel refused to
compromise and he didn’t have any Christian fellowship to help him; he didn’t
have a priesthood to help him; he didn’t have prophet buddies to go home and
give him encouragement, he didn’t have any of these so-called spiritual
formation groups that are so popular today as spiritual crutches because people
don’t have the guts and initiative to stand up on their own two feet on top of a
Word of God that is trustworthy. People
have given that up and yet what we see with Daniel is that he’s all by himself,
there’s no church, there’s no congregation, there’s no Christian fellowship,
all he has is the Word of God and he trusts it implicitly. Because of that he handles the stress, the
peer pressure, all the manipulation of some of the most powerful, the
wealthiest men in all of human history and some of the most vindictive people. Some of the wise men and counselors that
surrounded both Nebuchadnezzar in the earlier stage and Cyrus Darius in the
latter stage did everything they could to destroy Daniel, except Daniel never
compromised.
So the purpose for Daniel is
to show the wisdom for living in the kingdom of man until the kingdom of God
arrives.
By way of background and to
get a little understanding of what’s going on, turn to Ezekiel 14:1 and pick up
a little background. “Then some elders
of Israel came to me,” “me” is Ezekiel, “and sat down before me.” Now let’s understand a little bit about the
background, who Ezekiel was. Ezekiel was
a contemporary of Daniel, they’re about the same age, but Ezekiel’s ministry
did not start until 593 BC. By the time
Ezekiel’s ministry started Daniel had already been in captivity twelve to
thirteen years. So when Daniel went into
captivity at the age of 14, by the time Ezekiel’s ministry started in 593
Daniel is 29 or 30, he’s still a young man, he hasn’t advanced to the highest
level he will advance to. Daniel hasn’t
even… [Tape turns]
…associate mostly with
Daniel. The only thing in the book of
Daniel that has occurred by this point is Daniel 1. But at this point Ezekiel is in Babylon, he
was taken captive in the second invasion of Nebuchadnezzar in 596 and there was
a group of Jews taken and they had a settlement down on the River Trivar [?*]
in the southwestern part of what is now modern Iraq, and there’s a number of
leaders there who have been following all the false teachers, you know, like so
many of the false evangelists on television today and all the liberal
theologians. It’s amazing that when we
look at our political leaders some of the so-called spiritual leaders that have
risen to the top in recent years who are giving them counsel and we wonder what
they’re counseling them from. But these
people, it’s the blind leading the blind.
Well, the same situation existed in Ezekiel’s day and things were
looking pretty bad for them as they looked over to Israel and they saw that the
nation was threatened, so they thought well, we’ll go to Ezekiel and find out
what Ezekiel has to say. So they came to
Ezekiel to see what he had to say and God gave Ezekiel a message.
He said, Ezekiel 14, “And the
word of the LORD came to me, saying, [3] ‘Son of man,’” that’s a title for the
prophet, “Son of man, these men have set up their idols in their hearts,”
that’s in their minds, they are worshiping something other than God, it’s not
just the physical idol, it is the fact that there’s mental idol, and mental
idolatry always precedes physical idolatry because with the mind you decide to
reject God, and whenever we reject God something else moves into the
vacuum. Something else always replaces
God and we always worship some aspect of the creation. Now it’s interesting that the word for “idol”
in Hebrew is the word gillul; now
that has a very fascinating etymology; basically the root word means a rolled
object of wood or metal. The word “gill” or galal also became, which has its root in this it’s something that’s
been rolled or rounded, it became the common word for dung or manure,
specifically dung pellets.
That took me back to my days
of camping in south Texas when we’ve got a little critter down there called a
dung beetle or tumblebug, and these tumblebugs get into the manure and they
start rolling it all up, one of God’s little creatures to help break everything
down and return it to the soil, but this shows God’s tremendous sense of humor
that He uses in Hebrew a word for idol that also means dung, it means something
that is rolled, and someone sort of sarcastically has commented that his
something to do with dung rolling downhill maybe, but that’s a very ancient
concept. And it also indicates God’s
comments about idolatry, that when you replace God with anything in life as being
more important, then your life is going to turn to dung. So there’s a wonderful little sense of humor
here, a paronomasia from God the Holy Spirit.
So they “set up these idols
in their hearts,” and the word there is leb
in the Hebrew which has to do with their mentality and their thinking. All idolatry starts there, we all begin with
intellectual idols and that’s what we have today, the idols of the mind,
academic rationalism, subjectivity, today the great God of America is emotions,
how does it make me feel, and that’s what we worship, whatever is going to make
me feel better, whatever is going to make my life smoother, whatever is going
to make me happier at the moment, whether it’s money, career, education, sex,
entertainment, material possessions, sports, the trappings of success,
popularity, fame, whatever it might be, any of these things might be good in
the proper role and position but whenever any of these things supplant our
devotion to God and making doctrine the number one priority in our lives and
the lives of our children, then the next thing we know is we are on the road to
collapse. And this is what was happening
in Israel at the time.
So God speaks to these men,
and He tells them, Ezekiel 14:4, that “Any man of the house of Israel who sets
up idols in his heart, puts right before their faces the stumbling block of his
iniquity, and then comes to the prophet, I the LORD will be brought to give him
an answer in the matter in view of the multitude of his idols.” I don’t want to do a detailed study of this
so we’ll skip down to Ezekiel 14:10, “And they will bear the punishment of
their iniquity,” that is the false leaders because they are the ones who have
deceived the nation, “as the iniquity of the inquirer is, so the iniquity of the
prophet will be,” God is going to bring divine discipline on them. And then in verse 11 he says, “In order that
the house of Israel may no longer stray from Me and no longer defile
themselves,” see, there’s a place for harsh discipline in order to prevent
spiritual collapse in the future. Because
of this discipline Israel is no longer going to be involved in the kind of
idolatrous systems of Baal worship and the other fertility cults. They go the other way and they get into
legalism, but they no longer succumb to overt idolatry.
Now in verse 11 God says they
“will no longer defile themselves with all their transgressions. Thus they will be My people, and I shall be
their God,” in other words God is saying there will be survivors, the nation
will continue, but those who survive successfully, those who are happy, those
who have stability in the midst of the coming catastrophe are those who have a
profound spiritual life, those who have inner resources to draw on that come
from doctrine. We know that it’s the
young people, for example, it’s Daniel, Ezekiel, Hananiah, Azariah, Mishael who
are the ones who survive the catastrophe of the destruction of their nation,
and these are the ones who become the foundation for the future of the nation.
Now how did that happen? It happened first because of their positive
volition. Those kids were positive to
doctrine, when they were kids, when they were back in Israel, when their
parents were training them. But beyond
that their uncompromising position, their integrity, as demonstrated in Daniel
1 is there because of what their parents did. They are a testimony to parents
who did not compromise the Word of God, parents who did not become distracted
by the details of life but focused on their priorities as outlined in
Deuteronomy.
Look at Deuteronomy 6:4, we
read, “Hear, O Israel! The LORD our God,
the LORD is one! [5] And you shall love
the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your
might.” He’s the number one priority in
your life. Nothing else matters if God
is not at the center of everything.
Verse 6, “And these words, which I am commanding you today,” and that is
the entire panorama of doctrine in Deuteronomy, “these words which I am
commanding you today, shall be on your heart,” that is on your mind, the
thinking part of the soul, [7] “and you shall teach them diligently to your
sons and shall talk of them when you sit in your house and when you walk by the
way and when you lie down and when you rise up.” He’s not talking about lecturing your kids,
he’s not talking about reading them a Bible story every night. He’s talking
about day in and day out, when you’re sitting down at breakfast, when you’re
going out and playing sports and something happens and you get a chance to teach
them how a believer is to respond in difficult situations; when you go through
family situations you say okay, we’ve got a decision to make here, here’s how
we apply doctrine. Your kids come home
from school, they’ve got a problem; you say okay, what does the Bible say? You teach them in life situations, help them
learn how to make decisions and how to apply doctrine in those situations.
And the word translated
“teach” is interesting, it is the Hebrew word shanan, and in the qal stem it means to sharpen, like you sharpen a
knife. How do you do that? You take a whetstone and you just continue to
move it across that whetstone and to grind down that blade and it takes a lot
of strokes on that whetstone before you finally bend back the edge enough to where
you sharpen it and put an edge on that.
And that’s repetition, so in the piel stem which is the intensified stem
in the Hebrew it comes to mean to repeat.
So the way that should be translated is “you shall repeat them
diligently to your sons, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house.” That’s how you learn is repetition, over and
over and over and over again.
But you know what folks, as
parents before you can do that, that doctrine has to be deep in your soul. You have to be applying it that way because
if you’re not applying it that way those kids are going to spot it in a second;
they have to see that you know it and you apply it and that doctrine is your
priority and that means you’re going to be in Bible class Sunday, Wednesday
night, you’re going to pop tapes in when you get in your car to take the kids
to a sports event, when you turn on the ignition a tape is going to come on and
they’re going to know you’ve been listening to tapes and they’re going to know
that doctrine is the most important thing in your life. I don’t care what else you do for your kids,
I don’t care what kind of music lessons, dance lessons, sports, I don’t care
what kind of exposure you give them to all the culture in the world, if you
don’t set the priority as doctrine then everything else is a sham, because if
you knew today that in three years this country was going to be overrun, that
all your money was going to be gone, you’d never see your kids again, what
would you do different? What would you
do to prepare your kids to be able to handle that so that when they were
removed from this country and put in another culture would they be able to
stand like a Daniel, like a Hananiah, like an Azariah, like a Mishael? Or would they just compromise and fall
apart. But that’s what Daniel’s parents
did for him and that’s what the other men’s parents did for them; even their
parents were going against the flow of the perverted culture in Israel at that
time.
Deuteronomy 11:18 repeats
this, “You shall therefore impress these words of Mine on your heart and on your soul; and you shall
bind them as a sign on your hand,” that means it affects everything you do,
“and they shall be as frontals on your forehead,” that means it affects
everything you think. [19] “And you shall
teach them,” that same word, shanan,
“you shall repeat them to your sons, talking of them when you sit in your house
and when you walk along the road and when you lie down and when you rise
up.” In other words, your life is going
to be characterized… have you ever notice that there are some people that you
get around, especially some men, every time, they talk about work or they talk
about sports. With women maybe it’s
something else, maybe it’s cooking, I don’t know. But that’s what they’re interested in, but for
the believer who is positive, what they talk about when everything else doesn’t
have to be talked about, they’re talking about doctrine, they’re talking about
the Word, and it becomes contagious.
I remember when I was in
college in Houston, we’d go to Bible class and after Bible class we’d get a
group and we’d all go some place to get a hamburger or to get coffee and we’d
sit there and we’d talk about whatever we’d learn that night for an hour or an
hour and a half because we were excited about it. Doctrine was the most important thing to us,
and what happens is usually as people get older they become consumed with 401K
plans and their career, retirement, and
the grandkids and everything else, and the next thing you know, well, I
remember when doctrine used to be really important. It has to stay important as we advance to
spiritual maturity.
Then Ezekiel 14:12 we read, God
gives them a personal message here, “Then the word of the LORD came to me,
saying, [13] Son of man, if a country sins against Me by committing
unfaithfulness, and I stretch out My hand against it, destroy its supply of
bread, send famine against it, and cut off from it both man and beast, [14]
even though these three men, Noah, Daniel, and Job were in its midst, by their
own righteousness they could only deliver themselves.” I want you to notice three men. Noah’s a Gentile, Job’s a Gentile, sandwiched
between them is the contemporary of the Jews, Daniel. Why not Abraham, Isaac and Jacob? Why not Moses, Joshua and David? Why these three? Because Noah built an ark for 120 years and
was faced with continuous attacks; he was ridiculed, he was maligned day in and
day out, yet he never compromised the Word, he stood fast with God, he never
violated his priorities. What about
Job? Job lost his kids, his seven sons
and three daughters, his wife said why don’t you just curse God and die, and
Job went to his friends for counsel and they gave him bad advice, but despite
all that, he faltered a few places but he stayed fast with God, he never
violated his priorities.
And then Daniel; these three
men faced incredible crises in their lives, they faced incredible opposition,
they faced overwhelming pressure to compromise their stand on the truth, but
they didn’t. Why didn’t they? Because they had built a fortress in their
soul, we’ve studied the stress-busters, we’ll go over them again, but we’ve
studied the principles that God gives us so that we can strengthen our soul to
withstand any storm and it only comes from a consistent and dedicated learning
of doctrine and applying it in our lives and being positive and not giving up
despite all the pressure, not giving into peer pressure, not giving into all of
the easy solutions that life presents, but always standing firm on the Word.
When we come back next time
we’ll start in Daniel 1 and start looking at the Babylonian and Chaldean
background to the passage.