RDean/Daniel Lesson 45
Daniel’s Last Vision; The Preincarnate Christ – Daniel
10:1-9
I’ve been using the Nelson
Study Bible, I like it, I like the notes, but I don’t know why it is when
certain editors do certain things and decide on type faces and font faces and
things of that nature that they decided to use the tiniest numbers possible and
the lightest font face possible to indicate where each verse is. I’m going to try to use it from the pulpit;
last time I tried this I couldn’t find any of the verses I was looking
for. Open your Bible to Daniel 10. Just by way of review at the end of the last
session, the conclusion of Daniel 9, we finished Daniel’s third vision, the
third revelation given to Daniel and that took place in the first year of
Darius which is also the first year of Cyrus.
Now we’re going to emphasize the distinction here in verse 1, and we
looked at the outline of this great panorama of history.
The reason that we’re going
to back to this is that Daniel is given this vision in about 538 BC. The vision that he’s given in Daniel 10 does
not come for two years and so he has two years to think and to meditate on the
significance of what was revealed to him in chapter 9. Then we saw that God gave a timetable, a
clock for the history of Israel and that clock was to start with the decree to
restore the city, to restore it in terms of plaza and mote which refers to both
its economic as well as military defensive structure and that from the date of
that decree, which would start the time clock, from the date of that decree to
the coming of Messiah the Prince, 69 weeks would go by and we studied that and
we saw that was equivalent to 173,880 days and that when you work out that time
clock it began on March 5, 444 BC, a date that’s fairly certain, there’s always
a little caveat here that if our understanding of the calendar system is off
then that throws everything off but at this stage I think there’s a fair degree
of certainty that Artaxerxes decree was on the 5th of March, 444 BC,
and 173,880 days later is March 30, AD 33, the day Jesus enters into Jerusalem
in the triumphal entry.
It is after that, according
to the text, that Messiah the Prince is cut off, and then the city and the
sanctuary are destroyed. That indicates
that there’s a clear interval between the sixty-ninth week and the seventieth
week. The seventieth week begins when
the coming prince, the antichrist, signs a peace treaty with Israel. It is the last week or a seven year period
divided into two segments, a half week each, or three and a half years and
three and a half years. Messiah returns
at the end of that period, ending the plan for Israel. Both segments have to do with Israel and not
the Church which is one reason why we believe the Church must be removed before
the Tribulation begins. Again I remind
you that it is not the rapture that begins the Tribulation; it is the peace
treaty that the antichrist signs with Israel that starts that prophetic time
clock going again.
Daniel has been reflecting
upon this and it’s had a lot of impact on his thinking and now two years later
we come to the beginning of chapter 10.
Here we’re going to see that after three weeks of prayer concerning the
difficulties that are facing the Jews who’ve returned to the land…see between
Daniel 9 and Daniel 10 Cyrus gave his first decree in 538 BC, just about the
time or very close to the time that Daniel had the vision in Daniel 9. Cyrus gave a decree for the first people to
return to the land and they’ve gone back but they’re having problems, they’re
running into opposition from some of the inhabitants of the land, they’re not
getting enough military support, economic support and so they’re having
numerous problems establishing themselves back in the land. And as Daniel gets reports on that he’s
extremely concerned and discouraged and he’s trying to relate what he has heard
from God because…if you were Daniel, put yourself in Daniel’s place. He’s been told that there is a decree, from
the coming of this decree until Messiah there’s going to be 69 years and now
there’s this decree from Cyrus for people to go back to the land. It would be easy for Daniel to assume that
that’s the right decree. He would not
know, there’s no indication that he was given additional revelation identifying
which decree it was, until we come to Daniel 10:1, so there’s a level of
uncertainty in Daniel’s understanding of how all these factors come together.
We read in Daniel 10:1, “In
the third year of Cyrus king of Persia, a message,” that is a word, “was
revealed to Daniel, who was name Belteshazzar, and the message was true and one
of great conflict, but he understood the message and had an understanding of
the vision.” So at this time he is given
additional revelation and it is one that is overwhelming; it is one that is not
what he expected in light of what he had already understood from the previous
revelation. It is one, the text says,
“of great conflict” and the Hebrew there for “conflict” is the word tsaba which is the root noun of the noun
that we use, Sabaoth, when we sing A
Mighty Fortress is our God, it refers to the “Lord Sabaoth,” and as I have
pointed out, that’s not sabbath, that is the Hebrew word Sabaoth which means
armies, and so the root word, tsaba
refers to conflict, it refers to military conflict and war and so the vision
that Daniel gets, this final fourth vision that actually is covered in three
chapters, it begins in Daniel 10 and goes to the end of the book.
This is the last vision in
the book; this is what everything has been heading to is this final detailed
vision that is not given in symbols.
That’s one thing we’ll note here is that it’s not in symbols. Remember in Daniel 7 you had the symbols of
the animals and you had animals again in Daniel 8 but there’s no animals here
and it covers basically the same information but in a lot more detail, like
what Daniel covered in Daniel 8.
Remember, for those of you who are not all that enchanted with history,
that we spent a good deal of time in Daniel 8 going through the history of the
Seleucid Empire. One of the reasons we
did that is because I knew that when we got to Daniel 10, 11 and 12 the Holy
Spirit goes into enormous detail about what will happen during the time period
of the Seleucid Empire. So it’s a matter
of inculcation, repetition and inculcation for you to get that initial overview
of the history of the Seleucid Empire and then be able to come back and look at
it a second time in Daniel 10 and 11 and 12 because that becomes a type of the
Tribulation, as Antiochus Epiphanes is a type of the antichrist.
So in Daniel 10, 11 and 12 we
see that there is one unit here; this one unit is the climax of the book of
Daniel. You might think the way Daniel
is normally taught by a lot of people is that the vision at the end of Daniel 9
is the climax because it’s such a pivotal prophecy, so important, but the
climax of the book is God is revealing it to Daniel is relationship to His plan
for Israel; the climax is contained in these last three chapters. It is a report from heaven on exactly what
will take place in Israel’s future and it is not a pleasant look. As verse 1 indicates, it’s a message of
tremendous warfare. And so as Daniel
sees this, rather than anticipating the coming of Messiah, a rebirth, perhaps,
of the glories of the kingdom of Israel as it was under Josiah, or even further
back, under David and Solomon, Daniel is faced with a vision that indicates
that their future is going to be one of horrible suffering, of warfare, of
violence throughout the land, and it leave him overwhelmed. We read in this verse that the message is
true, it’s one of great conflict, and he understood the message and had
understanding of the vision. The word
translated “understood” in the Hebrew is the word bin in the Hebrew and bin,
I always remember this from studying Hebrew, you have to learn all kinds of
little…use all kinds of pneumonic devices to bin means between, it has to do with discernment and making a
decision between two options, so it’s not simply understanding, it has to do
with discerning issues and being able to apply doctrine in the process of
decision making. So this goes far beyond
an academic comprehension of the message; it indicates that Daniel is able to
apply the meaning of the message to his philosophy of history.
As we get into this section,
chapters 10-12 there are two things that are important here. First, they give us as believers a framework
for understanding history. One of the
problems that we often face when we go to modern history classes is we’re just
faced with a plethora of details and nothing seems to orient or bring those
details together; nothing seems to tie all of the detail together because very
rarely do history teachers have a coherent philosophy of history and if they do
it’s usually on the order of some sort of Marxist or Hegelian, or Darwinian,
it’s just a matter of time and chance as one thing happens after another, and
as Henry Ford once commented, history is just one damned thing after
another. That’s the view a lot of people
have of history. But history is God’s
story; it is the outworking of God’s plan and purposes for mankind, and as we
look at this chapter we can see, get an understanding and a framework so that
when we look at history we can put those pieces together and they’re not just
random events and facts hanging out there unassociated with anything else but
they have meaning and value because they’re in God’s plan.
The second thing that we’re
going to see, more of next time than this time, and that is the role of
angels. I think more than any other book
in the Old Testament Daniel tells us about angels. There’s a tremendous amount of angelology
here and Daniel 10 starting in verse 10 indicates some information about the
fact that there are demons as well as elect angels associated with the
leadership of most national entities and empires. I will save it to next time but this doctrine
that’s contained in this passage has been exploited and distorted and magnified
into an entire category of doctrine among charismatics that has introduced a
whole new realm of vocabulary in many churches.
I’ve heard people use this vocabulary who don’t know a thing about the
charismatics simply because somehow they heard someone use this vocabulary and
they just sort of picked it up and it’s amazing that the greatest lies in
history are lies that are built on 90% truth and not lies that are built on 90%
error. So the distortion of this passage
has led to some tremendous heresy in the realm of angelology and demonology in
contemporary times so we’ll get into that next time.
Now the purpose for this
vision is given in Daniel 10:14, “Now I have come to give you an understanding
of what will happen to your people in the latter days, for the vision pertains
to the days yet future.” By the time we
get down to verse 14 there is a personage that shows up on the scene and this
is an angel, and this angel, probably Gabriel, this angel is unnamed but it has
been Gabriel throughout this book that has been revealing and interpreting the
visions for Daniel so this is probably Gabriel speaking here and there are
three things we see in this verse. First
of all, the prophecy in chapters 10-12 applies specifically and directly to the
Jews, Daniel’s people. They are for
“your people.” So this does not apply to
the Church, does not apply directly to the Church Age but it again will be an
indication that God has a plan and a purpose for Israel. That has an application today in that we must
recognize that the return of Jews to the land today, while they’re not saved,
it’s not a regenerate nation, it’s not a nation that is concerned about
spiritual things, it is nevertheless, as we saw last time, part of God’s plan
and purposes to restore Israel as an unregenerate nation before the Tribulation
can begin. And so any thinking that is
anti-Israel is also anti-Semitic and there’s no place for anti-Semitism or
anti-Israel thought among Bible-believing Christians.
This is one of the problems
with what is known as replacement theology.
Replacement theology is not the same as Covenant theology. We’ve gone through replacement theology and
it is all of the theological systems, except for dispensationalism, all of the
theological systems that think that the Church replaced Israel in God’s plan;
so that’s Roman Catholicism, Lutheranism, Wesleyanism, Methodism, Episcopal
Church, Congregational Churches, many Baptist Churches have forms of
replacement theology. The only people
who are consistently dispensational reject replacement theology. So that means that in a system of replacement
theology where the Church replaces Israel, these folks no longer see a
spiritual significance to Israel; Israel is no longer the apple of God’s eye,
Israel is no longer in that privileged position of blessing or will no longer
return to that special place of blessing, and so they really don’t have a
basis, theologically, for rejecting anti-Semitism. In fact, historically replacement theology
has always, rightly or wrongly been sort of seed bed for anti-Semitism.
One of the greatest
anti-Semitic institutions in the history of mankind is the Roman Catholic
Church, and that is because they have completely got into replacement
theology. So we have to be very attune
to that and recognize that as evangelical believers who hold to
dispensationalism and a distinction between Israel and the Church that we
believe there is a future, God does have a future plan for Israel and we are to
be supportive of Israel. That does not
mean that we necessarily agree with every political decision, every military
decision that Israel makes. That’s not
what it means to be pro-Israel, but it does mean that we recognize that the
ultimate goal of the Arab terrorists, the ultimate goal of the Arab nations is
to destroy Israel, they’ve stated that time and time and time again in their
own language. If we had reporters with
integrity they would be broadcasting that on the evening news but since we have
few reporters in the media with any kind of integrity it never seems to make
the news.
In Daniel 10:1 we read that
the date is somehow significant. We saw
in previous studies that in Daniel 7 the first vision took place in the first
year of Belshazzar. The second visions,
in chapter 8 took place in the third year of Belshazzar. Then a number of years went by, about eleven
years, and in the first year of Darius, the third visions. And now in the third year of Cyrus…now the
third year of Cyrus is the same as the third year of Darius, Darius is the
Median nephew of Cyrus who was set to rule over Babylon, it was Darius who was
in charge of the old Babylonian Empire and he was the one responsible for
sending Daniel to the lion’s den. One
theory is that between chapter 9, between 538 BC and 536 BC, Darius died. Another view is that the reason Daniel is
emphasizing Cyrus here, rather than Darius is not that Darius is no longer
ruling over the old Babylonian Empire under Cyrus but that Cyrus is the one who
was named by Isaiah as God’s anointed, who would be used by God to bring the
Jews back from captivity, back to their land, and so by saying “in the third
year of Cyrus, king of Persia,” Daniel is emphasizing this connection, that
this is the Cyrus, he’s reminding his Jewish readers that this is the Cyrus of
whom God had spoken that would send the Jews back to the land.
It’s always important that
when God puts a historical notice in Scripture that we pay attention to it and
see if we can discover why that notice is there. God the Holy Spirit is economic with His use
of words and doesn’t just put stuff there just to randomly give information. It always has some significance. So we need to pay a little more attention to
this, and he states clearly that this is the third year, not the second or the
fourth year, but “the third year of Cyrus.”
This means that perhaps we should look at other passages of Scripture
following the time honored principle of comparing Scripture with Scripture and
correlate Daniel 10:1 with other passages of Scripture to discover what was
going on in that third year of Cyrus, which is 536 BC.
What was troubling Daniel and
other believers and other Jews in that particular year? To find out what happened we need to turn to
Ezra 1. Ezra is a book that was written
during the third year of Cyrus, at least portions of it because Ezra was one of
the leaders of the Jews that returned to the land as a result of Cyrus’ decree
in 538 BC. Ezra was a priest; Zerubbabel
was a descendant of royalty, although he was not a king he was the political
leader so we usually speak of this time period as the time period of Ezra and
Zerubbabel, Ezra being the priest, Zerubbabel being the political leader.
In Ezra 1:1 we read, “Now in
the first year of Cyrus king of Persia,” that was 538 BC, “in order to fulfill
the word of the LORD by the mouth of Jeremiah, the LORD stirred up the spirit
of Cyrus, king of Persia, so that he sent a proclamation throughout all his
kingdom, and also put it in writing, saying.”
Now just a little note, now and then you will recognize that there’s a
controversy and that controversy is, based on what I’ve been teaching Sunday
morning, that is, that we have a human spirit, that we are born spiritual dead,
without a human spirit according to Jude 19, not having a spirit, and yet
someone will go to a passage like this and there are passages in Genesis and
Exodus that talk about the spirit of Pharaoh, and people will say here’s a use,
so obviously Cyrus was an unbeliever, Pharaoh was an unbeliever, yet the Bible
says they have a spirit. Well, you have
to recognize that there are about eight or ten different uses of the word
“spirit” in the Bible and this is just the generic word referring to the
thinking of the individual. And as I
pointed out, even in 1 Corinthians 2 spirit is used there, when it talks about
who knows what’s in a man except the spirit of a man, it’s talking about that
inner most part of the thinking of a man.
So, “the LORD stirred up the
spirit,” that is the thinking of Cyrus, king of Persia, so that the sent a
proclamation throughout all his kingdom, and also put it in writing, saying,
[2] Thus says Cyrus, king of Persia, ‘The LORD, the God of heaven, has given me
all the kingdoms of the earth,” now there seems to be an indication here that
perhaps Cyrus is a believer because of his recognition of Yahweh, the God of
Israel, as the God of heaven. “The LORD,
the God of heaven, has given me all the kingdoms of the earth, and He has
appointed me to build Him a house in Jerusalem, which is in Judah.” So he recognizes the significance of Isaiah’s
prophecy, that he was to be appointed or anointed by God to send the Jews back
to rebuild the temple. So it’s very
possible, based on this verse alone, not the verses in Isaiah because you don’t
have to be a believer to be appointed by God, but it’s very possible based on
this verse alone that Cyrus was a believer but you can’t be dogmatic about
that.
Daniel 10:3, “Whoever there
is among you of all His people, may his God be with him! Let him to up to Jerusalem which is in Judah,
and rebuild the house of the LORD, the God of Israel, He is the God who is in Jerusalem.” The reason you can’t be real dogmatic is that
his terminology towards the end of the decree is still the terminology of a
pagan talking about a regional territorial god.
So while he sounds like he might be a believer at the beginning he
doesn’t sound like it at the end so we can’t be too certain about his spiritual
status. So in Cyrus’ first year which is
538 BC he issues a decree for the Jews to return to the land of Israel. So in Daniel 10:1 we’re talking about the
third year of Cyrus, which is two years later.
The way they counted the years the first year would be 538; the second
year would be 537; the third year would be 536, we’re in BC time so we’re going
backwards. So it’s 536 C when this takes
place so people would already have been returning to the land. Now Daniel did not return to the land because
at this time Daniel is a bit old. He is
in his golden years, he is a senior senior because he is at least 85 years of
age, he might even be as ripe as 90.
Whenever the Scripture talks about living to a ripe old age, that was
not a slang term. So he did and he
maintained most of his mental faculties; if you don’t know it by the time
you’re 75… by the time your 75 10% of you will have Alzheimer’s; by the time
you’re 85 50% of you will have Alzheimer’s; the rest of you won’t remember
because you’ll just have regular old senility.
Then we come to Ezra 3:1,
“Now when the seventh month came, and the sons of Israel were in the cities,
the people gathered together as one man to Jerusalem,” so here we see that the
Jews in the land during their first year of regathering to Israel and they meet
to Jerusalem in order to be challenged by the Word of God from Ezra. In Ezra 3:8 we read, “Now in the second y ear
of their coming to the house of God at Jerusalem in the second month,
Zerubbabel, the son of Shealtiel and Jeshua the son of Jozadak and the rest of
their brothers, the priests and the Levites, and all who came from the
captivity to Jerusalem, began the work and appointed the Levites from twenty
years and older to oversee the work of the house of the LORD.” Notice they’re building the temple, not the
plaza and moat that Daniel talked about in the prophecy in Daniel 9. So in the second year they’re back in the
land, pioneers recolonizing the land that God had given them but he points out
that they still had problems with sort of an early proto-Palestinian people,
they aren’t related to the Palestinians by any means, but whenever the Jews go
back to the land, whoever happens to be living there really puts up a fuss and
puts up a lot of terrorizing activity in order to prevent them from returning.
Then in chapter 4 there are
even more events recorded about the problems that those returning to the
land. In Ezra 4:1 we read, “Now when the
enemies of Judah and Benjamin heard that the people of the exile were building
a temple to the LORD God of Israel,” notice the similarity with today, see,
nobody who’s in the land that’s not Jewish wants a temple there. The ancient inhabitants who were resettled
there by the Chaldeans didn’t want it and the modern Arabs that lived there who
are called Palestinians by a misnomer, don’t want it, because ultimately what
energizes their opposition is Satan.
Satan does not want the presence of God in Israel; he didn’t want it
then because he was thwarting the plan and he doesn’t want it now because he
doesn’t want the Tribulation to begin. So he is preventing these things, trying to
hold up and stop God’s plan, but the message we see in all of this is that God
controls history and Satan can’t stop it.
In Ezra 4:2 we read that
“they,” that is these who oppose the Jews, “approached Zerubbabel and the heads
of fathers’ households, and said to them, ‘Let us build with you, for we like
you seek your God,’” see, their attempt is to work alongside in order to
sabotage, in order to keep them from being able to complete the temple. Now where does the word sabotage come
from? Sabotage comes from a Dutch word,
sabot, which has to do with a shoe because back around the end of the 19th
century a bunch of factory workers went on strike, took their shoes off and
threw them into the industrial works to stop the machines. So they were called saboteurs. That’s where that word comes from; just a
little extra insight, trivia, something you can show off with.
So these early saboteurs want
to infiltrate the ranks in order to stop the construction of the temple. So they ask, “let us build with you, for we
like you, seek your God,” they’re so sanctimonious; notice the enemies of God
always want to use God’s name in order t justify their cause, “and we have been
sacrificing to Him since the days of Esar-haddon, king of Assyria, who brought
us up here. [3] But Zerubbabel and
Jeshua and the rest of the heads of the fathers’ households of Israel said to
them, ‘You have nothing in common with us in building a house to our God; but
we are ourselves will together build to the LORD God of Israel, as King Cyrus,
the king of Persia has commanded us.”
So even in the Old Testament
we see this doctrine of religious exclusivism that Israel is held exclusively
to God and there is really only one way to worship God and that’s according to
the way He has described it in His Word.
But these saboteurs, these opposers, filed various lawsuits with Cyrus
back in Babylon in order to prevent the rebuilding of the city, according to
the rest of the chapter, down through verse 21.
So by the third year of Cyrus
the entire Jewish rebuilding and restoration movement has been brought to a
standstill and this is what’s bothering Daniel in Daniel 10. He’s thinking about the prophecy at the end
of Daniel 9 and the reports that he’s getting from the land that they are no
longer able to work and everything is falling apart, and it’s distressing
him. And then he receives this message,
and this message piles on the distress because the theme of the message is that
the future of Israel is going to be bathed in bloodshed, it’s going to be
covered in violence and the result of that is that it has an impact on him.
I think it’s interesting to see how this impacts a mature believer because too
often I think as Church Age believers we have a tendency to be a little
anti-emotional sometimes and we also have a tendency to think that if you’re in
fellowship and walking with the Lord, and as we see in John 15, abiding in
Christ, and the Holy Spirit is filling you, that you’re going to have the joy
of Christ and there won’t be any sense of sorrow or sadness. But as I pointed out, when believers are
faced with real life difficulty and pain the loss of loved ones, difficult
situations in life, whether it’s unemployment, the breakup of a marriage,
whatever kind of problem it may be, it’s not wrong to be sad, it’s not wrong to
be sorrowful, it’s not wrong to go through that mourning process. That is not something that is doubting the
provision of God because you see, even Jesus went through times of mourning, He
wept, He mourned over the people, not for Lazarus, He mourned when He looked at
the crowds because He saw the impact that sin and death was having on their
mental attitude. So at the time though
He still had maximum joy. See, we want
to juxtapose mourning and grief and legitimate sadness with joy and what
Scripture presents is the fact that you can have both at the same time. You can have stability and joy and at the same
time have legitimate sorrow and sadness over circumstances and situations in
life. We don’t have to act like we’re
untouched by what’s going on around us; that’s part of what it means to be
compassionate.
Daniel is mourning for three
weeks, he is so overwhelmed by what he sees that he’s devastated; he’s not
despairing, he’s not depressed, he’s mourning though, because he sees the
horrors that the nation is going to have to go through in the future, and it has
an emotional impact on him. It’s not
wrong to have an emotional impact; what’s wrong is to let that emotion dictate
wrong behavior and wrong mental and give into mental attitude sin such as
anger, bitterness, resentment, hostility things of that nature.
So Daniel is mourning and
this mourning takes particular form because he is going to turn to God in that
mourning which is what should take place when we go through those times, it
should drive us to dependence upon God, and he is going to turn to God and seek
for God’s provision. So for three weeks
he goes through this mourning process; for twenty one days. Now this is an important time in the feast
calendar of Israel. If we put together
the passage we’ll discover that this 21 day period covers the first month of
the feast calendar and goes to the 24th day. Remember it is the 14th day of the
first month, this is in verse 4, it is the 14th day of the first
month that is Passover; the day after Passover the Feast of Unleavened Bread
begins and that lasts for a week so that goes from the 15th to the
22nd, and then two days later Daniel ends his fast. So he is going to express his mourning by
fasting.
He fasts, he says in Daniel
10:3, “I did not eat any tasty food,” and he’s really listing three things
here, the punctuation is poor here. What
he says in the English is first of all he did not eat any of the prime gourmet
delicacies that were available to him because of his high position in the
Persian court. So he says I didn’t eat
any of the wonderful food that was available to me, not only that, I didn’t eat
any common food, I didn’t eat any just bare necessities. I not only didn’t eat any of the great food
available to me at all, “I didn’t eat any meat, I didn’t drink any wine,” and
the entire structure here is to exclude any kind of eating that for this 21 day
period he is on a fast, and he says “nor did I use any ointment at all,” and
this is an emphatic construction in the Hebrew to emphasize the fact that he
didn’t use any ointment. Now the reason
that you use ointment is in the ancient world is just for daily cosmetics. It would be comparable to the fact that he’s saying
look, I didn’t take a shower, I didn’t put on any deodorant or after shave, I
didn’t comb my hair, I was distraught.
He is indicating the fact that he is focused on something and the
details of life in terms of food and in terms of the daily structure of taking
care of himself are just irrelevant to him.
He’s focusing on one thing
and that’s studying doctrine and praying, and that was the purpose of fasting,
not to impress God. Remember Jesus told
the Pharisees, see religion takes stuff like this out of context. Religion looks at this and says oh, if I want
to have a word from God then I need to pray and not get a hair cut and not take
a bath or put on deodorant. But what
they’re talking about here is the fact that he’s so focused on God the details
of life are not important and what we’ll see is that he left town; he doesn’t do
this in the context of his normal social life.
He leaves town so he’s mostly off by himself. Now the Pharisees and Sadducees really
distorted this so that by Jesus time they think this is a sign of super
spirituality. You run into people every
now and then today think so and they’ll go without food and they’ll go without
bathing and that’s some kind of a sign of super spirituality. What the Pharisees did, and Jesus when you’re
fasting, still anoint yourself so that nobody knows. Remember if you’re doing any of these things
it’s between you and God, it should not be done in a way to impress other people
and that’s how religion had distorted this by the time of the First
Advent. So religion always looks on the
superficial and distorts this so that it becomes some kind of system for
impressing God and impressing other people with our own spirituality. So Daniel says he didn’t eat any food, any of
the good food that was available to him, any meat or wine, he didn’t anything,
not only that, he didn’t take a shower, didn’t take a bath, didn’t anoint his
hair with oil, he didn’t do anything like that for three weeks.
And then in Daniel 10:4 he
says, “And on the twenty-fourth day of the first month,” that is two days after
the end of the Feast of Unleavened Bread, “while I was by the bank of the great
river, that is, the Tigris,” which is a good distance from Babylon, so
obviously he’s not at home. That’s why I
can say he left town, he’s not with his normal social surroundings, he’s not
with other people, he has left town during this time of mourning. He is not going to impose his sorrow, his
sadness, his emotional state on other people.
That’s just good manners. When you’re
distraught, when you’re upset, don’t run around telling everybody about it and
don’t impose yourself on other people.
You probably have a good friend or two that you can share that grief
with and spend that time with but don’t just run around emotionally out of
control, putting yourself on everybody else.
So Daniel left town and he
goes up to the Tigris River, and he says, “And on the twenty-fourth day of the
first month, while I was by the bank of the great river, that is, the Tigris, [5]
I lifted up my eyes and look, and behold, there was a certain man dressed in
linen, whose waist was girded with a belt of pure gold of Uphaz.” So he sees this individual while he is down
by the river and by this time we know that he is with some friends so he’s finished
his fasting, he has joined some other friends in some location, we don’t know
where it is, down by the Tigris and at this point a man appears before him.
In Daniel 10:6 we go on to
get another description of this individual, “His body also was like beryl, his
face had the appearance of lightning, his eyes were like flaming torches, his
arms and feet like the gleam of polished bronze, and the sound of his words
like the sound of a tumult.” Now I want
you to pay attention to the details of what Daniel sees in his description of
this individual and we’ll compare to another passage for a little
surprise. A lot of people look at this
and up to this point there have been appearances of angels, and at this point
they want to think because of the way that things move through the passage that
this is Michael or Gabriel, but this is not a description of an angel.
Revelation 1:12-15, this is
John’s vision of the ascended Lord Jesus Christ while John is on the island of
Patmos before he receives his revelation.
Actually the title of that book is “The Revelation of Jesus Christ.” Verse 12 we read, “Then I,” the “I” being
John,” Then I turned to see the voice that spoke with me. And having turned I saw seven golden
lampstands; [13] and in the middle of the lampstands one like a son of man,
clothed with a garment down to the feet, girded about the chest with a golden
band. [14] And His head and His hair
were white like wool, as white as snow; and His eyes were like a flame of fire;
[15] and His feet were like fine brass as if refined in a furnace, and His
voice as the sound of many waters.”
Notice the similarity with the man that appears to Daniel along the
banks of the Tigris, the same type of clothing, the same appearance of the
eyes, a similar description of the sound of the voice. So it doesn’t take a whole lot to see the
parallel between these two visions.
So what we have in Daniel 10
is an appearance of the Lord Jesus Christ prior to the virgin conception and
the virgin birth, prior to the incarnation of Christ. So in Daniel 10 we have what is called a
Theophany. “Theo” for Theos, God, and “phany,” from phanos meaning appearance, phaneroo is the verb we’ve studied in 1
John 3 for manifestation or appearance.
So this is an appearance of God. Now
throughout the book of Daniel we’ve had various revelations and various
appearances to Daniel…[tape turns]… there is special revelation by means of a
dream to a Gentile king. In Daniel 4
there’s a vision given during the daytime to a Gentile king. In Daniel 5 there’s a public appearance of an
angel’s hand at the feast of Belshazzar, the handwriting on the wall. In Daniel 7 there is a dream given, not to a
Gentile king but to Daniel himself. In
Daniel 8, another vision given in the daytime to Daniel. In Daniel 9 he has a direct encounter with
the angel Gabriel, who interprets a dream for him. And now in Daniel 10 we have an encounter
with God the Son plus two other angels.
So let’s close this evening
with a review of the doctrine of the Theophany.
Point number one: a definition, a Theophany is a manifestation of the
person of Jesus Christ in a preincarnate state.
All the appearances of God in the Old Testament are appearances of God the
Son, not God the Father. We’ll see the Scripture
on that in just a minute. But that’s a
definition of a Theophany. A
Christophany is the appearance of Christ after His ascension. For example, when Jesus appears to Paul on
the Damascus Road, that is a Christophany, the appearance of Christ after His
ascension. So a Theophany is a
manifestation of the person of Christ in a preincarnate state and a
Christophany is a manifestation of Christ after the ascension.
Point number two: Jesus
Christ is the only visible member of the Trinity. This is clear from Scripture, that Jesus
Christ is the only visible member of the Trinity. No other member of the Trinity manifests
himself visibly. This is based on two Scriptures,
John 1:18, “no one has seen God at any time,” that would exclude Moses, that
would exclude Abraham, that would exclude Adam.
That would exclude everyone in the Old Testament who saw God. So that God, i.e. Yahweh that they saw was
really Jesus Christ in His preincarnate state.
Again in John 6:46, Jesus said, “Not that anyone has seen the Father,
except He who is from God, He has seen the Father.” That again indicates that Jesus is the only
one who has seen the Father, no human being has ever seen the Father. So this is clear from these direct statements
in the New Testament.
Third, the various
Theophanies in the Old Testament demonstrate that Jesus Christ is the God who
appeared to the prophets in the Old Testament.
For example, as a starting point we should look at Deuteronomy 6:4, this
is a famous passage known as the shema,
based on the Hebrew qal imperative of the verb shamam meaning to hear or in the imperative to listen. “Hear, O Israel,” this is probably best
translated, “listen up,” that’s a little Texas slang there, “Hear, O Israel,”
pay attention, “Hear, O Israel, the LORD our God, the LORD is one,” and a
little better translation, “Yahweh, our God,” Yahweh Elohenu, “Yahweh our God, Yahweh is one.” Now this word “one” is the Hebrew word echad; echad is not the only word for one in Hebrew; it is the word for
one in composite as opposed to a singular or unitary one. Let me give you an example: when God created
man and woman, when they are joined together they become one flesh, echad, they are two components but they’re
one flesh. When all the twelve tribes of
Israel appeared before God on Mount Sinai, they were said to be one nation, echad.
And yet there is another Hebrew number for one that indicates a singularity,
a non-compound one. So the word
translated one here does not exclude a division in the Godhead.
Furthermore, when it is used
in this kind of a construction it has the idea of unity, not the idea of
singularity, just as in the statement that when a man and woman are joined
together they are one flesh, the emphasis is on unity, the emphasis here is: “Hear,
O Israel, Yahweh our God, Yahweh is a unity.”
Yahweh is a unity! So it is
emphasizing the unity of the Triune God, just another glimpse of the fact that
the Trinity while not overtly revealed in the Old Testament is clearly
referenced in the Old Testament. This is
further substantiated by the appearance of the angel of the Lord in the Old
Testament. You have this one particular
individual appear again and again who is described as the angel of the
Lord.
For example, he appears in
Judges 2:1-4 and warns the leadership of Israel. Again in Judges 6:11-24 he appears to Gideon
and Gideon worships the angel of Yahweh as Yahweh. No other angel accepts worship from man. Every other time a human being tries to worship
God the angels stop him, but in Judges 6 this angel encourages it; in fact
Gideon directly calls the angel Yahweh.
In other passages in the Old Testament, for example, in Zechariah
1:12-13 this angel of the Lord is said to be carrying on a conversation with
Yahweh himself so that you have a conversation between Yahweh and the angel of
the Yahweh and they are both referred to as God. In Genesis 22:11-18 and Genesis 48:15-16 you
have the same kind of thing, you have the angel of the Lord appear but the
angel of the Lord is also referred to as Yahweh. So the fact is that in many passages the
angel of the Lord is identified as God.
And then in Zechariah 1:12-13 and some other passages the angel of the
Lord is distinct in personality from Yahweh as well so that indicates multiple
personalities in the Godhead.
Point number four: the
Theophanies ended with the incarnation of Jesus Christ at the First
Advent. Following His incarnation there
is a manifestation of Jesus Christ in His resurrection body and that is
referred to as a Christophany.
So we come to Daniel and
Daniel has this appearance, this man who appears to him and when he hears the
sound of his words he falls into a deep sleep.
This is in verse 9. Daniel says
in Daniel 10:7, “Now I, Daniel, alone saw the visions, while the men who were
with me did not see the vision; nevertheless, a great dread fell on them and
they ran away to hide themselves.” So he
receives this vision that will be described in chapters 11 and 12 during this
particular time.
Then in Daniel 10:8 he says, “So
I was left alone and saw this great vision,” now when he says he was left alone
that means not only that these men left, but this personage who is revealing this
to him also leaves and is replaced by an angel.
He says, “I was left alone and saw this great vision; yet no strength
was left in me, for my natural color turned to a deathly pallor, and I retained
no strength.” Isn’t it interesting, when
there is a manifestation of Christ that people other than the one to whom He is
revealing Himself tend to run away. When
Paul is on the road to Damascus and the Lord Jesus Christ appears to him,
everybody else runs away. When God appears,
those who are not the object of His appearance tend to run away terrified because
they are confronted with the integrity and the righteousness and the holiness of
God.
Daniel 10:9, “But I heard the
sound of his words; and as soon as I heard the sound of his words, I fell into
a deep sleep on my face, with my face to the ground.” Then in verse 10 things are going to
change. Get the picture, he falls into
the trance, he is going to get this revelation, and then at the conclusion of
receiving the vision a hand shakes him, physically, violently shakes him
awake. And this is a different
individual. “Then behold, a hand touched
me and set me trembling on my hands and knees.
[11] And he said to me, O Daniel, man greatly beloved, understand the
words that I speak to you and stand upright, for I have now been sent to
you. And when he had spoken this word to
me, I stood up, trembling.” So there is
a shift between the first man who appears to him back in verse 5 and this
individual. One of the reasons we say
that is the description in verse 5 is so clearly that of the same description
of Jesus Christ in Revelation 1, but this individual as an angel has to do
battle with a demon called the prince of the kingdom of Persia.
So next time we’re going t
get into some important angelology and demonology to understand a little bit,
or get a glimpse, we’re not going to push it like some people do, but we
recognize here we get a little bit of…God peels back the envelop a little bit
so that we can see and get a glimpse of how the angelic conflict and the war in
the heavenlies impacts the geopolitical strategy on planet earth.