RDean/Daniel Lesson 50
Instability in the Middle East – Daniel 11:4-16
Last week I went through
Psalm 130 which has something to do with the whole issue of hope and confidence
in the midst of difficult, the midst of crisis.
But I did that for a particular reason; that was that someone in the
congregation had some family members visiting who were not believers and they
called and said they were coming and wanted to know if I could give a good
gospel presentation. And you should be
aware of that and anyone in the congregation, if that’s happening you need to
let me know because I don’t mind shifting gears a little bit whenever that
opportunity presents itself because that’s what we’re all about is making sure
people hear the gospel.
Galatians 4:4 tells us that
it was in the fullness of time that God sent forth Jesus Christ, that Jesus
Christ was born in approximately 4 or 5 BC and that was not by chance; that was
not an accident. God was preparing
things and Daniel 11 gives us an insight into how God was preparing things
through human history even 400 or 500 years before the birth of our Lord. Open your Bible to Daniel 11 and we’re going
to start moving through this remarkably detailed prophecy that the preincarnate
Lord Jesus Christ gave to Daniel in approximately 538 BC. This prophecy is remarkable because it is an
outline in detail of events that will occur in the next 200 or 399 years in
Israel’s history. And it is primarily
for the purpose of giving insight to the Jews who are in the land, that despite
the fact that they are going to be right at the center point between battles
and between empires, and that they will be overrun several times and many
horrible things will take place, that God is still in control. So one principle we learn from this chapter
is that even though there is chaos in history, even though there may be crises
and there may be much personal calamity as a result of the time in which we
live, when we look at that from man’s perspective it looks like everything is
out of control. And yet the Scripture
says that God is still in control.
Now this is a remarkable
thing because many people get wrapped around the axle on the whole issue of
man’s freedom versus divine sovereignty and one of the fantastic things that we
need to understand is that God’s sovereignty is so great that His plan includes
flexibility for the free decisions of His creatures. Let me give you just a little illustration of
that. When God created all of the animal
kinds in Genesis 1 He included within their genetic structures the ability to
handle the chaos that would come from sin so that He created certain animals
that were gramnivorous, they were herbivores, they were grass eaters, lions,
tigers, certain now carnivorous dinosaurs.
And yet after sin these species, these kinds, became carnivorous. There were quite a few changes that happened
to those kinds, those certain animal kinds as a result of the chaos of
sin. And that is just one way to
illustrate how God’s sovereignty is great enough so that He can control history
and yet not violate individual human freedom. So though things may seem chaotic from our
perspective, God is still in control.
The second thing we learn in
this chapter is that there is genuine predictive prophecy in the Scripture
unlike any other claims to prophecy anywhere else in human history; you will
not find anything comparable to this anywhere, not even in your astrological
column or Nostradamus or any other claim to fortune telling. The purpose for this is to provide hope for
the believer, to provide confidence for the believer because when we know and
we’re confident that God is in control it then gives us the ability to relax in
His control in the midst of chaos, whether it’s personal chaos, national chaos
or international chaos.
Now we find ourselves in our
study of Daniel in Daniel 11:2 and I just want to briefly pick up the context
as we move through this history of the Middle East as it’s written hundreds of
years before it happens. “And now I”
that is the interpreting angel, “I will tell you the truth. Behold, three more kings are going to arise
in Persia.” And we have studied these,
that they began the heir to Cyrus the Great and passed on down through; the
second king was Pseudo Smerdis and the third king was Darius Hystaspes, and
then the fourth king which is mentioned in this verse is Xerxes. Darius Hystaspes was the father of Xerxes; he
is the third king in this line mentioned here.
“Behold, three more kings are going to arise in Persia. Then a fourth will gain far more riches than
all of them….”
The fourth is Xerxes. But before we go to Xerxes I want to hit a
couple of things on Darius Hystaspes. He
set the stage for what would happen in the reign of Xerxes when he decided to
invade Greece in 492 BC. The Persian Empire
was enormous at that time, spread from Egypt all the way to the Indus River,
the only place they had for expansion was to the west, to Europe, and though
you may not recognize this or realize the significance of all of this, what
took place in his reign and in Xerxes reign as the Persian advance to the east
was stopped, it changed history. This is
one of the most significant eras in all of human history. I would classify it alongside the battle of
Tours when Charles Martel defeated the Moslems as they were headed up north
across the Pyrenees into France, and a number of other battles, when they were
stopped at the gates of Vienna in the 1480s, this protected western Europe from
being taken over by ethnic groups whose area was to be in the east and in the
Middle East.
God has always had a purpose
for Europe and that does not mean that they are specially chosen but God has
specific purposes and plans for each region and every ethnic group. That doesn’t mean that one is favored over
another but that they have distinct roles and distinct plans in history and
part of that has to do with how things are going to play out in the end
times. There is a king of the west, the
antichrist, who is a ruler of a Revived Roman Empire ten nation confederacy in
Europe and so we know from prophecy that no matter how many times the Asian or
Oriental hordes try to invade Europe they will always be stopped, and they were
stopped in the ancient world by the Greeks, both during the time of Darius
Hystaspes and his son Xerxes.
Under Darius Hystaspes they
invaded Greece, they crossed the Hellespont and came south and outside of
Athens they were stopped at a battle of Marathon, and that’s where we get the
idea for marathon runs. The Greeks had a
very famous runner who, after the battle was over and the Persians were
defeated, the Persians under Darius got on their ships to make an end run
around the peninsula to hit Athens on the flank and so they sent this runner 26
miles to Athens in order to warn them of the coming Persians. And because he was able to warn them they
were able to defeat the Persian navy when it came around and so Darius tucked
his tail and went back home.
That didn’t sit well with the
Persians and when Xerxes assumed the throne in 486 BC he amassed an army to
invade Greece. He had a cousin by the
name of Mardonius who was also one of his generals and Mardonius was a
tremendous agitator for invasion of Europe because it just didn’t sit well with
his patriotic pride that the Persians had been defeated by the Greeks. You see, the Greeks were not a respected
people in the ancient world because they had a rather decadent
civilization. They promoted all kinds of
sexual perversion and homosexuality, in fact they promoted homosexuality in the
military because they felt like if you were having a love affair in the fox
hole with you then you would fight a little stronger and fight a little
better. So they were a perverted culture
and a perverted society and the Persians rejected all of that. So they wanted to take over and destroy the
Greeks.
Furthermore, the Trojans, you
remember the battle of Troy and the Trojan horse from studying Greek history,
the Trojans had never forgotten their defeat by the Greeks and they wanted to
ally themselves with the Persians to get back at the Greeks. So they had sent out their feelers and
various diplomats to Mardonius and Mardonius was pushing Xerxes to invade, so
he amassed an army of 180,000 and they invaded Greece in 480 BC with between
180,000 and 200,000 men and 700 warships.
In contrast to that the Greeks only had 300 ships and about 10,000 men
and they only had a possibility of raising another 50,000. So in order to stop the Persians as they were
headed south down the Greek peninsula, they sent as sort of a holding force 300
Spartan warriors under King Leonidas of Sparta to stop the Greeks. And there was one place, sort of a funnel, as
you came south down the Greek peninsula at a place called Thermopylae which
means hot springs, and all the 200,000 Persian army had to be squeezed through
this very narrow pass. So the 300
Spartans were defending that pass and the Persians could not get past them,
they were just completely bottled up and they couldn’t get anywhere and if it
weren’t for the fact that there was a Greek traitor who informed them of some
secret passes so that they could get around the Spartans and attack them from
the rear, the Persians would have been defeated there. And that battle, the battle of Thermopylae,
is considered one of the ten most significant battles in all of history because
once again it prevented the Oriental peoples from invading Europe.
But the Persians did defeat
the Greeks at Thermopylae, but they were delayed long enough to give the rest
of the Greeks time to amass a force, and for the people in Athens to flee. Athens was warned and so all the Athenians
fled town and they went out to an island off the coast called Salamis and when
the Persian navy tried to attack them there the Greek navy ambushed them and
that again is one of the most significant naval battles in all of history so at
this point Xerxes was defeated.
Now Xerxes is the king that
is mentioned here in verse 2, “Then a fourth” king in Persia, that’s Xerxes,
“will gain far more riches than all of them,” and he had an extremely wealthy
nation. In fact, when he fielded this
army of 200,000, and of course he had to pay for them and he had to outfit
them, it didn’t overtax their budget at all and it didn’t overtax their
treasury. See what happens most of the
time when you get into warfare, especially if you are not the aggressor, it
taxes you and most nations have to go into some form of deficit spending which
is exactly what’s happening in our nation now; if you notice all of a sudden
the Democrats have started screaming about how the Republicans are spending so
much money. The reason we are spending
so much money is because for the last 8 years in the previous presidency no
money was spent on beefing up our armed forces and beefing up our armor. One of the reasons things have slowed down
now in Afghanistan is because we spent so much of our weaponry during the last
8 or 9 months that we’re having to rebuild our arsenal.
Xerxes didn’t have that
problem; he had far more riches than any of the previous rulers of Persia and
so he was able to completely outfit his army and he was extremely strong and he
aroused the entire Empire against the realm of Greece. So he does that. Now the purpose of this vision is not to go
through a complete detailed history of Persia, so it stops there. It just tells them what will take place under
Xerxes, that there would be subsequent rulers and eventually there will be a
shift. And this occurs in verse 3 when a
new empire would come into place and that’s the Greek Empire.
Daniel 11:3, “And a mighty
king will arise, and he will rule with great authority and do as he
pleases.” Now this great king that
arises is Alexander the Great, Alexander the Great was not a Greek, he was a
Macedonian, and when his father, Philip II of Macedon, died he assumed the
throne and he immediately invaded Greece and united all of the Greek city
states or the polis and then he began
to head east and he conquered the area which we know as Turkey, which is Asia
Minor in the ancient world. Then he
swung down through Syria and on down into the area of Israel. And everywhere he went Alexander imposed
Greek culture and Greek language, more importantly, on the people he
conquered. And he didn’t realize that he
was basically performing God’s will when he imposed a Greek language on
everyone but as a result but as a result of what Alexander did, it both
unified, when he unified all of the Greek armies and unified all the Greek city
states, it forced them to develop a common language; take all of the various
Greek dialects that they had been speaking up to that point, whether it was
Attic Greek, whatever the dialect it was, Doric Greek, and they merged together
into a new language that was called common Greek or Koine Greek.
Now Koine Greek still has
elements in it and still has idioms in it that are holdovers from the older
languages. But just because we have an idiom in our language that is a holdover
from Elizabethan English doesn’t mean we’re speaking Elizabethan English. For example, if you make a serious mistake in
something you’re trying to do you might be told that you’re hoisting yourself
on your own petard. Some of you may not
know where that comes from but it’s a line that comes out of Hamlet and those
terms were common back in Elizabethan English.
A petard was a very early form of a hand grenade and you would have
these combat engineers who would take this explosive charge and they would go
up to the fortified walls around the city and they would then plant this charge
under the wall and light the fuse and hopefully get away before the petard
exploded. And if the petard exploded too
soon then they would go up in the air with the charge and they would be hoist
on their own petard. That’s where that
comes from. And I have heard that
expression, I’ve had professors and other people use that phraseology. I used to have a philosophy professor, that
was his favorite phrase for describing someone who had just committed some
logical fallacy but just because he uses a phrase that has its source in
Elizabethan English doesn’t mean that he was speaking Elizabethan English.
So when you get into the
Koine Greek of the New Testament you may find certain phrases, idioms and
structure that have their source in Ionic Greek or Doric Greek or Attic Greek
but it is not any of those, it is Koine Greek.
There is as much of a time difference between Koine Greek which came
into spoken use throughout the east and the Middle East by the 2nd
century BC, there is about as much difference between it and these earlier
dialects as there is between Elizabethan English and modern English, probably a
greater difference.
So what Alexander was doing
was actually laying the ground work for the spread of the gospel after the time
of Christ because in all the lands that he conquered he forced the people to
learn how to speak Greek, it became the lingua franca of those nations and
everyone who was educated learned Greek.
Even the people on the street, the language of commerce, was in Koine
Greek. So by the time of the New
Testament the New Testament could be written in Koine Greek and it could spread
all throughout, not only the Roman Empire but also into areas of the Middle
East and all the way over to India.
In Daniel 11:4 we’re told, “But
as soon as he has arisen,” notice the detail here, “as soon as he has
arisen.” Alexander took five years to
conquer the ancient world, he assumed the kingship of Macedon in 333 BC, he
began his conquest about 328 BC, and he died in 323 BC; in five years he
conquered the world. And “as soon as has
arisen his kingdom will be broken up and parceled out toward the four points of
the compass,” notice the details of the four divisions, “though not to his own
descendants, nor according to his authority which he wielded; for his
sovereignty will be uprooted and given to others besides them.”
Let’s look at that first
phrase, “as soon as he has arisen,” this verse foretells something that no one
would have believed in 323 BC, that a genius such as Alexander who had done so
much in destroying the world would just basically kill himself through his
drunkenness and debauchery and it was in a tremendous drunken party in Babylon
in 323 BC that Alexander died. He died
an alcoholic; he was basically discouraged because there was nothing else to
conquer. And at that point the whole
order of things, from the Adriatic Sea in the west to the mountains of central
Asia, the dusty plains of the Punjab, everything changed. Everything up to that point had been under
one ruler, under one fantastic genius, but when he died everything fell apart.
Now all of this reminds us
that God is in control. Proverbs 21:21
tells us that “the kings heart is like channels of water in the hands of the
LORD, and He turns it wherever He wishes.”
This is a reminder that God controls history; in fact, it’s the Second
Person of the Trinity, Jesus Christ who controls history and no matter what a
king, a ruler, a terrorist or the head of some terrorist organization may seek
to accomplish, God is still in control and God is the one who is going to use
their decisions to accomplish His ultimate plans. God is the ultimate one in control of human
history.
Now one of the things that we
learn as we go through this passage and as we look back in Daniel 9 and
Daniel’s prayer is that no matter what happens and what the leaders of nations
intend to do, what terrorist thugs intend to do, God has a special plan, He’s
given a special privilege to believers and that’s prayer and that history has
changed many times because of the prayers of believers. As we’ve seen in this passage, this is an
opportunity for believers, today and what we’re facing with this war on
terrorism to have a tremendous impact on history because of their prayers and
the way they pray. And so Daniel had a
tremendous impact because of his intercessory prayer toward God.
Now in verse 4, this gives us
a fantastic indication of God’s plan for the future, that Alexander would not
last, his kingdom would not last, but God would still have a plan for
Israel. Now the Jews were very interested
in Alexander because Alexander was very pro-Semitic. The Persians had been very pro-Semitic under
Cyrus and under Darius and under Xerxes, they had policies that were very
positive to the Jews and so for many years under those administrations the Jews
had prospered. Now they lived at a time
when things weren’t a whole lot different than they are today. Remember, they were defeated and taken out of
the land, not for 2000 years but for 70 years.
And when Cyrus issued his decree for the Jews to return to the land, it
wasn’t much different from the return to the land for the Jews in 1948. There were people who had settled in the
land, people who were making their homes in the land that been the Jews, and
when the Jews returned they were jealous, they were envious and they didn’t
want the Jews to come back and so they were hostile. They did everything they could to sabotage
the rebuilding in Jerusalem; they did everything they could to stop the
building projects on the temple and when Nehemiah returned they did everything
they could to keep Nehemiah from rebuilding the walls around Jerusalem. And what we see from this is the lesson that
anti-Semitism is always ripe and anti-Semitism is always wrong. It is always ripe because Satan is always
using anti-Semitism to try to destroy the Jews.
He tried to destroy the Jews in the Old Testament in order to prevent
the coming of the Messiah at the First Advent.
He’s trying to destroy the
Jews today because he’s trying to prevent the coming of Messiah at the Second
Advent which will announce his ultimate doom.
So we have to be aware of what’s going on in terms of anti-Semitism
today and the increase of anti-Semitism, especially in Europe, is just
phenomenal. There have been over 350
incidents of anti-Semitism in France in the last year and a half. The frequency of anti-Semitic riots in Russia
is much more than it ever has been in the past and is continuing to
increase. There have been anti-Semitism
riots not only in Russia but also in the Ukraine. The chief rabbi of London has issued warnings
to the Jews in England because of the rise of anti-Semitism in England. The chief rabbi in Brussels issued a report
because he was personally attacked and was beaten up by a bunch of thugs in
their anti-Semitism actions. So we are living
in an age today when anti-Semitism is on the rise, when we have to be very
careful of it because the guise that it is taking today is not the kind of
racist ethnic anti-Semitism that you saw in Germany in the 30s and 40s, but is
designed…it’s cloaked in the idea well, you know the Palestinians are really
getting a raw deal, so let’s not really support the nation Israel and the
anti-Semitism today is not cloaked in an anti state of Israel mentality but
however it is disguised it is still wrong.
That doesn’t mean we have to agree with every decision the Israeli
government makes but it does mean that overall we have to support them and
continue to support them against the Palestinians.
It’s very interesting that
when Alexander was taking his army down the Mediterranean, down through Syria
and Tyre and down into the area of Israel he came to an area near Gaza and
while he was there some of his men suggested that he go to Jerusalem and accept
a surrender of the Hebrew state. Now the
Jews were willing to surrender to Alexander because of what was stated here in
Daniel 11:2-3, they knew who Alexander was and they understood his role in
history. And so Alexander took his
entourage with him and they headed to Jerusalem in order to meet with the high
priest of Jerusalem and to accept their surrender. Josephus records this for us and it’s one of
the most unusual events in human history
It’s not recorded in the Bible because it took place during the time
between the Old Testament and New Testament but it does give us tremendous
insight on how this was fulfilled.
Josephus writes: “For
Alexander, when he saw the multitude at a distance in white garments while the
priests are clothed with fine linen, and the high priest in purple and scarlet
clothing, having the golden plate whereon the name of God was engraved, he
approached by himself and adored the name and greeted the high priest
first.” Now that’s very unusual; here
was the conqueror of the world grating the high priest and not the other way
around as protocol would dictates. This
was an astounding thing and really impressed the Jews. “The Jews also, altogether with one voice,”
Josephus goes on to say, “then did greet Alexander and encompassed him about
whereupon the kings of Syria and the rest were surprised at what Alexander had
done and supposed him disordered in his mind.
However, one of them alone went up to him and asked him how it came to
pass that when all the other countries adored Alexander, he should reverse
things and adore first the high priest of the Jews. Alexander replied, I did not adore him but
that the God who had honored him with his high priesthood, for I saw this very
priest in a dream and this very clothing when I was in Macedonia when I was
considering with myself how I might obtain the dominion of Asia, this priest
exhorted me to take no delay but boldly to pass over the sea for that he would
conduct my army and would give me the dominion over the Persians. Whence it is that having seen no other in
that particular clothing and now seeing this person in it, and remembering that
vision and the exhortation which I had in my dream, I believe that I bring this
army under the divine conduct and shall therewith conquer Darius and destroy
the power of the Persians, that all things will succeed according to what is in
my own mind. And when he had said this
to Parmenio and had given the high priest his right hand, the priest ran along
by him and he came into the city and when he went up into the temple he offered
sacrifice to God according to the high priest’s direction and magnificently
treated both the high priest and the priests.
After Alexander’s party went into the temple, and as they offered the
sacrifice, then the priests came out and opened the scroll and turned to the
book of Daniel. And when the book of
Daniel was shown to Alexander, wherein Daniel declared that one of the Greeks
should destroy the empire of the Persians, he supposed that himself was the
person intended, and as he was then glad he dismissed the multitude for the present. But the next day he called them to him and
begged them ask what favors they pleased of him, whereupon the high priest
desired that they might enjoy the laws of the Jews and might pay no tribute on
the seventh year.”
In other words, they asked for
a favor from Alexander to live under their own laws. So Alexander did that and a number of Jews
entered into his service. They entered
into his army and he also used many Jews as administrators throughout his
empire. And so Jews always had a special
status in Alexander’s empire. Now when
Alexander died, if we look at the verse, the next verse, apparently they didn’t
read the next verse to him, Daniel 11:5, “But as soon as he has arisen, his
kingdom will be broken up and divided toward the four winds,” so we have the
division of his kingdom into four. And
this was divided among four of his generals.
Now before we get to that,
one of the things that was caused to accomplish this was the intrigue among his
heirs. Alexander had a beautiful young
wife by the name of Roxana and at the time Alexander died she was
pregnant. And she had a son whom she
also named Alexander and he was the legitimate heir to Alexander’s throne. But Alexander also had a brother and this
brother was not very bright, and he had a very possessive mother. Remember it was his mother who had intrigued
also to have his father killed. So his
mother schemes and plots and hires a couple of hit men to take out Alexander’s
brother in order to secure the descendant to go to Alexander’s heir. So when Philip, Alexander’s brother was
assassinated and was poisoned, then that secured the inheritance to Alexander’s
son. But Alexander’s generals were also
very crafty and probably… this almost reminds me of that scene at the end of
Godfather, if you remember that, when everybody is getting murdered everywhere,
that’s what’s happening here and so the generals get together and they conspire
against Roxana and Olympia and they have them poisoned and killed as well as
the baby. So now that all of the heirs
are wiped out, only the generals can take over and so the Greek Empire that
Alexander amassed is now divided into four sections.
One of his generals, Ptolemy,
takes over Egypt and he initially has control over the area of Israel. The second general that takes control is
Seleucus, and Seleucus has control over much of Turkey and Syria and the
northern part of Palestine and what would be the main part of the old Babylonian
Persian Empire. The third general is
Cassander, Cassander gets control over Macedonia and Greece, and then
Lysimachus gets the small section of Thrace and the western part of Asia
Minor. Now if you’re geographically
challenged here’s a map that will give you an idea of this. This is the area of Greece and Macedonia;
this area went to Cassander. This area,
Thrace is just across from the Hellespont.
This little area right here, you have a small body of water here between
the Dardanelles and the Hellespont, this is the land bridge that goes between
Asia and Greece, and so it’s right in this area. Thrace is the country just on the European
side and Thrace and the western part of Turkey goes to Lysimachus. Then the main body goes to Seleucus, from the
southern part of modern Turkey, Asia Minor, all the way down through what would
be modern Syria, Iraq and Iran, that all went to Seleucus. And Ptolemy was down here in Egypt and also
out on Cyprus. But during the early
period he also controlled all the area that we would call modern Israel today.
What’s going to come up in
these next verses, from verse 5-16 is an outline of the history that will take
place over the next couple hundred years and the descendants of Seleucus and
Ptolemy vie for power and control in the Middle East. Some of this history may go right past you
because you’re not really interested in history, but the important thing you
should notice is the detail of the prophecy.
Remember most of the events that take place here do not take place for
another 300 years. This prophecy is
given in about 538 BC and most of these things aren’t fulfilled until that
period around 200 BC, plus or minus 50 years.
So it is clear predictive prophecy.
In verse 5 we’re told, “Then
the king of the South will grow strong, along with one of his princes who will
gain ascendancy over him and obtain dominion; his domain will be a great
dominion indeed.” So this introduces us
to the first personage who is simply referred to in the text as the king of the
south. There’s going to be a king of the
south in Daniel 11 and a king of the north. The king of the south is the Ptolemaic line;
the king of the north is the Seleucid line, which is in Syria. Don’t get that confused with, you may have
heard that the king of the north is invading at the beginning of the
Tribulation or sometime during the Tribulation, the king of the north, if we’re
going to stick with hermeneutics, the king of the north in Daniel 11 is Syria
or that area.
This is one of the greatest
interpretive challenges to understand Daniel 11 and I’m still trying to wade my
way through some of the details and frankly it just isn’t all that clear and
I’ve checked with several people and they say well, I teach it this way or I
teach it that way, then they’ll say I’m the least dogmatic about this than I am
anything else in Scripture, because when we get into the latter part of the
chapter we’re going to see some things that take place at the beginning, or
perhaps in the middle or maybe at the end of the Tribulation and we’ll have to
look at how those events fit with the invasion of Rosh, Meshech and Tubal in
Ezekiel 37 and 37 and that’s where the difficulty lies, is understanding how
these things connect together. So we’ll put
that off and just get into the easy part which is history. You can always see how prophecy was
accurately fulfilled historically but it’s not always clear how it’s going to
be fulfilled yet in the future. When the
times comes and it’s fulfilled we’ll say boy, that was precise. We’ll see exactly how it’s fulfilled but
sometimes ahead of time you’re not always sure and you’re not always as
accurate as you think you are.
Daniel 11:5 introduces this
king, he’s Ptolemy I, and he is the one who assembles a tremendous power base
in Egypt and along the Levant; that is the area that we call modern Israel
today. And this Ptolemaic line and the
Ptolemies are going to dominate the Middle East, including Israel, from 323 BC
until 200 BC and that ascendancy is going to end in 200 BC with the battle of Panias
between the Ptolemies in the south and the Seleucids in the north.
In Daniel 11:5 we read, “Then
the king of the South will grow strong,” this is the growth of Ptolemy I,
“along with one of his princes who will ascendancy over him and obtain
dominion; his domain will be a great dominion indeed.” Now this is somewhat of a confusing
translation. Actually, “the king of the
South will grow strong, along with one of his princes,” (comma) “along with one
of his princes,” that refers to Seleucus in the north, and “the one who will
gain ascendancy over him” is the king of the south, so there should be a comma
after “princes,” “the king of the South will grow strong, and he will gain
ascendancy over one of his princes and obtain dominion, and his domain will be
a great dominion.” This is exactly what
happened historically. Seleucus I served
under Ptolemy in Egypt; in fact, Seleucus I held a military post in the
Ptolemaic administration and was an admiral in Ptolemy I’s navy. Ultimately he left Ptolemy and went north as
he began to consolidate his own kingdom in the north.
Then in verse 6 we read, “And
after some year as they will form an alliance,” and this was the typical
procedure up until recent years, that if you were going to enter into a treaty
agreement between two nations you didn’t do it by sending all of your lawyers
and diplomats, what you did was you made sure you had lots of daughters and you
married your daughters off to these various kings and heads of state in other
countries and that would secure the treaty.
So this is exactly what happened in the way that the Ptolemies formed an
alliance with the Seleucids is that Ptolemy II had a daughter by the name of
Bernice and Bernice was sent north to marry Seleucus.
And this is the reference
here, she is the daughter of Ptolemy Philadelphus, who is Ptolemy II, and she
marries Antiochus II in the north. Now
both her father, Ptolemy Philadelphus, and her husband, Antiochus II die in the
same year, 246 BC. And that’s what’s
prophesied here. “…and the daughter of
the king of the south will come to the king of the north to carry out a
peaceful arrangement.” She’s going to
seal the peace treaty. “But she will not
retain her position of power,” she’s put in a place of power but she doesn’t
retain it because even though she comes to be the wife of Seleucus what happens
is he already has a wife and her name is Laodice, and for obvious reasons she
is very jealous of the young and beautiful Bernice, and also very vindictive so
she is going to hatch a plot, this is one of the famous scandals in the ancient
world, and she is going to manage to poison Antiochus II. She had already provided him with a son named
Seleucus II whom she wanted to be the heir to the throne. So in order to secure that she also poisoned
Bernice and a son that had borne for Antiochus II which left Seleucus II as the
sole heir to the throne of the Seleucid line.
When it says that she “did not retain her position of power” it’s
because she was killed.
“…nor will he remain with his
power,” that refers to her husband, Antiochus II, and he could “not remain with
his power” because he died in that same year, 246 BC, “but she shall be given
up, along with those who brought her in,” the whole entourage is wiped out by
this vindictive other wife, “and the ones who sired her,” that is Ptolemy
Philadelphus, “the one who sired her as well as he who supported her in those
times,” her father dies. Her father dies
in Egypt, her husband dies in Syria; he’s poisoned, she’s poisoned, the child
they had is poisoned, everybody is wiped out and there’s a major turning point
in the affairs of state between the Ptolemies and the Seleucids.
Then in Daniel 11:7 it
states, “But one of the descendants of her line will arise in his place,” now
the descendant of her line is not an …[tape turns]…actually in verse 7 it more
accurately reads, “But from a branch of her roots,” think of a family tree, “a
branch of her roots,” her roots goes back to her ancestors and another branch
is someone coming out of another line of the family, and that refers to her
brother. Her brother was Ptolemy III who
was called by history, Euergetes, which means
the benefactor. And this is a reference
to him. “One of the descendants of her
line will arise in his place, and he will come against their army” that is the
army of the Seleucids in the north, “and enter the fortress of the king of the
North, and he will deal with them and display great strength.” So he’s going to head north and he’s going to
defeat the armies of the Seleucids. And
as he does that he’s going to conquer Babylon which is one of their major
strongholds and when he does that, remember he’s from Egypt; he’s got an
Egyptian army, they’re going to come in and they’re going to go into the
temples in Babylon and they’re going to discover all of these tremendous
objects that had been stolen from them back when the Persians had invaded under
Cambyses, invaded and conquered Egypt.
So they go into the temple and they find all of these artifacts and all
their idols and all the gold and silver and they’re going to take that back to
Egypt and for that reason he is called the great benefactor of the
Egyptians.
We read in Daniel 11:8, “And
also their gods,” all of their golden idols and silver idols had been taken to
Babylon, “also their gods with their metal images and their precious vessels of
silver and gold he will take into captivity to Egypt, and he on his part will
refrain from attacking the king of the North for some years.” So after that there will be a period of peace
or relative stability in the region.
Then in verse 9 we read, “Then the latter will enter the realm of the
king of the South,” the “later” is the king of the north, another descendant of
the Seleucids, and this is Seleucus III and his son, Antiochus III the
Great. And in verse 9 they are going to
return to Egypt and invade Egypt and it says, “the latter will enter the realm
of the king of the South, but will return to his own land.” Verse 10, “And his sons will mobilize and
assemble a multitude of great forces; and one of them will keep on coming and
overflow and pass through that he may again wage war up to his very fortress.” Now this gets a little confusing because of
all of the pronouns. The term “his sons”
refers to the individual in verse 9 who chased after the king of the South. “The sons” in verse 10 are the sons of
Seleucus II. He had two sons, Seleucus
III and Antiochus III. Antiochus III
called himself Antiochus the Great and he mobilizes his army against the king
of the South. Seleucus III died in
battle three years after he succeeded his father and he was in turn succeeded
by his brother, Antiochus III. Now he is
the one is the father of Antiochus IV, called Antiochus Epiphanes who we’ll
study next time.
But he heads down to attack
the Ptolemies and is defeated just south of Gaza. So he has to go down and he goes through the
land, notice it says he “will keep on coming and overflow,” that is he
overflows through the land of Israel, and he “passes through,” so God is
warning the Jews at that time that you are going to be overrun time and time
again by these armies. You’re going to
be right in the middle of this battle between the king of the North and the
king of the South, and this is going to be a tremendous time of calamity and
instability for you.
Now here’s the
application. We live in a time when we
have this war against terrorist. We
don’t know what’s going to happen. We
don’t know if there’s going to be another major terrorist attack on this
country in the next couple of weeks or the next six months; we don’t know if
it’s going to be just a few attacks here and there, suicide bombers or
something of that nature or whether it’s going to be another major event on the
order of September 11. But whatever
happens it could have devastating consequences for the economic life of this
nation. There are some areas, some
industries, some business that because of what happened on September 11 they
haven’t been able to recover. There are
people, not only living in New York but in other parts of the country who basically
lost their jobs and their careers, or their jobs or careers are in serious
jeopardy as a result of the economic instability since September 11. Whenever you live in a nation during a time
of war of whenever there is international or national instability, people who
have nothing to do with those events are going to suffer tremendously. Some of you may remember World War II; even
during World War II, times like that there were many people in this nation who
suffered. Perhaps they were in a job
where there was rationing and they just basically couldn’t deal in their
commodity during the war and they lost their career. They suffered not because they were in
battle, not because they lost a loved one but simply because they could not
exercise their career in a nation that was involved in a war like that at that
time.
There’s all kinds of
collateral suffering that we’re going to go through during this war of
terrorism and in order to survive you have to have doctrine in your soul and
you have to realize God is still in control even though you may go through a
time of tremendous personal difficulty and suffering. And this is the underlying warning in this
chapter to the Jews, is that there’s going to be war, there’s going to be
suffering, you’re going to be overrun, your cities, your towns, your villages,
are going to be overrun. When these
armies come through they’re going to at times rape the women, they’re going to
kill people, they’re going to persecute Jews and you have to be prepared to
handle it and the only way that you’ll be prepared is through doctrine. So that’s one of the reasons this information
is given.
This is a picture of the time
during the later Maccabean kingdom but it gives us an idea of the geography of
the area. If we look at this area,
here’s Gaza, this area along the Mediterranean is the present Gaza Strip and
there’s the town Raphia just south of Gaza.
This was the site of the defeat of Antiochus III by Ptolemy IV.
In Daniel 11:11 we read, “And
the king of the South will be enraged and go forth and fight with the king of
the North.” So the Ptolemies are going
to head north and fight with the king of North, and “the latter,” that is the
Seleucid, and this would be Antiochus III, “will raise a great multitude, but
that multitude will be given into the hand of the former.” So this is referencing Antiochus III’s defeat
by the Ptolemies. Verse 12, “When the
multitude is carried away, his heart will be lifted up, and he will cause tens
of thousands to fall;” this is the pride of Antiochus III who then went back in
defeat, and caused tremendous problems, he continued to try to fight the king
of the South and hundreds lost their life, “yet he will not prevail. [13] For the king of the North will again
raise a greater multitude than the former, and after an interval of some years
he will press on with a great army and much equipment. [14] Now in those times many will rise up
against the king of the South; the violent ones among your people” that is the
Jews, “will also lift themselves up in order to fulfill the vision, but they
will fall down.” Notice the warning;
don’t get involved in the warfare between the king of the South and the king of
the North. Those who do, those who align
themselves with the king of the North are going to end up suffering and they
will be defeated. So there’s a warning
there not to get involved in this warfare between the king of the north and the
king of the south.
Daniel 11:15, “Then the king
of the North will come, cast up a siege a mound, and capture a well fortified
city; and the forces of the South will not stand their ground, not even their
choicest troops, for there will be no strength to make a stand.” This is talking about the capture of Sidon
where the forces of the South have come up and captured Sidon and then the
forces of the North attack them, and defeat them and they are driven back down
into the south. Then we come to verse
16, “But he who comes against him will do as he pleases,” this is a reference
to Antiochus IV Epiphanes, that “he who comes against him,” the second “him”
there is the king of the South, “he will do as he pleases, and no one will be
able to withstand him; he will also stay for a time in the Beautiful Land,”
that is Israel, “with destruction in his hand.”
So this is a warning of
coming destruction under Antiochus Epiphanes.
Now these verses give us the background in terms of the prophecy of the
setup for Antiochus Epiphanes. Antiochus
Epiphanes is the one ruler in human history who is chosen by the Old Testament,
by God, to be a representative, a type of the antichrist. So if we want to know what the antichrist is
going to be like, we have a picture God provides for us in the person of
Antiochus Epiphanes and in what happens during his reign as he is attacking
Israel. We’ve studied some of this already
but we’re going to get into more detail in the next section, and from verse 17
down through verse 28, we’re going to focus on Antiochus Epiphanes and that’s
going to be important to set the framework for understanding the function of
the antichrist during the Tribulation.
In verse 29 there is a shift,
and from that point on we’re talking about the antichrist, not the historical
figure of Antiochus Epiphanes. With our
heads bowed…