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Sovereign God, Daniel 4:28-37 What Is God Really Like #5
Sovereign God, Daniel 4:28-37 What is God Really Like #5 ✦Intro: Modern research has show that Nebuchadnezzer was the greatest monarch that Babylon or perhaps the East generally, has ever produced. He must have possessed an enormous command of human labor for nine tenths of Babylon itself and 19/20ths of all other ruins that in almost countless profusion cover the land, are composed of bricks stamped with his name. He appears to have built or restored almost every city and temple in the whole country. His inscriptions give an elaborate account of the immense works which he constructed in and about Babylon itself, abundantly illustration the boast, “Is not this great Babylon which I have built?” (Rawlinson, Historical Illustrations) Many inscriptions in cuneiform have been found, which describe the city. There is also an account by the Greek historian Herodotus, who visited the city of Babylon in about 460 BC. Here are some interesting things he recorded: ✦-The city was laid out in the form of a square, 14 miles on each side, and of enormous magnitude ✦-The brick wall was 56 miles long, 300 feet high, 25 feet thick with another wall 75 feet behind the first wall, and the wall extended 35 feet below the ground ✦-250 towers that were 450 feet high 1 Sovereign God, Daniel 4:28-37 What is God Really Like #5 ✦-A wide and deep moat that encircled the city ✦-The Euphrates River also flowed through the middle of the city. Ferry boats and a 1/2 mi. long bridge with drawbridges closed at night ✦Golden image of Baal and the Golden Table (both weighing over 50,000 lbs of solid gold.) ✦-2 golden lions, a solid gold human figure (18 feet high) ✦Nebuchadnezzar was our kinda guy. -
Alan R. Millard, "Daniel 1
A.R. Millard, “Daniel 1-6 and History,” Evangelical Quarterly 49.2 (April-June 1977): 67-73. Daniel 1-6 and History A. R. Millard [p.67] Current discussions on Daniel in commentaries and Old Testament introductions commonly consider the stories of Daniel and his Three Friends to be traditional tales originating “in the eastern Jewish Diaspora during the Hellenistic period”.1 The assumed Maccabaean author of Daniel then utilized them to encourage the faithful in a time of persecution. A minority opinion, most ably forwarded by H. H. Rowley, holds that the author of Daniel himself “made use of traditions older than his day, but moulded them to serve his purpose”.2 Clearly both views adopt a second century B.C. dating for the book, but for chapters 1 to 6 the basic reasons are historical and linguistic, whereas for the later chapters the question of detailed predictive prophecy is central. It is to historical aspects of the stories that this essay is directed. Before turning to them, however, attention may be drawn to the linguistic argument based upon the Aramaic of Daniel in the light of K. A. Kitchen’s conclusion: “there is nothing to decide the date of composition of the Aramaic of Daniel on the grounds of Aramaic anywhere between the late sixth and the second century B.C…. It is equally obscurantist to exclude dogmatically a sixth-fifth (or fourth) century date on the one hand, or to hold such a date as mechanically proven on the other, as far as the Aramaic is concerned.”3 Although H. -
Daniel for Individuals Or Groups Start of Old Testament Period Creation
IT’S NOT THE END OF THE WORLD 11 STUDIES IN DANIEL FOR INDIVIDUALS OR GROUPS START OF OLD TESTAMENT PERIOD CREATION ADAM & EVE THE FALL Please do not republish republish not do Please NOAH THE FLOOD | BABEL ABRAHAM (c. 2165-1990) visualunit.me ISAAC (c. 2065-1885) | JACOB (c. 2000-1860) JOSEPH (c. 1910-1800) MOSES (c. 1525 - 1405) THE EXODUS (c. 1450) JOSHUA THE LAW THE PROMISED LAND BIBLE TIMELINE © Mark Barry 2008 All use. personal for copy to free feel but permission, without approximate. are dates THE JUDGES (c. 1380-1050) SAUL (reign 1050-1010) DAVID (reign 1010-970) SOLOMON (reign 970-930) THE TEMPLE (966) REHOBOAM (reign 930-913) JEROBOAM I (reign 930-909) SOUTHERN KINGDOM: JUDAH NORTHERN KINGDOM: ISRAEL ELIJAH (875-848) ISAIAH (740-681) ELISHA (848-797) MICAH (750-686) JONAH (785-775) KINGDOM HOSEA (750-715) JEREMIAH (626-585) DIVIDED OBADIAH (605-585) (922) EZEKIEL (593-571) 1st DEPORTATION (597) EXILE TO DANIEL (605-530) ASSYRIA 2nd DEPORTATION (586) JERUSALEM DESTROYED (722) EXILE TO 1st RETURN (538) BABYLON under ZERUBBABEL ZECHARIAH (520-480) (597-432) 2nd RETURN (458) under EZRA MALACHI (440-430) LAST RETURN (432) under NEHEMIAH END OF OLD TESTAMENT PERIOD BETWEEN THE TESTAMENTS (432-5 BC) START OF NEW TESTAMENT PERIOD JESUS BORN (5 BC) JESUS BEGINS PUBLIC MINISTRY (26 AD) JOHN THE BAPTIST JESUS’ DEATH, RESURRECTION + ASCENSION (30) PENTECOST (30) PAUL CONVERTED (35) 1st MISSIONARY JOURNEY (46-48) JAMES MARTYRED + PETER IMPRISONED (44) 2nd MISSIONARY JOURNEY (50-52) JERUSALEM COUNCIL (49-50) 3rd MISSIONARY JOURNEY (53-57) -
The Recurrent Usage of Daniel in Apocalyptic Movements in History Zachary Kermitz
Florida State University Libraries Honors Theses The Division of Undergraduate Studies 2012 The Recurrent Usage of Daniel in Apocalyptic Movements in History Zachary Kermitz Follow this and additional works at the FSU Digital Library. For more information, please contact [email protected] Abstract: (Daniel, apocalypticism, William Miller) This thesis is a comparison of how three different apocalyptic religious groups interpret the Book of Daniel as referring to their particular group and circumstances despite the vast differences from the book’s original context. First, the authorship of the book of Daniel itself is analyzed to establish the original intent of the book and what it meant to its target audience in the second century BCE. This first chapter is also used as a point of comparison to the other groups. Secondly, the influence of Daniel on the authorship of the book of Revelation and early Christianity is examined. In the third chapter, the use of Daniel amongst the Millerites, a nineteenth century American apocalyptic religious movement is analyzed. To conclude, the use of Daniel amongst the three groups is compared allowing for conclusions of how these particular groups managed to understand the book of Daniel as referring to their own particular group and circumstances with some attention paid to modern trends in interpretation as well. THE FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES THE RECURRENT USAGE OF DANIEL IN APOCALYPTIC MOVEMENTS IN HISTORY By ZACHARY KERMITZ A Thesis submitted to the Department of Religion in partial fulfillment of the requirements for graduation with Honors in the Major Degree Awarded: Spring, 2012 2 The members of the Defense Committee approve the thesis of Zachary Kermitz defended on April 13, 2012. -
Daniel 4 God Reigns!
Daniel 4 God reigns! Prayer for illumination: Introduction: Right now, Chinese Christians are facing the worst persecution they have faced since 1982. In the last few months hundreds of Churches have been shut down. Authorities recently raided churches in the Henan province kicking down doors, tearing down crosses, and destroying church property. Afterwards church doors were locked permanently. Those who resisted were beaten or hauled off to prison. The pastors who refused to promote the communist party are thrown in Jail. Others are sent to communist re-education camps. Who is behind this? Chinese president Xi Jinping (she jin ping) the most powerful leader in China since Mao. I’m sure the Christians in China are discouraged and probably wondering if God is still in control. This brings us to Daniel chapter 4. The Jews to whom this book was written were prisoners in Babylon. After their capital city was sacked by King N. they were deported to Babylon to live under the rule of an evil tyrant. They wondered if God was still in control. If God was still good. Have you ever wondered this? Maybe you wonder why Obama ran our country for eight years, or why Trump runs our country now, or why the recent supreme court confirmation hearings have been such a circus? When we don’t like the direction of our leaders, or the circumstances they put us in, we wonder if God still in control? Daniel 4 answers this question. Through King Nebuchadnezzar’s dream and its fulfillment, we are reminded that God rules the nations. -
Daniel 1. Who Was Daniel? the Name the Name Daniel Occurs Twice In
Daniel 1. Who was Daniel? The name The name Daniel occurs twice in the Book of Ezekiel. Ezek 14:14 says that even Noah, Daniel, and Job could not save a sinful country, but could only save themselves. Ezek 28:3 asks the king of Tyre, “are you wiser than Daniel?” In both cases, Daniel is regarded as a legendary wise and righteous man. The association with Noah and Job suggests that he lived a long time before Ezekiel. The protagonist of the Biblical Book of Daniel, however, is a younger contemporary of Ezekiel. It may be that he derived his name from the legendary hero, but he cannot be the same person. A figure called Dan’el is also known from texts found at Ugarit, in northern Syrian, dating to the second millennium BCE. He is the father of Aqhat, and is portrayed as judging the cause of the widow and the fatherless in the city gate. This story may help explain why the name Daniel is associated with wisdom and righteousness in the Hebrew Bible. The name means “God is my judge,” or “judge of God.” Daniel acquires a new identity, however, in the Book of Daniel. As found in the Hebrew Bible, the book consists of 12 chapters. The first six are stories about Daniel, who is portrayed as a youth deported from Jerusalem to Babylon, who rises to prominence at the Babylonian court. The second half of the book recounts a series of revelations that this Daniel received and were interpreted for him by an angel. -
Chiasmus of Daniel 2 - 7 Nebuchadnezzar’S Dream Babylon Daniel 2 Daniel 2:4B-7:28 Is Written in Aramaic Not Hebrew SILVER 1
Vision of the Four Beasts Chronology of and the Eternal Dominion The Book of Daniel of the Son of Man Jeremiah Daniel 7 70 Years (Jeremiah 25:8-14) 70 = 490/7 years of Sabbaths for the land (2 Chronicles 36:21) Darius Evil-Merodach (Medes) Nebuchadnezzar Belshazzar … Cyrus (Persians) 586 605 562 553 539 535 first Ezekiel return deportation 553 BC under 585 BC Four Beasts Zerubbabel 605 BC Fall of Tyre Little Horn Daniel refuses Ancient of Days 538-534 BC delicacies 587 BC (Ch 7) Lion’s Den (Ch 1) Golden Image (Ch 6) 571-562 BC Fiery Furnace 551 BC 603 BC Nebuchadnezzar’s 539 BC ~534 W. Cochran (Ch 3) Ram & Goat Great Statue judgment Writing on Wall Kings N/S [email protected] (Ch 8) (Ch 2) (Ch 4) 70 Weeks Time of End (Ch 5, 9) (Ch 10-12) 1 2 Five Kingdoms of GOLD Nebuchadnezzar Chiasmus of Daniel 2 - 7 Nebuchadnezzar’s Dream Babylon Daniel 2 Daniel 2:4b-7:28 is written in Aramaic not Hebrew SILVER 1. Babylon (Nebuchadnezzar v 37, 38) Media • A : Dream of four kingdoms replaced by a fifth (Ch 2) Persia 2. Media / Persia • B : Daniel’s three friends in fiery furnace (Ch 3) Bronze Greece 3. Greece • C : Daniel’s interpretation of dream for Nebuchadnezzar (Ch 4) • C : Daniel’s interpretation of handwriting on wall for 4. Rome (which becomes divided) Iron Belshazzar (Ch 5) Rome 5. Millennial / Eternal Kingdom B : Daniel in the Lion’s Den (Ch 6) break & • consume • A : Vision of four kingdoms replaced by a fifth (Ch 7) Iron & Clay 3 4 Daniel’s Vision of Four Beasts Kingdoms in Daniel Daniel 7:1-8 Nebuchadnezzar’s Daniel’s Vision of “beasts came of from the sea” v.2 Kingdom Dream of Statue Four Beast Daniel 8 • Daniel 2 Daniel 7 • First beast of Revelation 13 Lion with Babylon Head of Gold rose “out of the sea” eagle’s wings Bear raised up on Chest and arms 1. -
Redeemer Daniel Study Guide.Indd
A STUDY GUIDE Dear Redeemer Church Family, This semester we are going to work through the Book of Daniel. It’s fi lled with heroic stories, historical events, heavenly perspectives on current and future events; and while this book was written in the 6th century BC, it’s still incredibly relevant for us today. Daniel was taken into exile as a teenager and spent the majority of his life in a culture completely opposed to God, yet he remained faithful. If you’re like me, it can feel like our world is pushing harder and harder against those who live to follow Jesus. It can be discouraging. It can feel hopeless. And we can wonder if there’s a way forward. STUDY GUIDE Thankfully, nothing we’re going through can compare to what Daniel and his friends went through, which means if there was hope for them, then there’s hope for us! So, my prayer is that you’ll dive into Daniel, learn applicable lessons, grasp gospel-truths, and see a way forward to thrive in our current culture. In Christ, Jeff Martin How to Use this Guide For the next few months, the Redeemer Preaching Calendar will center on the book of Daniel. This guide, however, is not for the purpose of going deeper into the sermon, but to go deeper into the text before you listen to the sermon. Each week has two main components: Personal Study and Questions for Discussion; and there will also be other helpful tools thrown in from time-to-time. The “Personal Study” can be taken at your own pace, but it’s recommended to pick one day, hunker down, read the whole chapter, and answer the provided questions corresponding to each section of Scripture. -
Daniel 2.1-49, God's Kingdom. the Only Kingdom That Will Never Be
God’s Kingdom: The Only Kingdom That Will Never Be Destroyed Daniel 2:1-49 Introduction 1) Man, with his ambitions, ego and idolatries is often impressed by what he can build. God, on the other hand, is not. If you would like God’s opinion on the great Kingdoms that men build in this world, then simply look at Daniel 2:35 where He says they “all together [are] broken in pieces, and became like the chaff of the summer threshing floors; and the wind carried them away, so that not a trace of them could be found.” In our modern vernacular we might say they are “dust in the wind.” They are “here today and gone tomorrow.” There is only one kingdom “that shall never be destroyed.” It is the kingdom “the God of heaven will set up” (2:44), the kingdom that God revealed in dreams to a pagan king named Nebuchadnezzar, dreams that only His servant Daniel could interpret. 2) In Daniel 1:17 we are told that God gave Daniel “understanding in all visions and dreams.” Now in chapter 2 we see how valuable this gift from God is. It is a gift that will save not only his life, but also the lives of his friends (v.17) and the lives of all the wise men, magicians, enchanters, astrologers and sorcerers in Babylon. How did all of this come to pass? Listen to the story Daniel tells. I. God creates impossible situations to reveal His greatness 2:1-16 1 1) Daniel 2-7 has a number of interesting characteristics that enhance our understanding of what God is trying to teach us. -
“The Book of Daniel - Introduction” Daniel 1: 1-2
“The Book of Daniel - Introduction” Daniel 1: 1-2 June 23, 2019 Daniel = God is my judge Daniel bridges the entire 70 years of Babylonian captivity Daniel was written to encourage the exiled Jews by revealing God’s program for them (both during and after the time of Gentile power in the world). Why God Judged Israel - 2 reasons: Reason #1 - Israel did not obey the land sabbath What is a land sabbath? Leviticus 25: 1-7 Why did Israel not obey the land sabbath? They did not trust God!! The Consequence: 70 years of captivity in Babylon 2 Chronicles 36: 20-21 LESSON: WHEN GOD SAYS SOMETHING, HE MEANS IT!!!! Why God Judged Israel - 2 reasons: Reason #2 - Israel was immersed in IDOLATRY Peaked with the sins of Manasseh = 2 Kings 21: 2-9 Babylon was used by God to crush Judah because of the sins of Manasseh - 2 Kings 24: 3-4 IMPORTANT: All the nation was complicit with the sins of Manasseh LESSON: - God will cause you to choose between Him and your idols - God will not accept a divided heart!! “Choose you this day whom you will serve” - Joshua 24: 15 Timeline for The Book of Daniel (please see your handout) Why Study Bible Prophecy? (excerpted from Austin Precepts) Many in the modern church minimize the teaching of Bible Prophecy - it’s too scary, too controversial, no one knows what the symbolism means, and on it goes The following are reasons why we study Bible Prophecy: 1) 20% of Scripture is prophecy. Daniel contains the basic prophecies that form the background for God’s plan for the ages 2) Cults misuse Bible prophecy - making it imperative that you have knowledge of the subject 3) The study of prophecy increases your faith. -
Teacher Bible Study Lesson Overview/Schedule
1st-3rd Grade Kids Bible Study Guide Unit 19, Session 3: God Gave Daniel Wisdom TEACHER BIBLE STUDY This week’s Bible story opens with a feast—a great banquet hosted in the palace by King Belshazzar. A thousand of his nobles were in attendance. The supply of wine was plentiful. King Belshazzar and those closest to him drank from the holy vessels that Belshazzar’s ancestor, King Nebuchadnezzar, had taken from the house of God in Jerusalem. They drank and praised their false gods. Several years had passed since King Nebuchadnezzar’s reign. Babylon had seen a handful of successions, and though Daniel still served the king, he had likely lost his high-ranking position after Nebuchadnezzar’s death. The great feast was suddenly interrupted when a human hand appeared; its fingers wrote a message on the wall. The king did not understand the message. Neither did the astrologers or wise men. The queen (possibly Belshazzar’s grandmother) remembered Daniel and his ability to understand dreams and signs. God had given Daniel wisdom to understand visions and dreams of every kind. (Daniel 1:17) Daniel read the words on the wall: MENE, MENE, TEKEL, PARSIN. As verbs, these Aramaic words mean “numbered,” “weighed,” and “divided.” They can also be interpreted as a series of weights: “a mina, a mina, a shekel, and half-shekels.” Daniel interpreted the message. God had evaluated Belshazzar and found that he wasn’t good enough. God was bringing his reign to an end. The kingdom would be divided. Belshazzar, who had witnessed the consequences of Nebuchadnezzar’s sinful pride, did not humble himself before the Lord. -
The Visions of Daniel
The Dreams & Visions of the Prophet Daniel Jeff Asher © 2003 Nebuchadnezzar’s Dream Daniel 2:31–45 I. INTRODUCTION: A. Who Was Daniel And How Did He Come to Be in Babylon? 1. A man of great faith (1:8; 6:10) 2. A prophet of God (2:30) 3. A son of the royal house of Judah (1:1–6) 4. A captive of the children of Judah in Babylon (Daniel 1:1, 21; 10:1; Jeremiah 25:11; 29:10) B. The Circumstances of this Particular Vision: 1. Nebuchadnezzar had a dream (2:1). 2. He called for his diviners to tell and interpret its meaning and they could not (2:2–9). 3. The king decrees that all his “wise men” be put to death (2:10–13). This decree included Daniel. 4. Daniel asks for time to ask God the interpretation (2:14–23). 5. Daniel stands before Nebuchadnezzar and praises Jehovah for the revelation and proceeds to give it (2: 24–30). C. What Did Nebuchadnezzar Dream? 1. A great image in the form of a man (2:31–35). 2. The image composed of four elements: gold, silver, brass, iron mixed with clay. 3. A stone cut out without hands which struck the image, broke it into pieces and grew until it filled the whole earth. II. DISCUSSION: A. The Four Elements Represent Four Kingdoms in Succession–– 1. The head of gold is Nebuchadnezzar (2:38). 2 2. The breast and arms of silver are an inferior kingdom (2:39). 3. The belly and thighs of brass shall bear rule over all the earth (2:39).