The book of Daniel is an
excellent prediction of the coming of the Messiah
and the triumph of His messianic kingdom (2:44-45;
7:7-28; 9:24-27; 12:1-4).
The book of Daniel
contains the crucial foundational passages
concerning Israel and the coming of the Messiah,
Jesus Christ. In these chapters you will find one of
the most dominant prophecies of the coming of Christ
ever recorded. The phrase "in the latter days"
describes the coming of the messianic age which God
will bring in as the climax of history. It is the
time when God will bring in His kingdom and all
history will reach its consummation.
Daniel describes the
final events when this present age with its sin and
rebellion will give way to the “age to come” in
which evil will be destroyed and all wrongs set
right. The kingdom is coming is his powerful
message.
We will make every
attempt to allow the Bible to speak for itself as we
apply the historical-grammatical rules of
interpretation and therefore, let the Bible tell its
own eternal message.
Years ago the beloved
expositor Harry Ironside said, "Where there is
light, there is bugs." It is my prayer that we see
the light of the Shekinah glory of God in the face
of Jesus Christ. May He deliver us from the bugs of
wild fanciful imagination and hermeneutical abuses.
I have only one agenda:
what does the Word of God say. I want to examine
carefully His Word and be obedient to its message.
Someone called the book
of Daniel "the book of Revelation in the Old
Testament."
The claim in the book is
that the author Daniel made the prophecies contained
therein and therefore must be taken in their plain
sense. Daniel lived about 620-535 B. C. and wrote
his prophecy in that time period while living in
exile in Babylon.
The book of Daniel opens
with Daniel as a young captive in Babylon. The
events are centered on the captivity of Israel in
583 B.C. when the city was destroyed and
Nebuchadnezzar, the king of Babylon, took the
Israelites to live in the city of Babylon and
provinces of the Babylonian empire. Daniel is one of
those captives who were taken as a teenager from
Jerusalem to spend the rest of his life in exile in
a foreign land. The book ends with Daniel as an
elderly man, honored and respected as a statesman,
having served under several kings in both the
Babylonian and Medio-Persian empires.
Four nations are referred
to symbolically in visions and dreams in Daniel.
They are Babylon (605-538 B.C.), Medio-Persia
(538-331 B.C.), Greece (331-146 B.C.) and Rome (146
B.C.-A.D. 476).
A VISION OF THE FUTURE
WORLD KINGDOMS (2:31-45)
In chapter two
Nebuchadnezzar, the king of Babylon, had some
nightmares. He dreamed and called his "magicians,
the conjurers, the sorcerers and the Chaldeans
(master astrologers), to tell the king his dreams"
(2:2). He put panic in their hearts when he told
them to "declare to me the dream and its
interpretation" but he didn't tell them what the
dream was. He forgot it! The counselors rebelled
because they knew they were on the verge of exposure
for their deception. If they were truly able, by
supernatural power, to interpret dreams, then surely
it would make no difference to them if the king
remembered the dream or not. Their supernatural
powers would give them the unremembered dream!
Therefore, their duplicity was exposed. When they
failed to come up with the dream Daniel told the
king, "There is a God in heaven who reveals
mysteries," and He always bats a thousand. This God,
says Daniel, "has made known to King Nebuchadnezzar
what will be in the latter days" (2:29).
Daniel reveals and
interprets King Nebuchadnezzar's dream (2:31-35).
You, O king, were looking
and behold, there was a single great statue; that
statue, which was large and of extraordinary
splendor, was standing in front of you, and its
appearance was awesome. The head of that statue was
made of fine gold, its breast and its arms of
silver, its belly and its thighs of bronze, its legs
of iron, its feet partly of iron and partly of clay.
You continued looking until a stone was cut out
without hands, and it struck the statue on its feet
of iron and clay and crushed them. Then the iron,
the clay, the bronze, the silver and the gold were
crushed all at the same time and became like chaff
from the summer threshing floors; and the wind
carried them away so that not a trace of them was
found. But the stone that struck the statue became a
great mountain and filled the whole earth.
In verses 36-40 Daniel
interprets the dream for the king. There are four
empires and Babylon is the first empire with
Nebuchadnezzar as the head. A second kingdom which
would be inferior to the first would follow it.
History identifies it even before the book of Daniel
closed, as the Medio-Persian Empire. It in turn is
followed by a third empire that came upon the scene
quickly. Chapter eight of Daniel reveals it as the
kingdom of Greece under Alexander the Great. The
fourth empire includes the Roman Empire. The book of
Revelation clearly identifies this empire with the
city of Rome. It is significant that the period
embraced by the image covers all of time from the
Babylonian Empire to the Second Coming of Jesus
Christ.
The remarkable thing
about this dream is its ending. A final kingdom
comes out of nowhere and smashes the huge image.
"You continued to look until a stone was cut without
hands, and it struck the statue on its feet of iron
and clay and crushed them" (v. 34). It didn't have
any human help. It was by divine providence. It is
the kingdom of God. The final kingdom that comes out
of heaven as a stone cut without hands and strikes
the grotesque image and destroys it is the kingdom
of God. All of the kingdoms of men will end at the
appearing of God's kingdom. If we have any doubt it
is quickly cleared up in verse 44. "And in the days
of those kings the God of heaven will set up a
kingdom which will never be destroyed, and that
kingdom will not be left for another people; it will
crush and put an end to all these kingdoms, but it
will itself endure forever." Ultimately God's
kingdom will prevail over all the earth with the
right monarch on the throne. He will be the Lord
Jesus Christ, the King of kings, and Lord of lords.
He is the "blessed and only sovereign" (1 Timothy
6:15). He is God's rightful King. God's eternal
purpose will then be done on earth as it is in
heaven (Matthew 6:10). It is the kingdom of God
through the reign of the Messiah (cf. Luke 1:31-33;
John 18:33-40). "How great are His signs, and how
mighty are His wonders! His kingdom is an
everlasting kingdom, and His dominion is from
generation to generation" (Daniel 4:3).
It is also significant
that we have not yet reached the end of
Nebuchadnezzar's dream and its meaning. As we shall
see in this Hebrew prophecy the empire of
Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon has long ago crumbled into
dust and the great Babylon is an uninhabited
desolation of ruins covered with the dust of the
centuries. However, it is still the dream that this
king dreamed that is being fulfilled by the world
political powers even in our day.
Daniel has several
Messianic prophecies: 2:44, 45; 7:13-14; 9:24-26.
THE "SON OF MAN" IS
COMING (7:13-14).
Chapters two and seven
seem to follow the same general pattern. Most
scholars interpret the four beasts in chapter seven
as the same nations we saw in chapter two, Babylon,
Medio-Persia, Greece and an empire beginning with
Rome but extending to the Second Coming of Jesus
Christ. Daniel writes,
"I kept looking in the
night visions,
And behold, with the
clouds of heaven
One like a Son of Man was
coming,
And He came up to the
Ancient of Days
And was presented before
Him.
And to Him was given
dominion,
Glory and a kingdom,
That all the peoples,
nations and men of every language
Might serve Him.
His dominion is an
everlasting dominion
Which will not pass away;
And His kingdom is one
Which will not be
destroyed."
The "Son of Man" referred
to here is not strictly a man as other men are but
appeared as other men. It is a comparison. We
immediately think of the divine and human nature of
Jesus Christ, the God-man. His two natures are
perfectly working together. This divine nature is
reflected in the fact that He appears "with the
clouds of heaven."
This is the term Jesus
used to identify Himself with humanity. It speaks of
His lowliness, humanity, patience as well as triumph
and victory. He uses the term over 80 times in the
Gospels as a substitute for the pronoun "I." He used
it when making great claims on men and when
referring to His suffering, death and resurrection.
But He also uses it when speaking of His future
glory and His coming again (Matthew 16:27, 28;
19:28; 24:30; 25:31; Luke 22:30).
In the book of Revelation
He is seen in the opening chapters as possessing all
power in heaven and on earth. He takes the scroll
with the seals and opens it. Daniel sees this same
person coming with clouds of heaven to the Ancient
of Days (cf. Matthew 26:64; Mark 14:62). Christ is
often associated with coming in clouds of heaven
(Matthew 24:30; 26:64; Mark 13:26; Revelation 1:7;
14:14).
Jesus told the high
priest at his trial, "You shall see the Son of Man
sitting at the right hand of power, and coming on
the clouds of heavens." The high priest knew what
Jesus was saying and almost had a stroke. This is
why they voted that night to kill Jesus and crucify
Him the next morning.
On another occasion Jesus
said, "The Son of Man shall come in His glory with
all His angels with Him. Then He will sit on His
glorious throne" (Matthew 25:31). At that time His
throne will be established and all nations shall
gather before Him and worship Him. The Lord God is
in sovereign control of history.
The promised kingdom in
Daniel is fulfilled in the coming of Jesus and the
establishment of His kingdom. It is “now and yet to
be” in that it is already present in the coming of
Jesus to this earth, and will reach its consummation
when He returns in glory at the second coming. We
proclaim the kingdom of God when we preach the death
of Jesus for our sins and His resurrection. We enter
the kingdom when we repent and put our faith in
Christ.
Daniel gives us absolute
assurance that there shall finally come an eternal
dominion by the Messiah. It is a double statement in
verse fourteen: "everlasting dominion" and "will not
pass away." The parallel statement reinforces the
duration of His Kingdom, "and His kingdom will not
be destroyed." The kingdom will be established for
all eternity.
The title "Son of Man"
has depths of meaning for Jesus' profound sense of
messianic consciousness. This Son of Man is also the
Suffering Servant of Yahweh who will reign eternally
as the King of glory.
THE COMING OF THE
MESSIAH THE PRINCE (9:24-27)
Chapter nine of Daniel is
in the context of the prophet–statesman praying over
the prophecy of Jeremiah regarding the 70 years of
exile in Babylon. God sent the angel Gabriel in
response to the prophet's prayer (9:20-23). Daniel
records what Gabriel said to him:
Seventy weeks have been
decreed for your people and your holy city, to
finish the transgression, to make an end of sin, to
make atonement for iniquity, to bring in everlasting
righteousness, to seal up vision and prophecy and to
anoint the most holy place. So you are to know and
discern that from the issuing of a decree to restore
and rebuild Jerusalem until Messiah the Prince there
will be seven weeks and sixty-two weeks; it will be
built again, with plaza and moat, even in times of
distress. Then after the sixty-two weeks the Messiah
will be cut off and have nothing, and the people of
the prince who is to come will destroy the city and
the sanctuary. And its end will come with a flood;
even to the end there will be war; desolations are
determined. And he will make a firm covenant with
the many for one week, but in the middle of the week
he will put a stop to sacrifice and grain offering;
and on the wing of abominations will come one who
makes desolate, even until a complete destruction,
one that is decreed, is poured out on the one who
makes desolate."
Seventy Weeks (v.
24)
God marks out a specific
period of time. He even gives a definite starting
point when the time period will begin. It is a clear
precise recorded event in history. Gabriel speaks in
symbolic language. The Hebrew term "weeks" literally
means "units of seven." All scholars agree that
seventy weeks can not be ordinary week but must be
seventy periods of seven years each. It is
impossible to find any epoch in Jewish history,
lasting but 490 days, in which the events narrated
here could be verified. The "seven" means year
weeks, seven years to each prophetic week. The units
of seven designate years, not days or weeks. Here
the seventy units of seven would equal 490 years.
Daniel had been studying Jeremiah's prophecy
regarding the seventy–year period of captivity and
realized that the time was nearing for the end of
the predicted captivity. Daniel had lived through
the whole Jewish captivity and was praying about it,
so it was natural for him to understand these as
years. These seventy weeks cannot be ordinary weeks
but must be seventy periods of seven years each or
490 years which best fits the historical context.
In this revelation to
Daniel the 70 weeks describes the cutting off of
Messiah Prince which sharply distinguished His first
coming from the time of His reign as King over
Israel. This is the first passage to refer to the
"Messiah" (v. 25). He is the "anointed one." The
verb is Mashach and involves consecration. The
passage speaks of the purpose, time and results of
His coming. In the New Testament the title “the
Christ,” means “the Anointed One,” is built on this
word and plainly refers to Jesus the Christ. The
Mashach of v. 26 is identical with the Mashach nagid
of v. 25, "Christ, who in the fullest sense of the
word is the Anointed" (Keil).
Six objectives
Several things will take
place during the 490 years. Here we have the sum
total of all that God promised to do to men.
Finish the transgression
Make an end of sin
Make atonement for
iniquity
Bring everlasting
righteousness
Seal up the vision and
prophecy
Anoint the most holy
place
The events during this 70
"week" period have been divided into three segments.
In seven "weeks" or 49 years the wall of Jerusalem
will be rebuilt and restoration accomplished. This
began in 445 B.C. (Nehemiah 2) when the decree was
issued by King Artaxerxes. Secular historians all
give the date 445 B.C. That is the correct starting
point for the 490 year period. Clearly history
confirms the fulfillment of that prediction when the
city of Jerusalem was rebuilt.
Then followed a second
period of 62 weeks of years, or 434 years, when the
Messiah the Prince will be cut off and have nothing.
Add 434 years to the 49 years and you have 483 years
until the coming of the "anointed one, a Prince."
The "anointed one" is the "Messiah Prince." From the
going forth to rebuilding of Jerusalem till the
coming of the Messiah Prince would be 483 years. It
began in 445 B.C. and it is completed in the death
of Jesus Christ on the cross. Jesus was 30-33 years
old when the 69 units of seven were completed. This
is another prediction of the death of Christ in the
Old Testament. Christ in His death made atonement
for iniquity (Isaiah 53:10; Romans 5:10; 3:21-22;
Jeremiah 23:5-6) The Messiah was rejected by His own
people and did not at that time receive the kingdom
that belongs to Him as the Son of David. Then the
nation that rejected the Messiah was destroyed in
A.D. 70 when the Romans burned Jerusalem. Jesus
prophesied the destruction of the Temple and the
city of Jerusalem (Luke 19:41-44; 21:24).
At the destruction of the
Temple the Roman soldiers were so angered by the
defiant stubborn Jews that they disobeyed their
generals and burned the temple, melting the gold and
silver so that it ran down the cracks between the
stones of the temple. To get to the precious metal
the soldiers pried the stones apart and fulfilled
Jesus' prediction that not one stone would be left
standing upon another.
The purpose of the coming
of the Messiah will be to take away the
transgressions of the people (v. 24a). We know from
history that Jesus Christ paid the penalty for man's
sin on the cross at Calvary. The first three deal
with the removal of sin and its consequences. This
Jesus did on our behalf by dying on the cross.
Jesus "was cut off and
had nothing" (v. 26). This "cutting off" is from a
word meaning "to hewn down, to fell, to cut to
pieces, signifies to be rooted up, destroyed,
annihilated, and denotes generally a violent kind of
death . . . " (Keil and Delitzsch). He received a
crown of thorns instead of a royal crown of the
King. He was given a broken reed instead of a royal
scepter. He was hung on a bloody cruel cross instead
of being seated on a throne of glory. However, in
that crucifixion he "made atonement for the
iniquity." The first part of the accomplishments was
fulfilled when Jesus was "cut off" on the cross. "He
came unto His own and His own received Him not"
(John 1:11; cf. Isaiah 53:8; Mark 9:12; Luke 24:26).
Then Gabriel told Daniel,
"the prince of the people who is to come will
destroy the city and the sanctuary. And its end will
come with a flood; even to the end there will be
war; desolations are determined" (v. 26). That
occurred with the complete destruction of Jerusalem
by General Titus in A.D. 70. Cf. Matthew 24:2; Mark
13:2; Luke 19:43.
The 70th Week
What about the remaining
one week or seven years? We have come up to 483
years out of the 490 years.
Some scholars take the
final "week" as having already taken place, applying
it to the first coming of Christ. The cutting off of
the Messiah is followed by the destruction of
Jerusalem and the Temple, then by desolations unto
the end. Titus accomplished the destruction of
Jerusalem and the Temple in A.D. 70. This
interpretation sees its purpose and fulfillment in
the sacrificial death of Christ.
Other scholars view the
last "week" or seven years as in a holding pattern.
Nothing in history of Israel have yet fulfilled this
remaining seven years of the prophecy of Daniel.
There is no account in Acts to indicate when this
period ended. The 70th week has yet not come. We are
still waiting for the events of the last week to
occur. The only conclusion is the remaining seven
years is still future and we are waiting for the
final week to begin. Everything has been
accomplished through the death of Christ to make
atonement for iniquity. However, the "bringing in
everlasting righteousness" will be fulfilled in the
Millennial Kingdom. The "anointing of the most holy
place" could refer to the dedication of the holy of
holies in the millennial temple (Ezekiel 41-46), or
the enthronement of the Messiah as the King of kings
in the Millennium.
If this view is correct
then "the prince to come" is a reference to the
Antichrist who will make a firm covenant with many
for one week, including a covenant with Israel
permitting her to restore sacrifices in the Temple
of Jerusalem (cf. v. 27; Matthew 24:15-21; Mark
13:14; Luke 21:20; 2 Thessalonians 2:1-12). In the
middle of that seven–year period, the Antichrist
will break his covenant and stop the sacrifices. He
will establish his own wicked rule and religion (v.
27b; cf. Revelation 19:20). The defeat of the
Antichrist by the Lord Jesus Christ will lead to the
beginning of the Millennial Kingdom.
EVEN SO, COME LORD
JESUS
When will this take
place? No one knows! The message of the Scriptures
is for us to be ready for Christ's return. Bible
prophecy as a rule avoids setting dates in the
future. When you hear someone on radio or TV, or in
the newspaper or in their latest book speculating
about dates and codes, stop and remember no one
knows when He is coming. Only the heavenly Father
knows when. Burn the book and go on with life. Any
date setting is foolishness. It is a definite sign
that the individual or group is like
Nebuchadnezzar's soothsayers.
Because this great
prophecy of Daniel has already been partly fulfilled
in precise accuracy concerning the first coming of
Jesus Christ, we can rest assured that the rest of
this prophecy will be as accurately and fully
fulfilled when He returns. Let's leave the logistics
up to His sovereign knowledge and power (Acts
3:17-21). Since the first 69 weeks have been
perfectly fulfilled according to Daniel's prophecy,
I am confident He will work out in His own perfect
way and time the one remaining "week" to His full
satisfaction.
If we expect too little
from prophecy we will find little in it. You cannot
see too much of Christ in His Word.
God is steadily moving
toward the final goal in His dealings with men. As
you study the words of Moses and the prophets keep
in mind the meaning and significance reaches far
beyond their own plain sense (cf. Luke 24:44ff).
They point beyond themselves to their fulfillment in
Christ and the Good News of His salvation. Jesus
told two of His disciples after He rose from the
dead: “’These are my words that I spoke to you while
I was still with you, that everything written about
me in the law of Moses and the prophets and the
psalms must be fulfilled.’ Then he opened their
minds so they could understand the scriptures" (Luke
24:44-45, NET).
Like the temporary
stopping of the missile launch countdown clock,
God's clock on Israel will resume again. It would
appear there has been "a partial hardening to Israel
until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in; and
thus all Israel will be saved . . . From the
standpoint of the gospel they (Israel) are enemies
for your sake, but from the standpoint of God's
choice they are beloved for the sake of the fathers;
for the gifts and the calling of God are
irrevocable" (Romans 11:25-29).
Are you ready for His
return? Even so, come Lord Jesus.
Have you personally
experienced this hope in Christ? Jesus Christ came
to give you eternal life. Here is A Free Gift
for You. All you have to do is receive it.
The book of Daniel is an
excellent prediction of the coming of the Messiah
and the triumph of His messianic kingdom (2:44-45;
7:7-28; 9:24-27; 12:1-4).
The book of Daniel
contains the crucial foundational passages
concerning Israel and the coming of the Messiah,
Jesus Christ. In these chapters you will find one of
the most dominant prophecies of the coming of Christ
ever recorded. The phrase "in the latter days"
describes the coming of the messianic age which God
will bring in as the climax of history. It is the
time when God will bring in His kingdom and all
history will reach its consummation.
Daniel describes the
final events when this present age with its sin and
rebellion will give way to the “age to come” in
which evil will be destroyed and all wrongs set
right. The kingdom is coming is his powerful
message.
We will make every
attempt to allow the Bible to speak for itself as we
apply the historical-grammatical rules of
interpretation and therefore, let the Bible tell its
own eternal message.
Years ago the beloved
expositor Harry Ironside said, "Where there is
light, there is bugs." It is my prayer that we see
the light of the Shekinah glory of God in the face
of Jesus Christ. May He deliver us from the bugs of
wild fanciful imagination and hermeneutical abuses.
I have only one agenda:
what does the Word of God say. I want to examine
carefully His Word and be obedient to its message.
Someone called the book
of Daniel "the book of Revelation in the Old
Testament."
The claim in the book is
that the author Daniel made the prophecies contained
therein and therefore must be taken in their plain
sense. Daniel lived about 620-535 B. C. and wrote
his prophecy in that time period while living in
exile in Babylon.
The book of Daniel opens
with Daniel as a young captive in Babylon. The
events are centered on the captivity of Israel in
583 B.C. when the city was destroyed and
Nebuchadnezzar, the king of Babylon, took the
Israelites to live in the city of Babylon and
provinces of the Babylonian empire. Daniel is one of
those captives who were taken as a teenager from
Jerusalem to spend the rest of his life in exile in
a foreign land. The book ends with Daniel as an
elderly man, honored and respected as a statesman,
having served under several kings in both the
Babylonian and Medio-Persian empires.
Four nations are referred
to symbolically in visions and dreams in Daniel.
They are Babylon (605-538 B.C.), Medio-Persia
(538-331 B.C.), Greece (331-146 B.C.) and Rome (146
B.C.-A.D. 476).
A VISION OF THE FUTURE
WORLD KINGDOMS (2:31-45)
In chapter two
Nebuchadnezzar, the king of Babylon, had some
nightmares. He dreamed and called his "magicians,
the conjurers, the sorcerers and the Chaldeans
(master astrologers), to tell the king his dreams"
(2:2). He put panic in their hearts when he told
them to "declare to me the dream and its
interpretation" but he didn't tell them what the
dream was. He forgot it! The counselors rebelled
because they knew they were on the verge of exposure
for their deception. If they were truly able, by
supernatural power, to interpret dreams, then surely
it would make no difference to them if the king
remembered the dream or not. Their supernatural
powers would give them the unremembered dream!
Therefore, their duplicity was exposed. When they
failed to come up with the dream Daniel told the
king, "There is a God in heaven who reveals
mysteries," and He always bats a thousand. This God,
says Daniel, "has made known to King Nebuchadnezzar
what will be in the latter days" (2:29).
Daniel reveals and
interprets King Nebuchadnezzar's dream (2:31-35).
You, O king, were looking
and behold, there was a single great statue; that
statue, which was large and of extraordinary
splendor, was standing in front of you, and its
appearance was awesome. The head of that statue was
made of fine gold, its breast and its arms of
silver, its belly and its thighs of bronze, its legs
of iron, its feet partly of iron and partly of clay.
You continued looking until a stone was cut out
without hands, and it struck the statue on its feet
of iron and clay and crushed them. Then the iron,
the clay, the bronze, the silver and the gold were
crushed all at the same time and became like chaff
from the summer threshing floors; and the wind
carried them away so that not a trace of them was
found. But the stone that struck the statue became a
great mountain and filled the whole earth.
In verses 36-40 Daniel
interprets the dream for the king. There are four
empires and Babylon is the first empire with
Nebuchadnezzar as the head. A second kingdom which
would be inferior to the first would follow it.
History identifies it even before the book of Daniel
closed, as the Medio-Persian Empire. It in turn is
followed by a third empire that came upon the scene
quickly. Chapter eight of Daniel reveals it as the
kingdom of Greece under Alexander the Great. The
fourth empire includes the Roman Empire. The book of
Revelation clearly identifies this empire with the
city of Rome. It is significant that the period
embraced by the image covers all of time from the
Babylonian Empire to the Second Coming of Jesus
Christ.
The remarkable thing
about this dream is its ending. A final kingdom
comes out of nowhere and smashes the huge image.
"You continued to look until a stone was cut without
hands, and it struck the statue on its feet of iron
and clay and crushed them" (v. 34). It didn't have
any human help. It was by divine providence. It is
the kingdom of God. The final kingdom that comes out
of heaven as a stone cut without hands and strikes
the grotesque image and destroys it is the kingdom
of God. All of the kingdoms of men will end at the
appearing of God's kingdom. If we have any doubt it
is quickly cleared up in verse 44. "And in the days
of those kings the God of heaven will set up a
kingdom which will never be destroyed, and that
kingdom will not be left for another people; it will
crush and put an end to all these kingdoms, but it
will itself endure forever." Ultimately God's
kingdom will prevail over all the earth with the
right monarch on the throne. He will be the Lord
Jesus Christ, the King of kings, and Lord of lords.
He is the "blessed and only sovereign" (1 Timothy
6:15). He is God's rightful King. God's eternal
purpose will then be done on earth as it is in
heaven (Matthew 6:10). It is the kingdom of God
through the reign of the Messiah (cf. Luke 1:31-33;
John 18:33-40). "How great are His signs, and how
mighty are His wonders! His kingdom is an
everlasting kingdom, and His dominion is from
generation to generation" (Daniel 4:3).
It is also significant
that we have not yet reached the end of
Nebuchadnezzar's dream and its meaning. As we shall
see in this Hebrew prophecy the empire of
Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon has long ago crumbled into
dust and the great Babylon is an uninhabited
desolation of ruins covered with the dust of the
centuries. However, it is still the dream that this
king dreamed that is being fulfilled by the world
political powers even in our day.
Daniel has several
Messianic prophecies: 2:44, 45; 7:13-14; 9:24-26.
THE "SON OF MAN" IS
COMING (7:13-14).
Chapters two and seven
seem to follow the same general pattern. Most
scholars interpret the four beasts in chapter seven
as the same nations we saw in chapter two, Babylon,
Medio-Persia, Greece and an empire beginning with
Rome but extending to the Second Coming of Jesus
Christ. Daniel writes,
"I kept looking in the
night visions,
And behold, with the
clouds of heaven
One like a Son of Man was
coming,
And He came up to the
Ancient of Days
And was presented before
Him.
And to Him was given
dominion,
Glory and a kingdom,
That all the peoples,
nations and men of every language
Might serve Him.
His dominion is an
everlasting dominion
Which will not pass away;
And His kingdom is one
Which will not be
destroyed."
The "Son of Man" referred
to here is not strictly a man as other men are but
appeared as other men. It is a comparison. We
immediately think of the divine and human nature of
Jesus Christ, the God-man. His two natures are
perfectly working together. This divine nature is
reflected in the fact that He appears "with the
clouds of heaven."
This is the term Jesus
used to identify Himself with humanity. It speaks of
His lowliness, humanity, patience as well as triumph
and victory. He uses the term over 80 times in the
Gospels as a substitute for the pronoun "I." He used
it when making great claims on men and when
referring to His suffering, death and resurrection.
But He also uses it when speaking of His future
glory and His coming again (Matthew 16:27, 28;
19:28; 24:30; 25:31; Luke 22:30).
In the book of Revelation
He is seen in the opening chapters as possessing all
power in heaven and on earth. He takes the scroll
with the seals and opens it. Daniel sees this same
person coming with clouds of heaven to the Ancient
of Days (cf. Matthew 26:64; Mark 14:62). Christ is
often associated with coming in clouds of heaven
(Matthew 24:30; 26:64; Mark 13:26; Revelation 1:7;
14:14).
Jesus told the high
priest at his trial, "You shall see the Son of Man
sitting at the right hand of power, and coming on
the clouds of heavens." The high priest knew what
Jesus was saying and almost had a stroke. This is
why they voted that night to kill Jesus and crucify
Him the next morning.
On another occasion Jesus
said, "The Son of Man shall come in His glory with
all His angels with Him. Then He will sit on His
glorious throne" (Matthew 25:31). At that time His
throne will be established and all nations shall
gather before Him and worship Him. The Lord God is
in sovereign control of history.
The promised kingdom in
Daniel is fulfilled in the coming of Jesus and the
establishment of His kingdom. It is “now and yet to
be” in that it is already present in the coming of
Jesus to this earth, and will reach its consummation
when He returns in glory at the second coming. We
proclaim the kingdom of God when we preach the death
of Jesus for our sins and His resurrection. We enter
the kingdom when we repent and put our faith in
Christ.
Daniel gives us absolute
assurance that there shall finally come an eternal
dominion by the Messiah. It is a double statement in
verse fourteen: "everlasting dominion" and "will not
pass away." The parallel statement reinforces the
duration of His Kingdom, "and His kingdom will not
be destroyed." The kingdom will be established for
all eternity.
The title "Son of Man"
has depths of meaning for Jesus' profound sense of
messianic consciousness. This Son of Man is also the
Suffering Servant of Yahweh who will reign eternally
as the King of glory.
THE COMING OF THE
MESSIAH THE PRINCE (9:24-27)
Chapter nine of Daniel is
in the context of the prophet–statesman praying over
the prophecy of Jeremiah regarding the 70 years of
exile in Babylon. God sent the angel Gabriel in
response to the prophet's prayer (9:20-23). Daniel
records what Gabriel said to him:
Seventy weeks have been
decreed for your people and your holy city, to
finish the transgression, to make an end of sin, to
make atonement for iniquity, to bring in everlasting
righteousness, to seal up vision and prophecy and to
anoint the most holy place. So you are to know and
discern that from the issuing of a decree to restore
and rebuild Jerusalem until Messiah the Prince there
will be seven weeks and sixty-two weeks; it will be
built again, with plaza and moat, even in times of
distress. Then after the sixty-two weeks the Messiah
will be cut off and have nothing, and the people of
the prince who is to come will destroy the city and
the sanctuary. And its end will come with a flood;
even to the end there will be war; desolations are
determined. And he will make a firm covenant with
the many for one week, but in the middle of the week
he will put a stop to sacrifice and grain offering;
and on the wing of abominations will come one who
makes desolate, even until a complete destruction,
one that is decreed, is poured out on the one who
makes desolate."
Seventy Weeks (v.
24)
God marks out a specific
period of time. He even gives a definite starting
point when the time period will begin. It is a clear
precise recorded event in history. Gabriel speaks in
symbolic language. The Hebrew term "weeks" literally
means "units of seven." All scholars agree that
seventy weeks can not be ordinary week but must be
seventy periods of seven years each. It is
impossible to find any epoch in Jewish history,
lasting but 490 days, in which the events narrated
here could be verified. The "seven" means year
weeks, seven years to each prophetic week. The units
of seven designate years, not days or weeks. Here
the seventy units of seven would equal 490 years.
Daniel had been studying Jeremiah's prophecy
regarding the seventy–year period of captivity and
realized that the time was nearing for the end of
the predicted captivity. Daniel had lived through
the whole Jewish captivity and was praying about it,
so it was natural for him to understand these as
years. These seventy weeks cannot be ordinary weeks
but must be seventy periods of seven years each or
490 years which best fits the historical context.
In this revelation to
Daniel the 70 weeks describes the cutting off of
Messiah Prince which sharply distinguished His first
coming from the time of His reign as King over
Israel. This is the first passage to refer to the
"Messiah" (v. 25). He is the "anointed one." The
verb is Mashach and involves consecration. The
passage speaks of the purpose, time and results of
His coming. In the New Testament the title “the
Christ,” means “the Anointed One,” is built on this
word and plainly refers to Jesus the Christ. The
Mashach of v. 26 is identical with the Mashach nagid
of v. 25, "Christ, who in the fullest sense of the
word is the Anointed" (Keil).
Six objectives
Several things will take
place during the 490 years. Here we have the sum
total of all that God promised to do to men.
Finish the transgression
Make an end of sin
Make atonement for
iniquity
Bring everlasting
righteousness
Seal up the vision and
prophecy
Anoint the most holy
place
The events during this 70
"week" period have been divided into three segments.
In seven "weeks" or 49 years the wall of Jerusalem
will be rebuilt and restoration accomplished. This
began in 445 B.C. (Nehemiah 2) when the decree was
issued by King Artaxerxes. Secular historians all
give the date 445 B.C. That is the correct starting
point for the 490 year period. Clearly history
confirms the fulfillment of that prediction when the
city of Jerusalem was rebuilt.
Then followed a second
period of 62 weeks of years, or 434 years, when the
Messiah the Prince will be cut off and have nothing.
Add 434 years to the 49 years and you have 483 years
until the coming of the "anointed one, a Prince."
The "anointed one" is the "Messiah Prince." From the
going forth to rebuilding of Jerusalem till the
coming of the Messiah Prince would be 483 years. It
began in 445 B.C. and it is completed in the death
of Jesus Christ on the cross. Jesus was 30-33 years
old when the 69 units of seven were completed. This
is another prediction of the death of Christ in the
Old Testament. Christ in His death made atonement
for iniquity (Isaiah 53:10; Romans 5:10; 3:21-22;
Jeremiah 23:5-6) The Messiah was rejected by His own
people and did not at that time receive the kingdom
that belongs to Him as the Son of David. Then the
nation that rejected the Messiah was destroyed in
A.D. 70 when the Romans burned Jerusalem. Jesus
prophesied the destruction of the Temple and the
city of Jerusalem (Luke 19:41-44; 21:24).
At the destruction of the
Temple the Roman soldiers were so angered by the
defiant stubborn Jews that they disobeyed their
generals and burned the temple, melting the gold and
silver so that it ran down the cracks between the
stones of the temple. To get to the precious metal
the soldiers pried the stones apart and fulfilled
Jesus' prediction that not one stone would be left
standing upon another.
The purpose of the coming
of the Messiah will be to take away the
transgressions of the people (v. 24a). We know from
history that Jesus Christ paid the penalty for man's
sin on the cross at Calvary. The first three deal
with the removal of sin and its consequences. This
Jesus did on our behalf by dying on the cross.
Jesus "was cut off and
had nothing" (v. 26). This "cutting off" is from a
word meaning "to hewn down, to fell, to cut to
pieces, signifies to be rooted up, destroyed,
annihilated, and denotes generally a violent kind of
death . . . " (Keil and Delitzsch). He received a
crown of thorns instead of a royal crown of the
King. He was given a broken reed instead of a royal
scepter. He was hung on a bloody cruel cross instead
of being seated on a throne of glory. However, in
that crucifixion he "made atonement for the
iniquity." The first part of the accomplishments was
fulfilled when Jesus was "cut off" on the cross. "He
came unto His own and His own received Him not"
(John 1:11; cf. Isaiah 53:8; Mark 9:12; Luke 24:26).
Then Gabriel told Daniel,
"the prince of the people who is to come will
destroy the city and the sanctuary. And its end will
come with a flood; even to the end there will be
war; desolations are determined" (v. 26). That
occurred with the complete destruction of Jerusalem
by General Titus in A.D. 70. Cf. Matthew 24:2; Mark
13:2; Luke 19:43.
The 70th Week
What about the remaining
one week or seven years? We have come up to 483
years out of the 490 years.
Some scholars take the
final "week" as having already taken place, applying
it to the first coming of Christ. The cutting off of
the Messiah is followed by the destruction of
Jerusalem and the Temple, then by desolations unto
the end. Titus accomplished the destruction of
Jerusalem and the Temple in A.D. 70. This
interpretation sees its purpose and fulfillment in
the sacrificial death of Christ.
Other scholars view the
last "week" or seven years as in a holding pattern.
Nothing in history of Israel have yet fulfilled this
remaining seven years of the prophecy of Daniel.
There is no account in Acts to indicate when this
period ended. The 70th week has yet not come. We are
still waiting for the events of the last week to
occur. The only conclusion is the remaining seven
years is still future and we are waiting for the
final week to begin. Everything has been
accomplished through the death of Christ to make
atonement for iniquity. However, the "bringing in
everlasting righteousness" will be fulfilled in the
Millennial Kingdom. The "anointing of the most holy
place" could refer to the dedication of the holy of
holies in the millennial temple (Ezekiel 41-46), or
the enthronement of the Messiah as the King of kings
in the Millennium.
If this view is correct
then "the prince to come" is a reference to the
Antichrist who will make a firm covenant with many
for one week, including a covenant with Israel
permitting her to restore sacrifices in the Temple
of Jerusalem (cf. v. 27; Matthew 24:15-21; Mark
13:14; Luke 21:20; 2 Thessalonians 2:1-12). In the
middle of that seven–year period, the Antichrist
will break his covenant and stop the sacrifices. He
will establish his own wicked rule and religion (v.
27b; cf. Revelation 19:20). The defeat of the
Antichrist by the Lord Jesus Christ will lead to the
beginning of the Millennial Kingdom.
EVEN SO, COME LORD
JESUS
When will this take
place? No one knows! The message of the Scriptures
is for us to be ready for Christ's return. Bible
prophecy as a rule avoids setting dates in the
future. When you hear someone on radio or TV, or in
the newspaper or in their latest book speculating
about dates and codes, stop and remember no one
knows when He is coming. Only the heavenly Father
knows when. Burn the book and go on with life. Any
date setting is foolishness. It is a definite sign
that the individual or group is like
Nebuchadnezzar's soothsayers.
Because this great
prophecy of Daniel has already been partly fulfilled
in precise accuracy concerning the first coming of
Jesus Christ, we can rest assured that the rest of
this prophecy will be as accurately and fully
fulfilled when He returns. Let's leave the logistics
up to His sovereign knowledge and power (Acts
3:17-21). Since the first 69 weeks have been
perfectly fulfilled according to Daniel's prophecy,
I am confident He will work out in His own perfect
way and time the one remaining "week" to His full
satisfaction.
If we expect too little
from prophecy we will find little in it. You cannot
see too much of Christ in His Word.
God is steadily moving
toward the final goal in His dealings with men. As
you study the words of Moses and the prophets keep
in mind the meaning and significance reaches far
beyond their own plain sense (cf. Luke 24:44ff).
They point beyond themselves to their fulfillment in
Christ and the Good News of His salvation. Jesus
told two of His disciples after He rose from the
dead: “’These are my words that I spoke to you while
I was still with you, that everything written about
me in the law of Moses and the prophets and the
psalms must be fulfilled.’ Then he opened their
minds so they could understand the scriptures" (Luke
24:44-45, NET).
Like the temporary
stopping of the missile launch countdown clock,
God's clock on Israel will resume again. It would
appear there has been "a partial hardening to Israel
until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in; and
thus all Israel will be saved . . . From the
standpoint of the gospel they (Israel) are enemies
for your sake, but from the standpoint of God's
choice they are beloved for the sake of the fathers;
for the gifts and the calling of God are
irrevocable" (Romans 11:25-29).
Are you ready for His
return? Even so, come Lord Jesus.
Have you personally
experienced this hope in Christ? Jesus Christ came
to give you eternal life. Here is A Free Gift
for You. All you have to do is receive it.