9/9/2023 0 Comments Ispeak danielWe might see “through a glass darkly” in this life, as the Apostle Paul put it, but in the next, there is the promise of clear vision. To think of my own life, to think of our own history and all the prognostications that are made by experts, and to realize that in the end God has the last word, God has the ultimate understanding. The four horns that grow from the single horn predict the four kingdoms that will arise when the king’s vast land is conquered and divided. The goat with a single horn represents the king of Greece. (Second note to self: Angels can be quite practical.) The horns of the ram represent the kings of Media and Persia. Gabriel describes what the dream means in more mundane terms. (Note to self: The appearance of an angel can initially be quite frightening.) As we’ve seen before and will see again in the Good Book, Daniel-even visionary Daniel-is overcome with fear and falls down prostrate before God’s messenger. To confirm, Daniel hears a voice saying, “Gabriel, help this man understand the vision.” None other than Gabriel-the angel Gabriel-was sent to help Daniel interpret his dream. The dream goes on, as dreams often do, and Daniel doesn’t know what to make of it. Wouldn’t you be baffled? Just reading it, I’m clueless (as I often am when I study one of those dreams I’ve scrawled in the morning). In the scuffle, the goat’s great horn was broken, and four more horns, marking the four winds of heaven, grew in its place. The goat threw the ram to the ground and trampled it. Until the ram came upon a goat with one horn between its eyes (that proverbial locus of inner vision). All beasts were powerless to withstand this ram, who did as it pleased. The ram has two horns, one longer than the other. In this dream he sees a ram standing beside the river. Not one from a king this time, but one of his own. So it comes as a bit of a relief to me when, toward the latter part of the book, in chapter eight, Daniel reveals that he too can be flummoxed by a dream. No wonder he was granted such privilege and power. What I find especially impressive about Daniel is that he doesn’t solely interpret the dreams of kings he can actually recount one before it’s even been recounted. The king is forced to praise not only the God who protected them and walked with them but also the angel who was sent to deliver them. The three young men were released, not a hair on their heads singed, their tunics hardly damaged. But as the king watched from above the flames, he saw Daniel’s three friends walking through the fiery furnace-with a fourth in their midst, a fourth who had the appearance of a god. If I imagine my own oven, often set at 350 degrees, we’re talking about 2,450 degrees! The escorts were immediately obliterated. When these three young men did not bow and worship a mighty golden statue that the king had set up, they were escorted into the inferno, whose heat was increased sevenfold. There is another wonderful story in the book about how an angel-or maybe it was God himself-appeared in a fiery furnace and rescued Daniel’s compatriots, Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego. So much for reading the writing on the wall. In fact, even after quickly promoting Daniel in a desperate attempt to save himself, King Belshazzar dies that very night. He has not humbled himself before God and has misused the sacred vessels. As he reports, things do not look good for Belshazzar. Who can read this foreign writing? Who can interpret what it says? Daniel is sent for and risks all to tell the truth. Until the fingers of a human hand appear out of nowhere and begin writing on the palace’s plaster wall. In his father’s conquest of Jerusalem they had stolen the vessels of gold and silver from the temple, and the king and his mistresses and wives and lords were using them to drink wine and praise false gods. At this point in the story, Nebuchadnezzar’s son Belshazzar has become king. Or consider the expression the writing is on the wall, referring to a forecast of coming doom. Daniel’s interpretation was that Nebuchadnezzar, with all his power, would still contend with vulnerabilities. In the dream he saw a huge statue with a head of gold, chest and arms of silver, thighs of bronze, legs of iron, and those feet, well, partly iron and partly clay. Feet of clay, for instance, refers to the dream King Nebuchadnezzar had. So many popular expressions come from the book of Daniel. His enemies at court weren’t so lucky when the king had his way with them. There was Daniel, alive and hardy, praising God and acknowledging the angel that had held shut the lions’ mouths. The next day the king hurried to see what had happened. A stone sealed the mouth of the den that held his loyal servant-and the lions. He was called out, and the king was forced to observe the law.
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