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A Summary of the Book of Daniel
A Summary of the Book of Daniel

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Daniel is one of the most exciting books in the Bible, fascinating children in the first six chapters, and challenging the wisest of adults in the last six chapters. Daniel is also one of the rareness of apocalyptic literature, for it promotes faith in God more than any other book. In 605 BCE, as a teenager, the Babylonian army captured Daniel, during its first attack on Jerusalem.
Because of their disobedience to God, the nation of Israel and Judah was taken captive. Daniel survived the attack and spent the rest of his life in the city of Babylon, in the service of the royal court. He went by two names: Daniel and Belteschazzar. That city was generally regarded as the most beautiful in the known world. Ancient authorities, not known for accuracy, claimed that its walls were 60 miles long, 300 feet high and 80 feet thick. Both a passage in Isaiah and Jeremiah 51:37-43 prophesized that Babylon would be destroyed and never occupied again. The prophecy was partially correct: the city was destroyed. However, part of it has been occupied in recent years by the government of Iraq. Daniel is described as living in Babylon for the entire duration of the Babylonian empire, a period of 72 years, assisted five succeeding kings, survived through the occupation by the Medes, and into the occupation of the Persians. He was present as Israel was taken into captivity; he died two years after a fragment of the Jews were allowed to return to Jerusalem.
The first six chapters deals with experiences in Daniel’s life and contain five well-known stories. Daniel\'s interpretation of King Nebuchadnezzar\'s dream: The king demanded that his magicians, exorcists, sorcerers, etc. describe the dream to him, and to interpret its meaning. He might have withheld information about the dream from them in order to test their psychic abilities. Alternately, he may not have been able to recall the details of the dream. (Many people are unable to recollect dreams after wakening.) Understandably, they failed. Daniel then described the dream, and explained that the metals that the king dreamed of (gold, silver, bronze and iron) each represented one earthly kingdom: his own and three to come in the future.
The attempted execution of Daniel\'s three friends in the fiery furnace: The king had made a gold image, some 90 feet tall and ordered the people to worship the image whenever certain music was played. Any who resistance was to be thrown into a blazing furnace. Three Jewish friends of Daniel: Shadrach, Meschach and Abednego-nego, refused to and was thrown into a fiery furnace that had been heated \"to seven times its normal heat.\" Not only were they unharmed, but also they were accompanied by a fourth figure who \"looks like a god\" and was later identified has Christ.
Nebuchadnezzar\'s madness: He has a dream in which he is a tree. Mental illness and roamed like an animal through the parks surrounding the palace for 42 months. Daniel interprets the dream, which happens a year later. The king was restored to his right mind after 42 months of living with wild beasts and feeding on grass like oxen. At the end of that time, he acknowledged the sovereignty of God and was made whole.
The handwriting on the wall of King Belshazzar\'s banquet hall: Nebuchadnezzar had stolen the gold and silver vessels from the temple at Jerusalem. When his son, Belshazzar, became king, he ordered that the vessels be brought out and used at a party by the nobility, himself and his concubines and courtesans. Suddenly, the fingers of a hand appeared, and wrote a message on the wall of the palace. The king\'s magicians, sorcerers, etc. were unable to decode the words. Daniel translated the message as saying that God has ended his kingdom. That night, Belshazzar was killed and \"Darius the Mede\" took over. The Babylonian empire ended and the Medes occupied the land.
Daniel surviving in the den of lions: \"Darius\" appointed Daniel as one of three chief ministers of the new kingdom of the Medes. Some jealous ministers and satraps conspired to kill Daniel. They persuaded the king to write an edict stating that anyone who petitions any god or human being other than the king during the following 30 days would be thrown into the lions\' den. The conspirators caught Daniel praying to God, and presented him to the king for execution. The king tried to think of a way to avoid executing Daniel, but was unsuccessful. Daniel was thrown in to the pit, but survived. He credited an angel with shutting the lions\' mouths.
The remainder of the book deals mainly with Daniel\'s visions: A dream of 4 beasts (lion with eagles\' wings, bear, leopard with four wings like a bird, and a terrible beast with 10 horns, which later became 8 horns). This, the four animals each symbolized an earthly kingdom. The vision of a powerful ram and a male goat who fight each other. The goat conquers the ram. A prayer of confession to, and trust in, God. A momentous vision of Israel\'s future, leading to the end of the age some 1,335 days later. Some of the dead will awake \"to everlasting life and some to the reproach of eternal abhorrence. The wise leaders will shine like the bright vault of heaven, and those who have guarded the people in the true path will be like the stars for ever and ever.\" This implies a resurrection of the dead, a judgments and transfer of the resurrected Jews to
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