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Daniel Chapter
Seven
Daniel 7
Chapter Contents
Daniel's vision of the four beasts. (1-8) and of Christ's
kingdom. (9-14) The interpretation. (15-28)
Commentary on Daniel 7:1-8
(Read Daniel 7:1-8)
This vision contains the same prophetic representations
with Nebuchadnezzar's dream. The great sea agitated by the winds, represented the
earth and the dwellers on it troubled by ambitious princes and conquerors. The
four beasts signified the same four empires, as the four parts of
Nebuchadnezzar's image. Mighty conquerors are but instruments of God's
vengeance on a guilty world. The savage beast represents the hateful features
of their characters. But the dominion given to each has a limit; their wrath
shall be made to praise the Lord, and the remainder of it he will restrain.
Commentary on Daniel 7:9-14
(Read Daniel 7:9-14)
These verses are for the comfort and support of the
people of God, in reference to the persecutions that would come upon them. Many
New Testament predictions of the judgment to come, have plain allusion to this
vision; especially Revelation 20:11,12. The Messiah is here called
the Son of man; he was made in the likeness of sinful flesh, and was found in
fashion as a man, but he is the Son of God. The great event foretold in this
passage, is Christ's glorious coming, to destroy every antichristian power, and
to render his own kingdom universal upon earth. But ere the solemn time
arrives, for manifesting the glory of God to all worlds in his dealings with
his creatures, we may expect that the doom of each of us will be determined at
the hour of our death; and before the end shall come, the Father will openly
give to his incarnate Son, our Mediator and Judge, the inheritance of the
nations as his willing subjects.
Commentary on Daniel 7:15-28
(Read Daniel 7:15-28)
It is desirable to obtain the right and full sense of
what we see and hear from God; and those that would know, must ask by faithful
and fervent prayer. The angel told Daniel plainly. He especially desired to
know respecting the little horn, which made war with the saints, and prevailed
against them. Here is foretold the rage of papal Rome against true Christians.
St. John, in his visions and prophecies, which point in the first place at
Rome, has plain reference to these visions. Daniel had a joyful prospect of the
prevalence of God's kingdom among men. This refers to the second coming of our
blessed Lord, when the saints shall triumph in the complete fall of Satan's
kingdom. The saints of the Most High shall possess the kingdom for ever. Far be
it from us to infer from hence, that dominion is founded on grace. It promises
that the gospel kingdom shall be set up; a kingdom of light, holiness, and
love; a kingdom of grace, the privileges and comforts of which shall be the
earnest and first-fruits of the kingdom of glory. But the full accomplishment
will be in the everlasting happiness of the saints, the kingdom that cannot be
moved. The gathering together the whole family of God will be a blessedness of
Christ's coming.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Daniel》
Daniel 7
Verse 1
[1] In the first year of Belshazzar king of Babylon Daniel
had a dream and visions of his head upon his bed: then he wrote the dream, and
told the sum of the matters.
In the first year of Belshazzar — This prophecy is
written in Chaldee, to be a monument to him, of the reverence his father and
grandfather shewed towards God, who had done such mighty works for them.
Then he wrote — These visions were recorded for
the benefit of the church, to rectify their mistake: for they thought all
things would succeed prosperously after they returned out of their captivity.
Verse 2
[2] Daniel spake and said, I saw in my vision by night, and,
behold, the four winds of the heaven strove upon the great sea.
The four winds — Probably by the four winds of the
great sea is signified commotions of contrary nations, striving together by
wars, and producing these four beasts successively.
Verse 3
[3] And four great beasts came up from the sea, diverse one
from another.
Four great beasts — That is, four great
monarchies, great, in comparison of particular kingdoms; beasts for their
tyrannical oppressions.
Verse 4
[4] The first was like a lion, and had eagle's wings: I
beheld till the wings thereof were plucked, and it was lifted up from the
earth, and made stand upon the feet as a man, and a man's heart was given to
it.
The first — This was the Chaldean, or
Assyrian; whose seat was first at Babylon, afterwards at Nineveh, and then at
Babylon again.
Eagle's wings — They were swift, over-running
many countries, and brought their monarchy to a prodigious height in a short
time.
The wings were plucked — Which was first done
in stopping the career of their victories, and afterwards in casting them out
of their kingdom.
A man's heart — They lost their lion-like
courage, and became faint and cowardly like other men.
Verse 5
[5] And behold another beast, a second, like to a bear, and
it raised up itself on one side, and it had three ribs in the mouth of it
between the teeth of it: and they said thus unto it, Arise, devour much flesh.
Another beast — The Mede's and Persians, a
fierce, ravenous creature.
On one side — The north side; for the Mede
first arose and sent to Cyrus the Persian to come and assist him against the
Assyrian.
Three ribs — Several of the Babylonian
subjects revolted, and all these made the three ribs.
Verse 6
[6] After this I beheld, and lo another, like a leopard,
which had upon the back of it four wings of a fowl; the beast had also four
heads; and dominion was given to it.
Like a leopard — This leopard was the Grecian
monarchy; a leopard is less than a lion, so was this monarchy at first, but yet
durst fight with a lion; so did Alexander encounter Darius with an inferior
force. A leopard also for his swiftness; therefore described with four wings on
his back.
Four heads — He was succeeded by four of his
chief commanders, who divided that empire into four parts.
Verse 7
[7] After this I saw in the night visions, and behold a
fourth beast, dreadful and terrible, and strong exceedingly; and it had great
iron teeth: it devoured and brake in pieces, and stamped the residue with the
feet of it: and it was diverse from all the beasts that were before it; and it
had ten horns.
A fourth beast — The Roman empire.
Verse 8
[8] I considered the horns, and, behold, there came up among
them another little horn, before whom there were three of the first horns
plucked up by the roots: and, behold, in this horn were eyes like the eyes of
man, and a mouth speaking great things.
Another little horn — Probably either the
Turk or the Romish antichrist.
Verse 9
[9] I beheld till the thrones were cast down, and the
Ancient of days did sit, whose garment was white as snow, and the hair of his
head like the pure wool: his throne was like the fiery flame, and his wheels as
burning fire.
The thrones — The kingdoms of this world were
destroyed by God the king, and judge of all, called the Ancient of days,
because of his eternal deity.
Verse 11
[11] I beheld then because of the voice of the great words
which the horn spake: I beheld even till the beast was slain, and his body
destroyed, and given to the burning flame.
Destroyed — This cannot but be meant of the
ruin and judgment of antichrist.
Verse 13
[13] I saw in the night visions, and, behold, one like the
Son of man came with the clouds of heaven, and came to the Ancient of days, and
they brought him near before him.
A son of man — That is, the Messiah, he came
with the clouds of heaven, gloriously, swiftly and terribly.
And came — This relates to his ascension, at which time, he
received his royal investiture, for the protection of his church, and curbing
of their enemies.
Verse 16
[16] I came near unto one of them that stood by, and asked
him the truth of all this. So he told me, and made me know the interpretation
of the things.
Unto one — That is, to an angel, that ministered.
The truth — The true meaning of this vision.
Verse 18
[18] But the saints of the most High shall take the kingdom,
and possess the kingdom for ever, even for ever and ever.
But the saints — Jesus Christ being their king,
they shall reign with him, and possess the kingdom for ever.
Verse 24
[24] And the ten horns out of this kingdom are ten kings that
shall arise: and another shall rise after them; and he shall be diverse from
the first, and he shall subdue three kings.
And another — This seems to mean the Romish
antichrist.
Verse 25
[25] And he shall speak great words against the most High,
and shall wear out the saints of the most High, and think to change times and
laws: and they shall be given into his hand until a time and times and the
dividing of time.
Until a time and times — The numbers of Daniel
and John seem to agree. Daniel was certainly prophetical in these things, and
his prophecy reacheth to the end of times, even of antichrist's reign.
Verse 28
[28] Hitherto is the end of the matter. As for me Daniel, my
cogitations much troubled me, and my countenance changed in me: but I kept the
matter in my heart.
Of the matter — Of the vision, and the angel's
interpretation.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Daniel》
The Vision Of The Four Beasts (7:1-28)
INTRODUCTION
1. The book of Daniel naturally divides itself into two parts...
a. In our introductory lesson, we described these parts as:
1) God's providence in history - Dan 1:1-6:28
2) God's purpose in history - Dan 7:1-12:13
b. Wiersbe describes these two parts as:
1) The personal history of Daniel - Dan 1:1-6:28
2) The prophetical history of Daniel - Dan 7:1-12:13
2. The second half of the book contains four visions seen by Daniel...
a. The vision of the four beasts - Dan 7:1-28
b. The vision of the ram and the goat - Dan 8:1-27
c. The vision of the seventy weeks - Dan 9:1-27
d. The vision of the time of the end - Dan 10:1-12:13
-- In which God reveals to Daniel many things about His purpose and
plan in history, regarding the nation of Israel and the
everlasting kingdom to come
[In this lesson we shall consider "The Vision Of The Four Beasts",
found in Dan 7:1-28. We begin by noting...]
I. THE VISION DESCRIBED (1-14)
A. DATE OF THE VISION...
1. Received by Daniel in the first year of Belshazzar king of
Babylon - Dan 7:1
2. This would be about 550 B.C., when Belshazzar became co-regent
with his father Nabonidus
B. DETAILS OF THE VISION...
1. Part One: The four beasts from the sea - Dan 7:2-8
a. The four winds of heaven stirring up the Great Sea
(Mediterranean Sea )
1) The "sea" may symbolize the mass of humanity - cf. Isa
17:12; Re 17:15
2) The "four winds of heaven" may be forces God uses to
control and even destroy - cf. Jer 49:36; 51:1
-- (Harkrider)
b. Four great beasts coming up out of the sea
1) The lion with eagle's wings
a) Whose wings were plucked off
b) Made to stand on two feet like a man
c) A man's heart given to it
-- The lion represents Babylon ; the wings possibly
symbolizing the co-regency of Nabonidus and
Belshazzar, a kingdom shown to be remarkably fragile
- cf. Dan 5:1-31 (Believers' Study Bible)
2) The bear with ribs in its mouth
a) Raised up on one side
b) Three ribs in its mouth between its teeth
c) Told to "Arise, devour much flesh!"
-- The bear represents the Medo-Persian empire; that it
raises on one side may reflect the Persian dominance,
the three ribs in its mouth may illustrate its
victories over Egypt , Syria , and Babylon (BSB)
3) The winged, multi-headed leopard
a) With four wings and four heads
b) To whom dominion was given
-- The leopard represents the Greek empire of Alexander
the Great; the wings may symbolize its rapid
conquest, the four heads prophetic of its division by
four generals after Alexander's death (BSB)
4) The dreadful and terrible beast
a) Exceedingly strong, with huge teeth
b) Devouring, breaking in pieces, trampling residue with
its feet
c) Different from all the beasts before it
1/ Unlike the other three, it is not compared with
any animal
2/ But if it is the beast of Revelation, note that it
was a conglomeration of a lion, bear and leopard
- cf. Re 13:1-2
d) With ten horns; another little horn coming up among
them...
1/ Before whom three of the first horns were plucked
from their roots
2/ In which were the eyes of a man, and a mouth
speaking pompously
-- This beast represents the Roman empire ; the ten horns
and little horn may represent emperors or kings who
ruled during events involving the establishment of
God's kingdom (see below) - cf. Dan 2:44
2. Part Two: An awesome judgment - Dan 7:9-12
a. Thrones were put in place, and the Ancient of Days was
seated
1) His garment was white as snow, His hair like pure wool
2) His throne a fiery flame, its wheels a burning fire, a
fiery stream issued from before Him
3) A million ministered to Him, a hundred million stood
before Him
4) The court (judgment) was seated, and books were opened
b. The judgment of the four beasts
1) The great and terrible beast
a) The one with the sound of pompous words from the
little horn
b) It was slain, its body destroyed, and given to the
burning flame
2) The rests of the beasts
a) They had their dominion taken away
b) Their lives were prolonged for a season and a time
3. Part Three: The coronation of the Son of Man - Dan 7:13-14
a. Daniel sees one like the Son of Man
1) Coming with the clouds of heaven
2) Brought near to the Ancient of Days
b. To Him was given dominion, glory, and a kingdom
1) That all peoples, nations, and languages should serve
Him
2) His dominion is an everlasting dominion
3) His kingdom the one which shall not be destroyed - cf.
Dan 2:44
[The parallels between this vision and Nebuchadnezzar's dream (Dan 2)
should be carefully noted. Both involve the rise and fall of four
kingdoms, and a kingdom which would never be destroyed. In Daniel's
three-part vision, the conflict to come between the fourth kingdom and
the establishment of the everlasting kingdom is foretold as we see...]
II. THE VISION INTERPRETED (15-28)
A. EFFECT ON DANIEL...
1. Grieved in his spirit - Dan 7:15
2. Troubled by the visions he saw
B. EXPLANATION TO DANIEL...
1. An overall summary of the vision - Dan 7:16-18
a. Provided by one of those who stood by (an angel?)
b. The four beasts represent four kings (kingdoms, cf. 7:23)
c. Yet the saints of the Most High shall receive and possess
the everlasting kingdom
2. Daniel's desire to know more - Dan 7:19-20
a. About the fourth beast, exceedingly dreadful
b. About the ten horns on it head
c. About the little horn
1) Before which three horns fell
2) Which had eyes and a mouth speaking pompous words
3) Whose appearance was greater than his fellows
3. What Daniel then saw - Dan 7:21-22
a. The little horn making war against the saints, prevailing
against them
b. Until the Ancient of Days came
1) With judgment in favor of the saints of the Most High
2) And it was time for the saints to possess the kingdom
4. What Daniel then heard - Dan 7:23-27
a. Concerning the fourth beast
1) It shall be a fourth kingdom on the earth
2) It shall devour the whole earth, trample it, and break
it in pieces
-- The Roman empire, which came to rule the Mediterranean
world
b. Concerning the ten horns
1) They are ten kings to arise from this fourth kingdom
2) After whom another shall arise
-- These may be emperors who ruled during the first century
A.D. when the everlasting kingdom (i.e., the church) was
being established, or the ten kings alluded to in Re 17:
12-13; then again, the number ten may be symbolic,
reflecting their complete or full number, and not ten
specific kings
c. Concerning the little horn
1) He shall be different from the first kings
2) He shall subdue three kings
3) He shall speak pompous words against the Most High
4) He shall persecute the saints of the Most High
5) He shall intend to change times and law
6) Into whose hands the saints shall be given for a time,
times and half a time
1/ Perhaps 3 1/2 years (1 year, 2 years, 1/2 year), or
42 months - cf. Re 13:5; also 11:2,3
2/ A broken, short period of time involving persecution
(Harkrider)
-- This is likely the persecuting emperor of Rome (e.g.,
Domitian), described as the beast from the sea in
Revelation - cf. Re 13:1-2,5-7
d. Concerning the judgment
1) The dominion of the little horn shall be taken away,
consumed and destroyed
2) Then the kingdom (of heaven?), and the dominion and
greatness of the kingdoms under heaven shall be given to
the saints of the Most High
3) This kingdom will be an everlasting kingdom, and
dominions shall serve Him
-- As depicted in Revelation, the conflict between the
Roman empire and the church would end with the ultimate
victory of the people of God (who even though martyred,
would reign with Christ) - cf. Re 17:14; 19:19-20; 20:4
C. EPILOGUE BY DANIEL...
1. His thoughts greatly troubled him, and his countenance changed
- Dan 7:28
2. But he kept the matter in his heart - Dan 7:28
a. A good course of action whenever we are unsure about the
meaning of a particular Scripture, especially that which is
prophetic
b. As we continue to read and study, what we learn later may
help enlighten the unclear Scripture we have kept in our
heart
CONCLUSION
1. "The Vision Of The Four Beasts" is certainly interesting and
challenging...
a. It expands upon the vision seen by Nebuchadnezzar in Dan 2
b. It introduces the conflict described in the vision seen by John
in Re 13-20
2. I understand these visions to relate details concerning the
establishment of "the everlasting kingdom" (i.e., the church)...
a. To occur during the days of the Roman empire - Dan 2:44; Lk 1:
30-33; Mk 1:14-15
b. Which began when Jesus ascended to heaven - Dan 7:13-14; Ac 1:9;
2:36; Ep 1:20-23; 1 Pe 3:22; Re 1:5,9
c. Which experienced great persecution at the outset - Dan 7:25;
Re 1:9; 2:10; 17:14
3. But the saints who persevered in those days, even to the point of
death, continue to reign with Christ in heaven (i.e., they "possess
the kingdom") - Dan 7:18; 2 Ti 4:17-18; Re 20:4
The ultimate victory of the church over the Roman empire came to pass
as foretold to both Daniel and John. May this fulfillment encourage us
to remain faithful until the time when Jesus returns to "deliver the
kingdom to God the Father"! - cf. 1 Co 15:23-26
--《Executable
Outlines》
07 Chapter 7
Verses 1-28
I saw in my vision by night.
Modes of Communication with God
Since the days of the apostles, the intercourse between Heaven and
earth has been maintained through the ordinary channels. God speaks to man
through the medium of his conscience--in the Bible, and by the operation of His
providence. These are now the appointed means whereby we are to ascertain a knowledge
of our duty. Not that our Heavenly Father is less desirous of guiding us into
the path of truth, or that we, His children are more abandoned to the perils of
the world than were the people of His inheritance in a former age; but the
ransom of our souls having been effected through the meritorious sacrifice of
the Son of God, the Saviour, having ascended into glory and “received gifts for
men”; and instruction, accompanied with the most cheering promises, adapted to
the case of every individual, having been imported in the canon of Scripture,
the Deity has withdrawn Himself from holding a more immediate communion with
His creatures, leaving us, not to ourselves, but to the influence of those aids
which He has provided. Though visible conferences have ceased between the
inhabitants of this world and their omnipresent Creator, we are still under
Divine control, and derive our guidance, our strength, and our comfort from on
high. The ancient seers were instructed in different ways. Some were endowed
with the gift of prophecy by the action of the Holy Spirit upon the mind,
illumining the understanding, and conveying to the person so inspired the
requisite acquaintance with events not yet accomplished. Angels were also
employed to unfold to men the designs of the Almighty. Daring the ages of
prophecy, dreams appear to have been frequently of a supernatural order, and
highly significant of some important circumstance. (Charles Popham Miles, B.A.)
And four great beasts came up from the sea.
The Four Beasts
I. THE ELEMENT OUT OF WHICH THE WORLD-KINGDOMS CAME INTO EXISTENCE.
“Four beasts came up from the sea.” The sea, when looked at in some of its
aspects, is a most fit symbol of the means by which human kingdoms without
godliness have made progress in the world.
1. There is the element of
treachery. The sea is at one moment calm, and apparently harmless; and the
next, sending a nation into mourning by overwhelming her vessels and casting
their crews into the depths of the ocean.
2. The element of restless
change. From its creation to the present moment its waters have not been at
rest for a single hour.
3. The element of
destructiveness. The sea is a terribly destroying power. The Babylonian,
Persian, Macedonian, and Roman empires were destructive rather than
constructive forces in the world.
II. THE CREATURES WHICH ARE USED AS SYMBOLS OF THE WORLDKINGDOMS.
“Four beasts.” The characteristics of these kingdoms were animal rather than
human. There is no true humanity where there is no divinity. These kingdoms of
the parabolic vision are symbolised by beasts of prey noted for their strength,
and cruelty, and treachery; no animal of a gentle, peaceful nature is found
among them; denoting the entire absence of these characteristics in kingdoms
without godliness.
III. THE KINGDOM THAT AROSE LAST OUT OF THE SEA OF TIME,
EXCEEDED THOSE THAT HAD GONE
BEFORE IT IN CRUELTY AND POWER. No mere animal could set forth
all its destructive power; it had “iron teeth” and “ten horns.” The longer
wickedness goes on unchecked the more its evil tendencies develops themselves,
and the more it spreads desolation in the world.
IV. A TRULY HUMAN KINGDOM CANNOT ARISE OUT OF ANY ELEMENT OF EARTH,
IT MUST COME FROM ABOVE.
“The Son of man came with the clouds of heaven.” The head of every kingdom
except Christ’s Kingdom has been a mere man. But the Son of man was from above,
and He came to be the head of a kingdom of true humanity. The subjects of His
Kingdom become partakers of the Divine natural, and, therefore, this kingdom
exhibits none of the characteristics set forth by the beasts. It is a human
kingdom because it is a Divine kingdom. Therefore, it is an everlasting
kingdom. This vision teaches us:
1. The knowledge of the
eternal in relation to human affairs in the ages to come.
2. That God has stretched a
measuring line across the bounds of every kingdom. He has appointed the bound
of their habitation.
3. Human kingdoms form a dark
background to reveal the beauties of the Kingdom of Christ. (Outlines by
London Minister.)
The Symbolical Beasts
Let us first attend to the place from which these beasts seemed to
issue. It appeared to the prophet that they came up from the sea. We are not to
interpret this literally. The sea, here, represents or symbolises something
else, and, in a subsequent verse, we are told that it signifies the earth.
“These great beasts, which are four, are four kings, which shall arise out of
the earth.” Now the word earth is often to be understood, not of this material
globe, but of its inhabitants, as in that passage of Jeremiah, “O earth, earth,
hear the word of the Lord.” And that in Psalms, “Make a joyful noise unto the
Lord all the earth; make a loud noise, and rejoice and sing praise.” In this
passage it is also to be understood of the inhabitants of the earth, or human
society. When, therefore, these kings are said to rise out of the earth, this
signifies that they would rise up out of the social state. But these beasts did
not simply come out of the sea, when they rose out of it the sea was in a very
marked condition. The four winds were striving upon it. Since the sea is the
emblem of society, the sea, with the four winds striving thereon, is to be
understood of society in a state of very great and violent commotion. Now,
whereas the sea is represented as being in this state, when the several beasts
came out of it, this clearly intimates that these kingdoms would arise amid
great commotions, and that, compared with what was to follow, society might be
said to continue in this state, and the earth to have no rest, until this
extensive prophecy was fulfilled. In particular, we find the great empires,
here predicted, rising to ascendancy amid the hurricanes of civil commotion,
and convulsing the world by the shock of their fall. The four beasts which came
up out of the sea signified four kings. “These four beasts are four kings that
shall arise out of the earth.” In this passage the word king is of equal
significance with the word kingdom. This is evident from verse 22, “The fourth
beast shall be the fourth kingdom upon earth, which shall be diverse from all
kingdoms.” Here the fourth beast is called the fourth kingdom, which
undoubtedly implies that the three preceding beasts were three kingdoms.
Whereas these kingdoms are symbolised by beasts, this was probably intended to
describe the qualities by which they would be distinguished. It seems to
intimate that all these governments, as to their principles and aims, who would
be more characterised by what was common to man with the inferior creation than
by those principles which connect, and ally, and link him to creatures holding
a higher place in the ascending scale of existence. They are not simply
represented by beasts, but by beasts of prey, by the lion, and the bear, and
the leopard, and another beast which was dreadful, and terrible, and strong
exceedingly. Now beasts of prey are principally distinguished from ethers by
two things, they are strong and fierce, they take by violence and use with
cruelty. And do not these symbols prove their own divinity? For what has been
the character of all the great monarchies since the time of Daniel, as
developed in their public character? May not a great part of their history be
summed up in this, that they were strong and fierce, that they acquired
dominion by violence, and used it in oppression? When brought to the test have
not all governments accounted might to be right? Have not nations, up to this
date, been known to one another principally as military establishments? Is not
the history of empires a history of wars, murders, rapine, and desolation? If
there be any variation in these murderous annals, it is when force gives place
to policy and intrigue; it is, however, the wild beast still, though crouching
in concealment, in order that he may spring unexpectedly upon his unprepared
victim. Violence and fraud have been characteristic of every government that
has risen hitherto upon the earth, even when individual rulers were personally
of good character, and arts, commerce, and science were encouraged. There never
was an instance of a government acting steadily on the great principles of
truth and holiness. These beasts were four in number, and represented four
kingdoms that were to arise upon the earth. That these were the Babylonian,
Persian, Grecian, and Roman empires is evident from a variety of
considerations. In the first place, the symbols, here employed, will be found
inapplicable to any other connected chain of history. An individual king may be
found to whom some of the symbols apply, but a succession of four monarchies
rising after one another will nowhere be found to which these words can with
any plausibility be referred. In the second place, the application of the symbols
to these four empires is so easy and natural as to show that the former were
designedly employed to represent the latter. In the third place, this will
appear from a comparison of the seventh with the second chapter of Daniel.
These two chapters evidently refer to the same subject. Four kingdoms are
symbolised in the second chapter, four kingdoms are symbolised in the seventh.
In both chapters these kingdoms are represented as extending down to the period
when God would erect His kingdom on the earth. In the second chapter the fourth
kingdom is represented as being one of irresistible strength. In the seventh
chapter it is described as being dreadful, and terrible, and strong
exceedingly. The fourth kingdom, in the second chapter, is represented in its
latter stages by ten toes. In the seventh chapter its last form is symbolised
by ten horns. There cannot remain, on any mind capable of weighing evidence,
the faintest doubt that the second and the seventh chapters relate to the same
subject. This being ascertained, it is easy to prove, from the second chapter,
that the four kingdoms must be understood of the Babylonian, Persian, Grecian,
and Roman empires. In the second chapter the head of gold denoted the first
monarchy; but Daniel said unto Nebuchadnezzar, “Thou art this head of gold”;
the Babylonian empire was, therefore, the first of these kingdoms. Now, in the
second chapter, the four empires are symbolised by one image. They must,
therefore, have come after one another in the order of immediate succession.
The other three kingdoms, then, must signify the three great empires which
immediately succeeded that of Babylon. But it is matter of undeniable and
immutable fact that the empire of Babylon was succeeded by those of Persia,
Greece, and Rome; the Babylonian having been overthrown by the Persian, the
Persian being overthrown by the Grecian, and the Grecian being overthrown by
the Roman. Notwithstanding of certain minor exceptions that have been stated
against it, we regard this theory as one at which we have arrived by the sound
and simple exposition of the sacred text itself, and which has been tested by
time and proved to be genuine. But while the fate of empires is concealed from
man, it is naked and open to the eyes of God. Kingdoms rise and fall by Divine
ordination: “Surely their days are determined, the number of their months is
with God, he hath appointed them a bound which they cannot pass.” And, from the
book of His immutable decrees, it is easy for Him to transcribe any page of the
future with as much exactness as the historian can describe transactions that
are past. But why, it may be asked, are only these four empires pointed out the
prophecy? Why does the Holy Seer confine His revelations to this limited
district of the world? Beyond it were myriads of the human race, and old and
mighty dynasties, were then existing, elsewhere, or were afterwards to arise.
Why in this symbolical representation of empire are not India and China
included? Why are the two great continents of Africa and America wholly
omitted? For this limitation we may venture to assign two reasons, not indeed
drawn by exposition from the Scriptures, but drawn by exposition from the
oracles of Providence. From what we see of His actual doings by means of these
empires, we are perfectly safe in asserting that they occupy the sole place in
these predictions on two accounts:
1. Because they were to
exercise the greatest influence upon the church during the period to which this
prophecy refers.
2. Because through them God
intended to civilize and Christianize the whole earth. It is a fact which will
not be denied that these empires have had the principal effect upon the church
for good or for evil In the days of Daniel, the church existed only within the
limits of the Chaldean empire. Afterwards, we find it within the Persian
empire. Then we find it principally connected with the Grecian monarchy,
favoured by the great Alexander, and persecuted by more than one of his
successors. In the latter days of the Jewish dispensation, we find the Old
Testament church connected with the empire of Rome. It was by Rome that
Jerusalem was destroyed, and the Jews driven into exile. The place of their
dispersion, and the scone of their sufferings, during a period of nearly
eighteen centuries, has been almost exclusively within the limits of the four
prophetic monarchies. Within this district the Son of God became incarnate and
was crucified. Here the fires of persecution blazed most fiercely against His
devoted witnesses. Here the great apostacy from the truth was generated. This
district was the battlefield between Christ and anti-Christ during many
generations. It is the centre still of all the contests between light and
darkness, between God and Satan. It is thus a fact that these four empires have
had most effect upon the church for good or for evil; and, therefore, we seem
warranted in concluding that they alone are mentioned in these predictions,
because of the influential connection in which they were to stand to the
church. And it is not less true that these four empires have had the principal
effect in the Christianization and civilization of the other districts of the
world. Beyond the limits of these monarchies, the four winds have striven on
the great sea. There have been wars, and changes, and conquests, but, unless we
greatly mistake the matter, there is a very marked difference between the
political commotions and changes which took place within the territorial limits
of the four empires and those which occurred elsewhere. Beyond this district,
we will see one great conqueror after another sweeping over the earth in the
same murderous career. But we see no permanent current of civilization
following these commotions. We see no advancement amid all these changes. We
see the nations living in the same barbarous, or semicivilized, condition in
which they were in the times of Daniel. But the commotions which have occurred
within the limits of the four monarchies have had a civilizing tendency in the
issue. Not to ascend higher, wherever the Romans carried their arms, they
carried their noble literature, and left a seed of it behind. Their later
conquests were preparatory to the dissemination of the gospel; and to the
fourth empire, as the Divine instrument, may be traced the whole of European civilization.
Look beyond the limits of these four empires, and wherever we see civilization
it will be found to have come from them. Civilization and religion went from
them to America, to Greenland, Australia, the isles of the Pacific, and to many
spots in Africa. And there can now be little doubt that by means of the fourth
empire, in its last form, and of the church within it, God intended to
originate those movements which shall result in the Christianization of the
world. How thankful should we be unto God that we have been born within the
limits of these four monarchies, not merely because the currents of
civilization flow there, but because of the streams of life by which they are
watered and fertilized. How great and glorious does God appear in connection
with this prophecy! How low should we lie in the dust before Him, under a
profound feeling of the nothingness of our intellects, when we see His
omniscient eye piercing the vista of ages and generations, and unfolding the
end from the beginning! When we survey the long and dreary domination of the
four predicted beasts, we are apt to be seized with a feeling of despondency.
Why has wickedness been permitted to exult so long? But when we remember that
the Lord reigneth, and that the past stages of the world are merely preparatory
to its future glory, a prospect opens on our view delightful beyond all
description. If rays of the Divine glory are seen sparkling out amid the eras
that are past, we are prepared for the announcement that, when the work is completed,
“the glory of the Lord will cover the earth as the waters cover the sea.” (W.
White.)
Vision, of Four Wild Beasts
The first of these is the Babylonian empire. In the dream of
Nebuchadnezzar its symbol was the head of gold, and in the dream of Daniel, the
first wild beast which was like a lion and had eagle’s wings. The superior
excellence of the head of gold to the silver, brass, and iron of the colossal
image corresponds with the superior excellence of the first wild beast, which
had the body of the king of beasts and the wings of the king of birds, to the
three other wild beasts which came up afterwards out of the sea. A royal
dignity belonged to the Babylonian empire which was lacking in its successors.
It is true that when Daniel had his dream the Babylonian empire was near its
end; but as the stand-point of Daniel in the dream was before the wild beasts
came up out of the sea, the interpreter justly spoke of then to Daniel as “four
kings which shall arise out of the earth.” In the dream the Babylonian empire
was yet to come; but in point of fact it had already come, and was on the eve
of passing away. In the plucking of the wild beast’s wings, which deprived it
of its soaring ambition, and in lifting it up from the earth and giving to it a
man’s attitude and heart, which deprived it of the voracious nature of the wild
beasts, there seems to be a reference to the madness and restoration of
Nebuchadnezzar. The Judgment which humbled and ennobled the great king, paved
the way for the overthrow of the first great world-power. The empire after the
restoration of Nebuchadnezzar had never been so glorious; but the change
wrought in him had deprived it of the conquering and destructive power of the
wild beast. The lion-like ferocity and eagle-like swiftness in pouncing upon
the nations had given place to the kindliness and consideration of a brother
man. And when the great king died the glory had departed. None of his
successors had either his genius or his strength and nobility of spirit; and in
twenty-three years the Babylonian empire had ceased to be. The second
world-empire is the Medo-Persian. Three reasons seem to place this opinion,
which has been common in all ages, on a solid and immovable foundation.
The Vision of the Four Beasts
Let us attempt to get at the practical and permanent principles
which underlie this remarkable prophecy, and which are at once profoundly
suggestive and exceedingly important.
1. The terribly significant
truth, that earthly power, in and of itself, degenerates into brutality. The
appropriate symbol of a great empire is a wild beast. The kingdoms of the earth
have stood on military conquest. Might has taken the place of right. The sword
has been the arbiter of imperial dynasties, and the struggles between rival
powers have been as fierce and destructive as the contentions of wild animals
in the jungle.
2. The tendency of this
brutality is to increase. Note the order in which the four beasts are set. Bad
as the Babylonians were, they were outdone by the Persians; these were exceeded
by the Greeks; while the Romans were the worst of all. Note that all this while
the nations were growing in what has been called culture and civisation. This
was a merely superficial thing, and served only to veneer the rottenness and
cruelty which were beneath.
3. The restoration of man to
humanity must come, not from himself, but from above. He who introduced the
healing salt which is yet to purify thoroughly the bitter fountain of our
earthly life was sent forth from “the ancient of days.” There are few more
striking arguments for the Divine origin of the Gospel, and the deity of its
author, than that which may be drawn from the contrast between the character of
Jesus and that of His age. Surely, the hope of the world lies in the diffusion
of the Gospel of Christ. Wherever the Gospel goes in power, it restores men to
humanity by bringing them back to God. Civilisation without the Gospel is only
a veneered brutality. (William M. Taylor, D.D.)
Daniel’s First Vision
This first vision of Daniel is confessed on all hands to be an
expansion of the dream of Nebuchadnezzar. Nebuchadnezzar’s dream had
represented human empire in its intelligent, well-proportioned might. It was
man’s power as formed, in some measure, in the image of God. The substance, the
strength, the character of the several empires were different; the form was
one. Daniel’s vision exhibits them on another side. The four winds of Heaven
are driving upon the great sea, that representative, throughout Holy Scripture,
of our troubled world, and out of it there arise forms of more than human
strength. The terrific and wasting power of the world-empires is exhibited
under the symbol of brute force. A sort of unity is given to them, in that they
are all exhibited at first to the prophet’s eye at once. God shows them to him
first, as He Himself sees all things, at once; then, as they arose in fact,
succeeding one another. Nor did they arise of their own power. “Not without
being acted upon by the winds of Heaven does the sea send forth those beasts;
not without being set in motion by the powers above, does the heathen world
form itself into those great empires” (Hoffmann.) As the Babylonian empire had
been exhibited to Nebuchadnezzar under the symbol of the richest metal, “gold,”
so now to Daniel under that of the solid strength of the king of beasts of
prey, with the swiftness of the royal bird, the eagle. Jeremiah and Ezekiel had
likened Nebuchadnezzar to both. The second beast, the bear, corresponds with
the solid, heavy, chest of Nebuchadnezzar’s statue. The twofold division and
the relative strength of the two sides recur in this symbol also. It lifts
itself heavily, in contrast to the winged rapidity of the Chaldean conquests.
The “three ribs in its mouth” correspond accurately to the three kingdoms which
the Medo-Persian empire swallowed up, the Lydian, Babylonian, and Egyptian. It
is bidden, “Arise devour much flesh,” in conformity with the greedy character
of the animal: waste of human life was a characteristic of the Persian empire
in its heavy aggressiveness. Heaviness was, after Cyrus, the characteristic of
its wars. Of the third empire, the characteristics are insatiableness of
conquest, and swiftness, and fourfold division. The panther, an animal
insatiable above every other beast of prey, gifted with a swiftness which
scarce any prey can escape, is represented yet further with four wings. The
subdivision of the empire is indicated by its four heads. Its colour
corresponds to the brass of the image, its swiftness to the activity of the loins
and thighs of the image. Probably the multiplication of the heads was a symbol
of circumspection, of manifold, versatile intelligence. But, again, the chief
object of interest in the vision is the fourth empire. For the living creature
which can represent it there is no name. “In the former beasts,” says
Jerome, “there are single tokens of terribleness, in this, there are all.” Of
this last empire Daniel sees not only certain characteristics, but a history.
Intervals of its history are marked. It embraces a long period. Its
characteristic is stupendous strength. Permanent subdual characterised the
Roman empire, but it had not the power of consolidating into one the disjointed
materials of its greatness. The period after the destruction of the whole fourth
kingdom is indicated by the words: “And the rest of the beasts, the other
kingdoms, had their dominion taken away; yet their lives were prolonged for a
season and a time” (v. 12). This sentence seems to relate to a time after the
destruction of the fourth empire, but this, being still future, we cannot
explain certainly. The chief object of interest, that chiefly expanded, is that
in which all the kingdoms end--the Kingdom of God victorious over the evil of
the world . . . It is a sublime picture; man, with his keen intellect, a look
more stout than his fellows, overthrowing kings, doing his own will, speaking
against God, placing himself over against Him as His antagonist, having, for a
set time, all things in his hand; and above, out of sight, God enthroned in the
serenity of His majesty, surrounded by the thousands of heavenly beings who
serve Him; and near Him, One in human form, born of a human birth, yet, like
God, above in the clouds of Heaven, the darkness shrouding Him from human eye,
but reigning and to reign for ever, His Kingdom neither to pass away by decay,
nor to be destroyed by violence. “God is patient, because He is eternal.”
Below, all is tumult; above, all is tranquility; the Heavenly King over against
the earthly potentate, until the last blasphemy draws down His lightnings upon
him, the voice of his great word ascends, the judgment, of God descends. (E.
B. Pusey, D.D.)
The First Two Visions of the Book of Daniel
Two emblems are here used to describe the corruption of human
states in past ages, the great image and the four beasts of prey. False
religion and worldly ambition, with its natural fruits of cruelty and crime,
are vividly portrayed by this twofold emblem. The redemption of man from this
twofold fall must begin with their separate members. Let us, therefore, trace,
from the emblems themselves, the bright and holy contrast which is waiting to
be realised in the coming Kingdom of God.
1. Man, in his state of
nature, is dead in trespasses and sins. In the symbols of the prophecy he is an
atom of the dazzling, but lifeless image; a member incorporated in the wild
beast of prey. The first work of redemption is to deliver him from this state.
The bestial nature is then crucified and done away; and he becomes a living
member of the body of Christ. He is no longer a lifeless atom of clay in the
feet of the image. The breath of a new life has been breathed into his
nostrils, and, like Adam in the day of creation, he stands once mere erect in
the image of God.
2. The prophecy leads us to
contemplate the true character and blessedness of a righteous nation. The
closing part of those visions teaches us:
Verse 6
Like
a leopard.
Alexander the
Great
The
empire which rose on the ruins of the second monarchy was the Grecian.
Alexander the Great subverted the Persian empire. The leopard is remarkable for
its swiftness, and for the eagerness with which it springs upon its prey; and
we know, also, how rapid were the conquests of Alexander, how eager he was to
subdue all nations. This rapidity is symbolized in the vision by the four wings
which the leopard had on its back. The leopard with four wings reigned over the
vanquished bear. The leopard also prefigured the downfall of the Grecian
kingdom. The leopard was seen with four wings upon its back; but besides these
wings, it is described as having four heads, and these four heads symbolized
its downfall. When Alexander died, his kingdom was divided among his captains,
four of them. (W. Wood, A.M.)
The Wings of
Alexander the Leopard
During
the time occupied in the reduction of the Sogdians, the most heroic opposition
was displayed by a company of the people, who, under the command of their
governor, Arimazes, had fortified themselves upon a rock, situated near the
river Oxus, which was considered impregnable. The Macedonians were as
determined to drive them from their stronghold as the besieged were resolved
not to be overcome. Alexander summoned the barbarians to yield themselves his
prisoners; whereupon Arimazes, conceiving it impossible that his position could
be reached, and knowing that he possessed ammunition and provisions sufficient
for two years, returned the following laconic and undaunted answer: “Can
Alexander, who is able to do all things, fly also? And hath nature, on a
sudden, given him wings?” Exasperated at this reply to his message, the emperor
gave orders to three hundred mountaineers, chosen from his army, to scale the
place of refuge by night. Notwithstanding the perils attending so arduous an
enterprise, the men succeeded, after witnessing the sacrifice of thirty-two of
their party, who were precipitated and destroyed, in attaining a point higher
than that inhabited by the natives. In the morning, when the signal on the peak
of the rock wan descried by the Macedonians waving triumphantly over the heads
of the Sogdians beneath, Alexander despatched one of his retinue to the
governor, with an imperative injuction to surrender. Arimazes, being still
ignorant of the extraordinary feat that had been performed, sent back an answer
equally insolent with the former; but the officer, instead of returning with
the reply, pointed to the soldiers stationed on the height above, and,
remembering the nature of the message recently transmitted to his master,
exclaimed, “You see that Alexander’s soldiers have wings.” At this, Arimazes
surrendered the garrison and supplicated clemency. (Charles Popham Miles.)
Verse 8
Another little horn.
The Little Horn is
Antichrist
1. By
the ruin or destruction of this little horn, the fourth beast, or human kingdom
is said utterly and finally to fall (v.11). Therefore, it cannot represent
Mahomet.
2. The
destroying of the beast and little horn is described in such forms as are in
the book of Revelation, interpreted of Antichrist. (Revelation
19:20; Revelation
20:10-11.)
3. This
little horn is conjoined with the ten horns (v. 7,8, 20, 24), accordingly as
Antichrist is conjoined with them. (Revelation
13:1-18; Revelation
17:1-18.)
4. The
characters attributed to him are the same which are attributed to Antichrist.
Verse 9-10
The ancient of
days did sit.
The Ancient of Days Coming
to Judgment
Daniel claimed
two offices for the Messiah.
1. He should be a King.
2. A Judge.
These claims
rested on the unity of nature--the “ancient of days “ being “brought near “ and
taking “hold of, the Son of man; thus making both One and this One offering a
propitiation--being “out off,” but not from Himself. The first claim has been
met; Christ is the King! He shall be the Judge Kingship becomes the guarantee
of Judgeship. We proceed to proclaim a coming judgment.
I. IT IS THE
UNIVERSAL EXPRESSION OF OUR RACE.
1. By personal conscience.
2. By relative necessity.
3. By ideal anticipation.
II. IT IS THE UNIFORM
TESTIMONY OF SCRIPTURE.
The Bible teaches throughout that “the judgment “ will take place. In this
testimony we find three grand facts.
1. All the dead are reserved to judgment.
2. All the living are going to judgment
3. All conditions of life will be known at the judgment.
III. IT IS THE
INVOLVED CULMINATION OF REDEMPTION.
1. It will exhibit the personal glory of our Redeemer’s character.
2. It will vindicate the supreme importance of our Redeemer’s
mission.
3. It will display the impartiality of our Redeemer’s administration.
4. It will declare the immunities of our Redeemer’s followers. (Joseph
Odell.)
The World’s Assize
In metaphors
borrowed from the solemnities of earthly tribunals, and particularly from those
of the great Jewish Sanhedrim, the prophet describes the process of judgment.
As, in that assembly, the father of the consistory sat with the assessors
ranged on each side in the form of a semi-circle, with the people standing
before him, so here the prophet speaks of God as seated on His throne of
judgment, attended by thousand thousands who minister unto Him, whilst ten
thousand times ten thousand stand in His presence. We are disposed to regard
the language of the text as descriptive of the Great Assize.
I. THE GLORIOUS
APPEARANCE OF OUR SAVIOUR.
1. That Christ will re-visit this earth is a fact stated in many
passages of Scripture. What shall be the nature of the grandeur and glory of
His final appearing, or how it will be displayed, none can tell.
II. ITS ATTENDANT
CIRCUMSTANCES. More particularly as to ourselves and mankind at
large. Mark how diverse the characters of those around the throne! What an
affecting contrast is presented to our minds! (Edward Pizey, B. A.)
Manifestation or God by
Fire
Grotius remarks
that the ancient thrones and curule chairs had wheels. Those in the text being
like burning fire.” Dr. Cox observes: “Prognosticate”; “at once the majesty of
the Judge, piercing, penetrating, awful, and the rapid progress of those
providential visitations which would bespeak the indignation of a sin-avenging
Deity.” “The fire-scattering wheels,” says Keil, “show the omnipotence of the
Divine throne of judgment--the going of the judgment of God the whole earth.”
He further observes: “Fire, and the shining of fire, are the constant phenomena
of the manifestation of God in the world. The fire which engirds His throne
with flame pours itself forth as a stream from God into the world, consuming
all that is sinful and hostile to Him, and rendering His people and kingdom
glorious.”
Thousand thousands ministered unto Him.
Benefits of Meditation on
the Holy Angels
The thought
that the Christian life consists in the performance of everyday duties on the
principles of the Gospel, and with the temper and disposition of the blessed
inhabitants of Heaven, may help to restrain us from two serious errors into
which, from our extreme frailty, we must confess ourselves but too liable to
fall. One error is the disposition to imagine that religion is a matter of so
transcendantly high and spiritual a nature as to be quite above and unmixed
with earthly things. The other error is the disposition to lower the standard
and measure of Christian morality. It is of the highest importance that we pray
and endeavour to have our elections deadened to this present world, and our
minds drawn up to high and Heavenly things. Habitual reflection on the habits
of glorified spirits in the beatific presence of their and our God would
greatly tend to wean our affections from mean, unworthy objects, to fill us
with humility and awe, and, at the same time, to give us a notion of our true
dignity as God’s adopted children in Christ Jesus. The mere thought that there
are in existence innumerable glorious immortal spirits--that their God is our
God--that let our condition in this world be ever so poor and degraded, yet
these blessed angels disdain not to acknowledge themselves our
“fellow-servants”; that they care for us, and minister for us as Christians,
and heirs of salvation, may well arouse us from the low-born cares and follies
of this present world, lead us to consider what we are, and what we are coming
to. To be in the presence and favour of the Almighty God, this and this only
can constitute the happiness of all reasonable creatures, of angels in Heaven,
or of men on earth. To live in the presence of God is the happiness of
glorified spirits in Heaven. To live as in His presence is the great rule of
holiness to men on earth. It is of great consequence for serious minds to raise
their thoughts to high and Heavenly realities; especially to the thought of the
innumerable society of good angels, who sing their Alleluias before the throne.
(Serrmons by Authors “Tracts for the Times.”)
The Heavenly Service
The curtain of
Heaven was lifted up, and Daniel, wrapt in the spirit and vision of prophecy,
was favoured with a view of the celestial regions. The scene is laid in the
wide etherial of the third heaven. The Ancient of Days appeared upon a burning
throne, which, being provided with wheels, was the chariot in which He made the
immense circuit of His dominion. A numerous and splendid host of angels and
redeemed spirits minister unto Him, and stand before Him. To minister and to
stand in Scripture language, mean service. These countless millions, therefore, stand before God to
wait His commands, and then they minister unto Him, that is, they flee to do
His sovereign pleasure. The truth to be gathered from this part of Daniel’s
vision is, that Heaven is a state of exalted service.
I. THE PECULIAR
NATURE OF THE HEAVENLY
SERVICE.
1. It will be suited to a state of final reward. There will be
nothing that will imply a state of probation or trial. When we reach Heaven,
all service which had the nature of a means to attaining the end of moral
perfection will pass away.
2. It will include all essential duties that are due from the
creature to the Creator. Many of the duties of revealed religion will cease in
Heaven, because they are designed to effect a temporary purpose only. Through
eternity, angels and redeemed will be dependent upon God, and receive all good
from Him. Love, and the manifestation of love, will be one portion of this
exalted service. A holy fear of, and respect to, the majesty of God is due from
the creature to the Creator, and the manifestation of this will be one part of
the service of Heaven. A voluntary dependence on God; an absolute and unlimited
subjection to His supreme authority; a continued aim at His glory--enter into
the duty of the creature towards the Creator.
3. The Heavenly service will be the united service of angels and men.
The assembly of Heaven is one, the worship or service is one, the temple is
one, the song is one.
4. The Heavenly service will consist in immediate attendance upon
God. Here ours is the service of trading for our great Master while He is in a
far country. But in Heaven we shall serve in His presence; we shall be His
personal attendants.
5. It will be a service of subordinate dominion. The Scriptures
assure us that the saints are to be rulers and governors in the world to come.
What an honour and satisfaction it will be to serve the King of kings and Lord
of lords, as kings and rulers under Him, and this honour shall all the saints
have.
6. The Heavenly service will be a sabbath service. The earthly
sabbath is a type of Heaven, and it shadows forth the state and employments of
the saints there. It is a rest from worldly toil and labour, but not a
cessation of all activity and service.
7. The service of Heaven is temple service. The ancient temple was a
type of Heaven.
8. The service of Heaven will be a service of praise. To think of
God, to admire Him, to behold His glory and rejoice in it, to love and praise
Him, will be the sweet employment of Heaven. The Heavenly service is the
engagement of spirits freed from sin; pervaded with light, fired with love,
enraptured with delight, and bound by sweet and immortal bonds to God and to
each other for ever.
II. THE MANNER IN
WHICH THIS SERVICE WILL BE RENDERED,
1. Without the least reluctance. The service of God will be
voluntarily rendered, deeply loved, and highly enjoyed.
2. Without weakness.
3. Without weariness.
4. Without distraction.
5. Without intermission.
6. Without defect.
7. Without end.
If this service
will be our happiness and honour in Heaven, let us take care that we deem it
our happiness and honour on earth. None who refuse to serve God on earth shall
serve Him in Heaven. (N. Gregory.)
Verse
13-14
One
like the son of Man.
Messiah’s
Kingdom
Daniel
had this vision some fifty years after Nebuchadnezzar had the Vision of the
composite image: but his vision harmonizes with it, and is descriptive of the
same great kings and monarchies. The kingdom given to the Son of Man is the
kingdom which was symbolized by the stone cut out without hands, which grew
into a great mountain and filled the whole earth.
I. WHEN THIS KINGDOM
WAS GIVEN TO OUR LORD.
1. Our Lord is described as coming with clouds in the day of
judgment. But the coming of Christ to the universal judgment is not the coming
of Christ spoken of in the text. The coming of Christ to judge the world will
be the end of all things; but the coming of Christ in the text must be during
the time of the fourth or Roman empire. The coming of Christ to the universal
judgment will be to reward or punish mankind; but the coming of Christ in the
text is to receive a kingdom for Himself. The coming of Christ to the last
judgment will be to utter the final sentence and to fix the eternal state of
all the righteous and the wicked; but the coming of Christ in the text refers
to temporal events, and to temporal kingdoms.
2. What can the coming be but His coming from earth to Heaven at the
triune of His ascension. The prophet does not represent “the Son of Man” as
coming in the clouds from Heaven to earth, but as coming with the clouds of
Heaven from His former residence on earth towards the Ancient of Days on his
fiery throne. The description of Christ’s ascension by the Evangelist is the
best explanation of this part of the vision of the prophet.
Again
the prophet says, “And they brought him near before him,” i.e.,
they brought the Son of Man near before the Ancient of Days on His throne.
Again, “There was given him dominion, and glory, and a kingdom.” In His hand
was put the sceptre of everlasting empire. When, therefore, our Lord ascended
on high, and sat down on the right hand of God, then He received His kingdom
and glory.
II. THE NATURE OF HIS KINGDOM.
1. It is Divine. It is altogether of God; it is given to the Son of
Man by the Ancient of Days; it is set up on earth by the God of Heaven; it is
not of this world, it is a spiritual kingdom. As God alone could set up this
kingdom in the world, so God alone can make men its willing subjects.
2. It is universal. From the first the greatest opposition was made
to the establishment of this kingdom. But in the course of three centuries all
opposition was overcome, and Christianity became the religion of the world.
3. It is everlasting. “Of his kingdom there shall be no end.” The subject
is instructive, alarming, and consolatory.
The Kingdom of
the Son of Man
This
chapter has been well called “a religious philosophy of history.” It is a
philosophy rather than a foretelling of the future, but it is the philosophy of
a prophet who speaks for God. Daniel saw four great beasts come up out of the
sea of nations. These represent four kings. They are divers one from another;
the first is like a lion, and the second like a bear, the third like a leopard,
the fourth is dreadful and terrible, apparently indescribable. These beasts
have dominion for a time until the Ancient of Days sits upon the throne of
judgment. Then the dominion is taken from them and given to one like unto a Son
of Man. His dominion is everlasting, and His kingdom shall not be destroyed.
Consider this distinction between kings represented as “beasts” and “one like
unto a Son of Man.” The four beasts have one thing in common; they are all
beasts. They represent the sovereignty of brute force. They are strong, cruel,
rapacious. The final kingdom is given to the representative of humanity. But
these kings are men. Therefore, it is not enough to say that the Son of Man is
human. In the interpretation given to the vision, the phrase is explained thus:
“The Saints of the Most High.” Remember that man was made in the image of God: i.e.,
what distinguishes man from other animals is his moral greatness. He is an
animal in his lower nature; but he has a higher nature which makes him “man.”
Therefore, this vision describes the victory of the kingdom in which man’s
moral nature is redeemed from sin, and is made supreme over the kingdom in
which his lower animal nature is victorious. It teaches that the domination of
brute force and the sovereignty of selfishness do obtain; but they are judged
by God unworthy to continue, and must give place to the domination of redeemed
humanity and to the sovereignty of goodness. Only a kingdom represented by a
Son of Man can be lasting and universal. One of the most striking thoughts here
is that a civilisation which may appear very splendid to man, may appear very
unworthy to God. The prophet describes these world-powers from God’s
standpoint. He judges the beast unworthy to rule, and gives the dominion to the
Son of Man, Now it does not concern us to identify very closely these “beasts”
with the world-powers they were meant to represent by Daniel. Probably they
were the Babylonian empire under Nebuchadnezzar, the Median empire, the Persian
empire made splendid for a season by Cyrus Darius. Artaxerxes and Xerxes, and
the Greek dominion in Asia connected with the meteor-like glory of Alexander.
These were all mighty empires. Some aspects of them appeal powerfully to our
senses. No one can consider these ancient empires without being affected by
their magnificence. But there is another tribunal before which they must be
judged. The eyes from which no secrets are hid look beneath all this dazzling
glory; and they see there--brutality! These empires are founded upon the
supremacy of man’s animal nature. They rule because they are strong. They have
great iron teeth! They devour much flesh. They speak great things. And this is
the supremacy of the lower nature. This is a very instructive analysis of
greatness. The prophet’s inward vision has been purged when he can see that all
selfishness is essentially bestial. “Let us pray to be delivered from deception
by dazzle! We admire power and massiveness, whether in individuals, or
societies, or empires. Let us be sure to examine what lies behind the glory
which appears. Nothing can match the story of the uprising of these ancient
empires except the story of their fall. They seemed destined to continue for
ever. It looked as if nothing could destroy them. But with startling suddenness
they tottered to their fall. So must fall every dominion which is brutal in its
foundations, which is founded on strength and selfish instinct rather them on
goodness and reason. The only dominion which can be finally triumphant is the
dominion of the saints of the Most High. What representative is like unto a Son
of Man? The consideration of this phrase leads us to take a big step forward.
As Daniel used the phrase, it is probable that there was no definite personal
reference. The phrase is “a Son of Man,” not “the Son of Man” and in v.27 it is
substituted by “the people of the saints of the Most High.” Doubtless Daniel
shared the Jewish hope that the final kingdom was that inaugurated by the
Messiah; but here the phrase “Son of Man” is meant only to contrast the human
kingdom with that of the beasts, Now, if we compare the usage of the name in
the, Gospels, it seems clear that Jesus took the name from this very passage.
Daniel may not have meant to describe the Messiah by it; but when the Messiah
came He adopted it at once as an admirable description of Himself. This means,
therefore, that Jesus considered that He was founding that kingdom which should
be universal and everlasting. He was that representative of the race whose
sovereignty is guided by the highest principles of reason and goodness, and to
which the Ancient of Days will give “dominion and glory and a kingdom that all
people, nations and languages should serve Him.” The kingdom which Jesus
founded is the kingdom of wisdom and love. It is to take the place of all
kingdoms in which man’s lower nature is supreme. It is to be the sovereignty of
a redeemed humanity. This philosophy of history has been justified not only by
the overthrow of the ancient monarchies, but also by the gradual permeation of
modern monarchies by Christian teaching. There is abundant evidence that the
nineteen centuries of the Christian era have seen an ever-increasing
application of Christian principles. Brute force is not worshipped to-day as it
was in the days when Roman legions ruled the world. Character is becoming more
and more the object of our praise. An altogether higher standard of duty
obtains in every department of life. Selfishness in every form is being
condemned increasingly. This transformation must go on until everything that is
brutal is destroyed and man’s highest nature redeemed from sin is supreme. The
dominion of the Son of Man is to be universal and it is to be everlasting. That is what you and
I are to believe! I suppose that we are all prone to believe that the reforms
of the past were wise and good, but that it is hopeless to expect much further
change. That is the temptation of the devil to little faith, and it must be
resisted earnestly. We must be much more worthy of the title, “Saints of the
Most High.” And we must have more faith in the triumph of our Saviour’s kingdom
upon earth. Think of this prophet away in the pre-Christian times when might
was right and all the world seemed against Him. It did require faith to call
this might that of a beast, and to speak of a Son of Man to whom the kingdom
was to be given. But Daniel could believe it. Surely we can! “To doubt would be
disloyalty, to falter would be sin.” Let us be more bold in our claims, more
fearless in applying our principles, more confident of victory. The limit of
the sovereignty of the Son of Man will not be until dominion and glory and a
kingdom are given unto Him, and all people, nations and languages shall serve
Him. Therefore, there is very much land yet to be possessed, and there is very
much for us followers of the Son of Man to do. I want to ask you whether you
belong to this kingdom of the Son of Man? There is a very simple test, “Is
Jesus your King or is He not?” If He is, you are in His kingdom. If He is not,
you are outside. If He is your Lord, you belong to a kingdom which is
everlasting, and you have eternal life! Death will not divide you from His
dominion. Death will set your spirit free from the trammels of your sinful
fleshy nature, and will usher you into His immediate presence. But if you do
not belong to His kingdom, then know that you belong to the kingdom which is
essentially brutal, because you are giving the victory to your lower animal
nature. Perhaps there are fine qualities in your character which you admire and
seek to develop. Perhaps there are splendid moments when the Godlike in you
stands erect and declares it will be supreme. But if you reject the Son of Man,
you turn away from the only One who can redeem you from sin and make you a
saint of the Most High. And so the crown is upon the head of that which makes
you like the brutes that perish. That kingdom cannot stand. The Eternal God has
judged it; it stands condemned to destruction. (J. E. Roberts, M. A.)
The Majesty of
the Messiah
The
venerable and saintly minister of a mighty world-empire, august in his
unrivalled reputation, his unique position, and his immense personal dignity,
with an enthusiasm for God and His laws which had braved the most appalling
dangers from irresponsible despots, was just the man to be permitted to see the
things which were hidden from the eyes of the rest of the world. There had been
brought before him in a vision the survey of a series of vast temporal powers,
under the forms of huge, terrific animals, horrible as nightmares, which filled
even his calm sad lofty spirit with dread. And then he was reminded that behind
and above all these was a greater power still, the everlasting omnipotence of
God. He saw the Ancient of Days, the Eternal Being, seated, whose garment was
white as snow, and the hair of His head like the pure wool; His throne was like
the fiery flame, and His wheels as burning fire. A fiery stream issued and came
forth from before Him; thousand thousands ministered unto Him, end ten thousand
times ten thousand stood before Him. And then, in contradistinction to the
horror of the typical monsters, one like the Son of Man, in all the beauty and
gentleness of a perfect human nature, came with the clouds of Heaven, in all
the strength of a Divine power, and came to the Ancient of Days. He had been
before among the millions of the Heavenly host, but now His time was come; and
to Him was given, not one of the temporal thrones, however splendid, because
that would soon pass away and be gone for ever, but dominion and glory and a
kingdom such that all peoples, nations and languages should serve Him; His
dominion was an everlasting dominion, which should not pass away, and His
kingdom that which should not be destroyed. It is useless for unbelievers to
say that by this magnificent imagery and exalted language Daniel meant nothing
but the Hebrew people in a state of improvement. The seer himself shows that he
was thinking of nothing of the kind, but of the personal Divine and human
Redeemer, when two chapters later he utters the solemn and mysterious words,
Messiah shall be cut off, but not for Himself. He whom the wise and experienced
statesman beheld shining bright and glorious in the clouds before the burning
throne of the Most High was the very same as He whom Abraham saw, and David and
the long line of psalmists and prophets, with different degrees of clearness,
certainty, and understanding. It was the very same who was revealed in Jesus of
Nazareth, of whom the awful voice from Heaven was heard declaring, “This is My
beloved Son; hear Him!” These thoughts which we have gathered from the facts of
the predictive element in the Old Testament, and from the life of Daniel,
impress upon us with unquestionable force the eternal majesty of the Son of
God. The systems and powers of the world, rise and fall, and have their sway, and
fill our minds with their seeming importance; but, notwithstanding all the fret
and fume of men, it is only the kingdom of righteousness and truth that is
eternal, only the city of God that hath unfading foundations, only the Son that
abideth ever. The Christian view of prophecy, says Principal Cairns, not only
accounts for the individual facts, but for the whole. Prophecy is systematic,
progressive, all-inclusive; and these features are accounted for alone by the
theory of a revelation of redemption. Christ is the centre; in Him all are
connected; the Messianic part of revelation is largest, most important, most
like the heart in the economy of the whole. This alone accounts for the
progress which is in all directions and towards all issues, but all conditioned
by the approach of Christ and by the fulness of the disclosure of His Person
and work, and its consequences . . . The world’s kingdoms must go through that
crisis of trial and judgment, to prepare the world as s whole for the Heavenly
King. With prophecy there is a Redeemer, and with Him a philosophy of history
leading upwards. Without prophecy, no redemption, but law, and sin fastened
down by law; any streaks in the darkness Like a prophetic glimmer, due to no
rising orb, but meteoric, and born of night or chaos: Ought not the Christian,
then, to give heed to this “sure word,” which is attested, as it is created, by
a power above nature, just where it needs to be? May he not hope as he prays
that to others this day may dawn, this morning star arise? (Archdeacon
Sinclair, D.D.)
The Supreme
Dominion of the Son of Man
I. THE NATURE OF
THAT SUPREMACY WHICH OUR BLESSED LORD EXERCISES AS THE SON OF MAN. That this whole vision relates to the
Mediatorial Person and Administration of Christ is demonstrably apparent. It is
mediatorially that the designation “Son of Man” applies to the glorious
Personage whom the Celestial Intelligences are represented as bringing near to
the Ancient of Days. The predictions of our Lord’s mediatorial government were
grievously misapprehended by the Jewish nation, not excepting Christ’s
immediate followers. Rivetted by vivid delineations of Messiah’s power and
glory, they overlooked those Scriptures which foretold, His profound
humiliation, obedience, and sufferings. The decease which He was to accomplish
at Jerusalem was an offence even to the apostles themselves. (Mark 9:31-32). Christ’s supremacy is intended to command the service of His
subjects. Jehovah alone is entitled to this service from all intelligent
creatures.
1. It is a spiritual service. External subjection may be yielded in
the absence of all those principles and affections which alone invest it with
moral character and worth. Human legislation discharges its duty when it uses
all competent means for ensuring obedience to positive statutes. It cannot go
further. The first demand which Jehovah prefers is, My Son, give me thy heart.
Love to Heaven’s Lawgiver is the rudimental principle of obedience to His will.
Of this love, mankind, without a solitary exception, are wholly destitute.
Against Scriptural views, illustrated by the findings of experience, it is
nugatory to oppose the testimony of superficial moralists, or dreamy poets. One
main design of the mediatorial supremacy of Christ is to restore to the human
soul that best of all affections, the love which is the fulfilling of the law.
For this end, Messiah became “the Son of Man.” The love of God our Saviour is
shed abroad in the heart by the Holy Ghost, and becomes the living principle of
new obedience.
2. The service which Christ requires from all people, nations, and
languages is unreserved. Those who are redeemed by the blood and renewed by the
Spirit of Christ, “have respect unto all God’s commandments.” Every requirement
in the infallible directory deserves and demands our prompt and faithful
observance. A genuine servant of the Son of Man is not satisfied with
generalities. A common practice of false teachers in our Lord’s day was the exaltation
of some favourite precepts at the expense of others which are specially irksome
to flesh and blood.
3. The service which the Son of Man claims is habitual service.
Temporary or occasional devotedness of heart and life to Christ is not the kind
of obedience which He will ever accept. Wherever living faith is implanted, it
is an undying principle of obedience. In this world the servants of the Son of
Man are distinguished rather by the sincerity and fervour of their aspirations
than by uniform progress in holiness.
II. THE UNIVERSAL
EXTENT OF CHRIST’S SOVEREIGNTY. “All
people . . . should serve Him.” The period referred to is after His
resurrection. Previously to the ascension of the Son of Man, the gospel
kingdomhad been, for reasons infinitely wise and good, confined almost
exclusively within Palestine and its vicinity. Whilst other nations professed
that measures of traditionary knowledge which a primary revelation and their
occasional intercourse with the seed of Abraham supplied, it was little more
than sufficient to render their spiritual darkness awfully visible.
III. THE STABILITY AND
ENDLESS DURATION OF THE DOMINION OF THE SON OF MAN. The fluctuating and evanescent nature of
all earthly power and glory is apparent to the most superficial observer. To a
casual observer of human affairs, the destinies of the church may seem to he
subjected to those sweeping resolutions which have overthrown the proudest
dynasties of the world. When we speak of the stability and endless duration of
the dominion of the Son of Man, our contemplations are carried forward “to the
end of all things.” Practical lessons:
The Everlasting
Kingdom
There
is no reason to doubt that the right and true and the holy shall have the
victory. All dominions hostile to Christ must give way. All kingdoms
incompatible with His must be dissolved. The kingdoms of this world have their
symbols in the lion, the bear, the leopard, and the fourth dreadful anal
terrible beast; and by a law universally proved, their passions and discord shall
precipitate their own destruction. But Christ’s kingdom has nothing anarchical,
because it has nothing sinful in it; it has not one element of decay, because
into it nothing that defileth can enter. Suns shall grow pale, stars shall
become dim; the crescent shall wane, the crucifix shall fall from the hands of
him that holds it; and Christ’s kingdom shall extend over all the earth, and
all shall bless Him, and be blessed in Him. We see already tokens of that day.
I take a bright view of the coming days. What progress do knowledge, science,
education, Christianity, the Bible, make everywhere throughout the world at
this moment? Do we not see all languages, however diversified, becoming
reducible to two, three, or four at the very most--Christians becoming less
earthly, and Christianity less alloyed? What are these but the tokens of the
approaching glory; voices in the wilderness, preparing the way of the Lord;
messengers sent before to announce that the bridegroom cometh? I see flowers of
paradise begin to bloom in many a desert. I see upon all sides the sea of
barbarism and superstition begin to ebb, and many a dove take wing, and fly
over the length and breadth of the world’s chaotic flood, giving tokens that
the Prince of Peace is on His way, warning us that the sound of His approach
already breaks upon the ear. Let us hail the twilight; let us urge on, us far
as we can, the coming day. (J. Cummings.)
The Son of Man
Brought to the Ancient of Days
In
the words before us the Son of Man is a prominent object. The government of the
Son of Man is a kingdom which shall not be destroyed. The Lord Jesus, in His
humanity, is called the Son of God as well as the Son of Man. Who is the Son of
Man? It may he suggested that the Son of Man means the material form which the
Lord took from the Virgin Mother, and that it is called the Son of Man from its
mortal derivation. But this supposition will be undoubtedly corrected if we
consult the teaching of the Lord with due attention. The natural, clear, and
simple view, then, of the Son is that it means the humanity which the Lord, the
Eternal, assumed by the instrumentality of the Virgin, containing in it Divine
qualities from God the Father, and human nature, as we have it, with all its
imperfections, from the Judean Mother. There may be a son born in time, but
there cannot be an Eternal Son. When we speak of the Lord’s humanity, or of
humanity in general, we must bear in mind that human nature is not a simple
element, but a wonderful organisation of spiritual and natural forms. If the
body is a wonderful congeries of organs, still more so is the soul. The portion
of humanity which was fallen and in ruins, is called the natural man . . .
While from the mother human nature was received in a fallen state, from the
Father within there was received the embryo of a Divine human nature. What is
that in the Lord which is properly meant by the Son of Man? It is sometimes
said that Divine and human are opposite. They are not so; man is a likeness of
his Maker. God is an infinite Divine man, (J. Bailey, A.M.)
Christ’s
Kingdom--the Kingdom of the Saints
This
sublime prophecy carries us on to the final establishment of Christ’s kingdom.
Of that kingdom His ascension may be regarded as the pledge and commencement.
He reigning even now; shall reign more visibly and fully hereafter. His kingdom
is to supplant and supersede all earthly kingdoms. See vision of four beasts
(empires) in previous verses. Their thrones to be “cast down” (v. 9), to make
room for a nobler one. It shall excel all earthly kingdoms.
1. To be universal--“All people, nations, languages,” etc.
2. To be everlasting--“not to pass away”; “not to be destroyed.”
Contrast in these respects the greatest of human kingdoms which stretch only
over part of men: carry seeds of own decay: sink before superior force. It is
to be the mediatorial kingdom of Christ; distinct from His empire as the
everlasting God; for:
I. IT IS “GIVEN TO HIM” (v. 14). By Ancient
of Days, i.e., the Eternal Father. This explained in the New
Testament (Philippians 2:6-10). Given as the purchase of His blood, and recompense of His
obedience Isaiah 53:12; Psalms 110:7).
II. GIVEN TO HIM AS “SON OF MAN” (v. 13). The glory
of the Ascension carries us back to humility of the Incarnation (Ephesians 4:9-10). The one is the top stone in “the mystery of godliness,” the
other its foundation 1 Timothy 3:16). It was through His death in the flesh He conquered the usurper
(Hebrews 2:14). By His sacrifice for sin as our High Priest, He prepared way
for His throne us our King. Hence Zechariah 6:13. First the cross, then the crown.
III. SHARED WITH HIS PEOPLE. Saints of
the Most High to “possess the kingdom”(v. 18). This was Christ’s design (Titus 2:14). This was His prayer (John 17:22-24). He would not have the kingdom apart fromthem. What love from
Him! what honour on us! It is this which makes the subject so intensely
practical. We are even now either amongst His enemies or His friends. If the
former, how terrible! (Luke 19:27). “Whither I go, ye cannot come.” If the latter, how blessed! (Matthew 24:34). “Where I am, there shall also my servant be.” All of us by
nature enemies, rebels, etc. What Christ did to bring us from this state (Colossians 1:20-22). How are we to be savingly connected with His glorious reign? By
faith in 1 Peter 2:7-10): by true reception of Him into our hearts John 1:12); by grace of His Holy Spirit (John 3:3, etc.). Are we now the subjects of His kingdom of grace, that so
we may be hereafter sharers of His reign of glory? Observe the twofold pledge
of His kingdom in the Ascension and the Pentecost, and how closely they come
together (next Sunday-week). Christ has taken one part of the pledge (our
nature) up to Heaven; He Sends down the other part (His Spirit) to us on earth.
The last that the disciples saw of Him on earth was human nature carried up;
the next they knew of Him was the Holy Ghost sent down. He holds a pledge from
us; we hold one from Him. Both for our assurance--His kingdom shall come.
1. Present duties resulting. Service, obedience, loyalty. He is our
king, though absent; has left us work to do; talents to improve; His cause to
advance; His enemies to oppose, and still heavenly-mindedness to be cultivated.
(See the Collect for the day.)
2. Present comforts suggested. Such hopes for the future, and their
influence (1 John 3:1-2). Grounds for patience and expectation Hebrews 10:36-37). What are present sorrows in comparison with such coming joys? (Romans 8:18). Through the cross lies our way to the throne; so it was with
Christ; so it must be with us; “He himself went not up,” etc. (See Visitation
of Sick.) Let “Thy kingdom come” ever indissolubly link itself to “Thy will be
done.” (W. P. Walsh, D.D.)
Verse 18
But the saints of the Most
High shall take the kingdom.
The Political Character of
the Good Time Coming
“There is a good time
coming,” so says the poet, so saith the Scriptures. The golden age of the world
is not in the past, it is in the future, the age of immortal light, liberty,
peace, virtue, religion, and blessedness are all ahead. The text indicates the
political character of that golden age.
I. IT WILL HAVE A GOOD GOVERNMENT.
“The saints of the Most High shall take the kingdom.” The word “saints” has
become a by-word. They say, “Look at your mitred saints, using evermore their
political power against freedom, justice, and the public good. Heaven deliver
us from the government of saints!” Be calm! You mistake the counterfeit for the
genuine coin. The man whom God calls a saint is a man whom you are made to
love, in whose wisdom and goodness you would place your utmost confidence. True
saintliness means honesty, brotherliness, disinterested philanthropy, and
elevated piety. Sainthood means goodness. A kingdom under such rulers would:
1. Be an
educated kingdom. The works of nature, the events of, history, the facts and
doctrines of revelation would be universally studied. “All would know the
Lord,” etc. It would:
2. Be a
virtuous kingdom. Christ is the model and the master of the saints. By His
principles they would shape all their laws, by His Spirit they would be
inspired in every legislative act. They would not mould their code after Greece
or Rome, but after Calvary.
3. It
would be a free kingdom. Saints are lovers of freedom.
4. Be a
peaceable kingdom. Every subject would do unto his fellow what his fellow would
do unto him.
II. IT WILL HAVE A PERMANENT GOVERNMENT.
“And possess the kingdom for ever, even for ever and ever.” Now the expression
may not express eternity, but it undoubtedly represents an indefinitely vast
period of time. Three considerations support a belief in its permanence.
1. The
length of time in gaining it. The instinct of true sainthood is aggressive and
imperial. The saints from Abel down have been endeavouring to sway the minds of
men by their Heavenly thoughts and aims. After all this, is it not probable
that when universal power comes to them, it will be a permanent possession?
2. The
firm hold which the morally true takes upon human nature. The false, the
unrighteous, the immoral, though recommended by imperial pageantry and enforced
by the invincibility of arms, can never take a firm hold upon human nature.
Hence the mutation and fleetnees of all human governments. But the government
of the saints being that of truth, equity, honour, love, humanity, religion,
will take an unrelaxable grasp upon the intellect, heart, conscience, and soul
of the people, and will endure from generation, even unto generation.
3. The
mediatorial life of Jesus Christ. Why did Christ come into the world, teach,
suffer, labour, pray, and die? Why did He rise from the dead, ascend to Heaven,
and send down His Spirit? Why? To destroy the works of the devil, to establish
rectitude on the earth, and to set up “a kingdom that shall never be moved.” (Homilist.)
The Kingdom of the Saints
The first word spoken by
the messenger of the Christ was this: “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at
hand.” This, too, was the first word of Christ himself. The word “kingdom” is
the keynote of the gospel story. In it is the idea of dominion, sway. It
expresses an area within which are the greater or the fewer multitudes subject
to that sway. It expresses a constitution, out of which comes the origin, the
administration, and the enforcement of law; and it expresses further the
supremacy of a single person. A kingdom supposes a king. Speak of the miracles
of Jesus! He was himself the greatest of all miracles. He opened His mouth, and
proclaimed a kingdom. But where is His kingdom? The King that was dead liveth,
and is alive for evermore. The saints of the Most High have been taking the
kingdom all down the ages, and possessing the kingdom, and they shall possess
it for ever, even for ever and ever. There is no time when the saints are not
possessing the kingdom. Power is in our minds chiefly when we think of a
kingdom, and where power is greatest there is the ruling kingdom among men. We
search for this power, and where do we find it? Knowledge, men say, is power.
The knowledge which men seek to gain, and do gain, they call power, and it is
so. But their knowledge, and all knowledge, is limited--limited as to the
faculty by which it works; limited as to the point which it reaches, limited as
to the interests which it affects. We are not come yet to the secret of the
greatest power. That is the greatest power which, when it goes forth, governs
the man, his body, his mind, his spirit. Where is this? Truly in God, but not
in God only. There are those of this world who are “of God.” The power is
theirs--in form at least, and measure, and degree--which dwells in theFather,
and in His Son, Jesus Christ. There is no power besides like theirs, so strong,
so far-reaching, so penetrating. How is it that the members of this great body
do possess the kingdom? And why is it that they shall possess it for ever? They
who are spiritually destitute, who have in themselves nothing, and know it and
feel it, and are ever crying to the God of their spirit for the supply of their
emptiness out of His fulness--these have the kingdom. All that they are
furnished with is from God,sought from Him, given by Him, known to be His gift,
and used as His. These are the God-marked of the earth. These are “the children
of the kingdom”; they in whose heart and purpose it is to do the will of the
Father in Heaven, Why shall they possess the kingdom for ever? Because they
have “overcome.” By the power given to them they have overcome evil, and only
good remains; and good is the final, the everlasting, the all-absorbing power
of this universe. (D. Wright, M.A.)
Verse
23
And shall devour the whole earth.
The Character of Oppressive Power in Religion
A certain great power is introduced in Scripture prophecy, of
large extent and long duration, and, in its nature and kind, different from all
other powers and kingdoms in the world. The description of it was either
intended to be a prediction of that tyrannical power which popery in its most
flourishing times established in the world; or, at least, that it is as exact
and complete a picture of it as could possibly have been drawn even after the
event. The peculiarities wherein this great oppressive power differs from all
other tyrannies which have been set up among men are principally these:
1. It is a religious tyranny; a power, sitting in the seat and temple
of God. Other tyrannies have used religion; but this is a tyranny founded
originally upon mere matters of religion; and carried on through its whole
progress, to the utmost length of an universal arbitrary dominion, under the
name and title still of a merely spiritual authority. The Church of Rome claims
to be itself the whole, the universal Church of God, and to be invested with a
power which indeed the real universal Church has no pretence to, even a
plenitude of Divine power. It has also fenced itself in, and excluded
absolutely out of communion all other Christians.
2. It has been raised and kept up, not by force only, but by
sorceries and lying wonders peculiar to itself.
3. It is a tyranny set up
over even remote princes, ever all kindreds and tongues and nations. “Exalting
itself above all that is called God.” (S. Clarke. D.D.)
Verse 25
The Saints of the Most
High.
Heavenly Saints
I. DISCRIMINATING FAVOUR.
This is intended as a two-fold contrast--saints in contrast to those who are
ungodly, and make no profession at all; and saints in contrast to those who are
men-made saints, made saints by human device--not saints really. A saint is a
men who is enlightened, and is led to see the way in which sin is put away.
II. THE SECOND THING IN SAINTSHIP IS TO
KNOW SOMETHING OF THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN LAW AND GOSPEL. And
saints are also distinguished by deep downward experiences, and conspicuous
deliverances A saint of the Most High is a man that is brought into covenant
with God. (James Wells.)
And think to change times, and laws.
Unchangeable Times
The greatest revolution
time ever underwent is that which the Saviour himself wrought when He put an
end to Levitical time, and introduced His own eternal sacrificial time.
I. TIMES AND LAWS. What
were the characteristics of the times the Saviour established?
1. Salvation. A time in which we can be accepted of God.
2. Christ’s time is one of vital and final ingathering.
II. THE TRIBULATION OF THE PEOPLE.
“They shall be given into His hand.” What a mercy it is that, if the adversary
gain dominion in some measure, yet the sovereignty of God, the hand of God,
will protect the people.
III. THE OPPOSITE DESTINY OF THESE TWO
CLASSES OF PEOPLE--THE ENEMY AND THE FRIEND. What will become of
the man who knows nothing of these Christian times, that knows nothing of the
law of faith, the law of liberty. The next verse says, the living God shall
take away His dominion. Why are we brought under the law of faith, and thereby
under the law of love, and life, and liberty, and righteousness? (James
Wells.)
Verse 27
And the kingdom and dominion shall be given to the people of the
saints.
The Reign of the Saints
Attend to some preliminary remarks.
1. The doctrine of the text does not require us to believe that the
Lord Jesus Christ is, at some future time; to return in person to our world and
set up a visible and theocratic empire upon all these continents. His kingdom
is, and is to be, a spiritual kingdom: an empire that asks and needs no visible
manifestation of its Lord, no earthly metropolis, or sceptre, or throne.
2. The Scriptures do not require us to teach or to believe this
doctrine even in any absolute, extreme, and unexceptionable sense. The saints
as persons, and their great Christian maxims as principles, shall ultimately
win such an ascendency over all nations, interests, institutions, and affairs,
that this whole world shall become an orderly and well-governed Christian
empire.
3. As to the way in which this great conquest is to be achieved. Are
the saints of the Most High, after a series of moral victories, wrought with
peaceful weapons, and by the aid of the all-conquering Spirit of God, to change
their tactics and go forth, in coming times, with their armies, to dislodge the
wicked, and settle as victors on all the continents? The Scriptures everywhere
discourage such conclusions. We have read history to little purpose if we have
not seen that the only revolutions which are permanent and deep are those which
take place underneath the surface--penetrating and reconstructing a nation’s
thoughts. Accordingly, there are, in every community, natural processes and
lawful methods by which to effect, first a moral, and then a civil revolution.
It is a great law of nature, a law operating among all the orders of the
animate creation, that the superior race shall win ultimate ascendency over the
inferior. The earth is covered with a vast framework of social institutions,
whose present and special office it is to guard, and administer, and conserve
the temporal interests of nations. Will the saints of the Most High, as they
advance and take possession of the world, overturn this great edifice of social
order? Will they set up in their place the one great institution, the Church,
making all offices spiritual? The Papist answers “Yes.” But the Scriptures hold
no such language. Since civil order is as indispensable to social well-being as
spiritual thrift, the State is an institution as truly Divine as the Church.
The one is Christ’s authoritative organisation, for the control and government
of things spiritual; the other is His twin organisation, for the management and
direction of things temporal.
4. According to all Scriptural intimations, the conquest of the
nations for Christ will be a very gradual conquest. Looking into the future,
through the prophetic symbols, is like looking over the tops of the mountains
to the distant sky. As we gaze we behold one summit behind another, and beyond
the farthest the blue heavens. But how far it may be from the first peak to the
second, and how far from the last to the firmament beyond, we cannot determine
or tell.
5. We may say that the predicted conquest and reign of the saints is
to be, and in a two-fold- sense, complete and universal. It will include all
races, it will embrace all arts, sciences, trades, interests, governments,
usages, compacts, relations. That the people of God will one day possess and
govern the world might be conclusively argued:
Application.
1. In this great work of possessing and governing the world, the
people of God must never allow themselves to confine their endeavours to any
single achievement, but must preserve a breadth and amplitude of purpose equal
to their universal mission.
2. Neglect or
debility in any one department of this great work of saintly conquest and
control, enfeebles and endangers the whole enterprise. (W. Clark, D.D.)
The Church of the Future
Around the grand mosque of Damascus there clusters a vast
accumulation of history. On the spot where it stands to-day, after a lapse of
nearly 1,400 years, there was originally erected, in the first century of our
era, a heathen temple. In the middle of the fourth century this temple was
destroyed by the Roman general Theodosius the Great, and on its ruins, in the
beginning of the fifth century, Arcadius, the elder son of Theodosius, built a
Christian house of worship. This latter house, though for 300 years the
Cathedral of Damascus, became in the eighth century a Moslem possession, and
far some thousand years it has been used as a Mohammedan mosque. No visit to
Damascus is quite complete without a sight of this historic structure. The most
interesting feature, however, of this curious building is not its age, nor its
history, nor its present prominence, but rather a single sentence engraved upon
the vestibule. The inscription is in Greek characters and reads thus: “Thy
kingdom, O Christ, is an everlasting kingdom, and Thy dominion endureth
throughout all generations.” There, on this Mohammedan mosque, and after ten
centuries of Moslem occupation, cut deep in the enduring stone, the Christian
record remains--a record of faith, of hope and of confidence on the part of the
Damascus Christians in the ultimate triumph of the Kingdom of God. Almost 2,000
years have rolled away since Jesus Christ opened in Bethlehem the marvellous
scene of Divinity in humanity, and still the Church of His grace abides. Other
kingdoms have perished, mowed down by the resistless scythe of time--Babylon,
Media, Macedonia, Persia, Syria, Egypt, Greece, Rome--each swept away almost as
though it had never flourished, while the Church founded on the rock by the
humble Nazarene lives and grown And the Church of the future will be more
glorious than the Church of the past. “Let us believe and know that
Christianity is advancing all the time; that, though men’s hearts may fail them
through fear, the Church goes on in God-guided and irresistible movements.” To
this happy conclusion of Mr. Gladstone’s must come every intelligent student of
history. The world grows bettor from century to century, because God reigns
supreme from generation to generation. The golden age of the Church is not in
the yesterday of the past, nor in the to-day of the present, but in the to-morrow
of the future.
I. In the first
place, what will be the attitude of the Church of the future in relation to the
PUBLIC WORSHIP?
With all confidence may we not say that the Church, come what may, will never
cease to worship? The worshipful impulse is as deep as it is universal, as
pervasive as it is prevalent. Worshipfulness is a differentiating
characteristic of the rightly-constituted soul. And this instinctive worshipful
impulse will be more intelligently educated and more reverently developed in the
future days of Christianity’s evolution. With the developing years shall come
to the Church of God clearer visions and broader outlooks, and a deepened sense
of righteousness, with profounder awe in the presence of spiritual realities;
and along with this there cannot fail to be developed a more noble,
God-pleasing, eternity-piercing worship in the hearts of God’s children.
II. In the second
place, what will be the attitude of the Church of the future in relation to the
BIBLE as the
final and authoritative revelation of God’s will and way to men? Of all the
books that fill our libraries and thrill our hearts this is the most wonderful.
It is the fullest and richest thesaurus of Divine wisdom and human knowledge.
All books, it has been said, are of two classes--books made from other books,
and books from which other books are made--and to the latter class, in a
pre-eminent degree, belongs this Word of God. And it seems to the truest and
most intelligent supporters of the old Book that things are shaping themselves
to-day, as never before, for unlimited victories for the Word of God. Certain
facts and conditions there are which appear a sure prelude to a superb Biblical
renaissance; the publication and distribution of the revised Scriptures, the
profound delving and exhaustive research o| historical critics, the patient
investigation of modern science; the recent discovery and explorations of
ancient cities by faithful archaeologists, and, along with all this, the
growing intelligence of the modern Christian Church, which is rejecting, as
never before, man-made creeds and formulas. Fear not the controversies now
raging about the Bible. The ages of theological agitation and discussion have
always been the ages of progress and promise. Better the agitations of the days
of Augustine and Athanasius and Luther than the tranquility of the Middle Ages.
III. In the third
place, what will be the attitude of the Church of the future in relation to JESUS CHRIST, as God’s Son and
man’s Saviour? Here we confront the great problem of Christianity to-day, than
which no greater can ever arise--the Lord of Glory; His Miraculous Incarnation,
His Spotless Character, His Transcendent Teaching, His Majestic Deeds, His
Sacrificial Death, His Glorious Resurrection, His Radiant Ascension, His
Position at the Right Hand of the Majesty on High, and His Abiding Presence in
human life and history. A truer and more pregnant sentence the great Christlieb
never uttered than when he wrote that Christ is Christiania, as Plato was never
Platonism, and Mohammed never Mohammedanism, and Buddha never Buddhism. We
often speak of Christianity’s unparalleled power, and yet let us remember that,
since the stream cannot rise higher than its source, Jesus Christ is the Living
Personal Force because of whom all ages and races have been agitated and
convulsed. Recall the splendid words of Dr. Wace, in his notable controversy
with Huxley: “The strength of the Christian Church is not in its creed, but in
its Christ. They see Him there; they hear His voice; they listen and they
believe in Him. It is not so much that they accept certain doctrines taught by
Him as that they accept Himself, their Lord and their God. It is with this
living personal force that Agnosticism has to deal; and as long as the Gospels
present Him to human hearts, so long will the Christian faith and the Christian
Church, in their main characteristics, be vital and permanent forces in the
Christian world.” Here is and ever shall be Christianity’s glory, the Son of
God and the Son of Mary--the Christ who on earth matched every sermon with a
service and every doctrine with a doing; the Christ who in Heaven is enthroned
amid native scenes and clothed with Divine anthority, recognised more and more
in the Church and world as the King of kings and the Lord of lords. And this
Exalted Christ, let us never forget, is the once Crucified Christ. More in the
Church of the future, if possible, than in the Church of the past will the
Cross be emphasised and glorified. The richest theme of the Church’s future
will be God in Christ reconciling the world unto Himself. Much of the preaching
in our day, even in Evangelical pulpits, is struck to a lower key.
IV. In the fourth
place, what will be the attitude of the Church of the future to the problem SOCIOLOGICAL? A most
practical and important question this, also peculiarly suited to our day and
generation. Ours is preeminently an age of practical benevolence and
utilitarian tendencies. We are unlike all of our predecessors. The Roman craved
the display of wondrous power and imperial sway. The Greek delighted to lose
himself in the abstruse labyrinth of metaphysics. The Hebrew made it part of
his religion to bow down before hoary rites and flaming sacrifice. We live in a
stern age of fact; an age in which, as a scholarly master of Sociology has well
said, Society is coming to itself and emphasising Sociology, Social ethics,
Social politics; an age in which religion means the salvation of the soul, but
also, as it meant with Jesus, the feeding of the hungry, the clothing of the
naked, the healing of the sick, and relief, comfort, and help for the whole
being. With the deeper life and broader outlook which the coming century will
bring to the children of God there will be felt, with a new power, the truth
that there is nothing secular which religion cannot both touch and glorify;
that God never meant His saints to have one Gospel for Sunday and another for
Monday, one religion for the Church and another for the world, one conscience
for Caesar and another for Jehovah, that goodness is not a little island here
and there in the great ocean of life, but rather the all-permeating salt that
fills every part of the bright, broad sea.
V. In the fifth
place, what will be the attitude of the Church of the future in relation to CHRISTIAN UNITY? To this
interesting question it may be answered that there never was among God’s
people, as to-day, such an unity of spirit in the bonds of peace. But the
Church may never, should never, become organically one. Men differ too widely
in birth and education for this ever to be accomplished. The universal law of
God in grace, as in Nature, is unity in diversity. And yet, with absolute
fidelity to the great fundamental truths of the Gospel, we shall more and more
realise the prayer of the Master, “that they all may be one, as Thou, Father,
art in Me and I in Thee”; not one in organic union, but one in heart and
purpose, in will and work.
VI. In the sixth
place, what will be the attitude of the Church of the future in relation to WORLD-WIDE EVANGELISATION?
The spirit of missions, which is the Spirit of Christ, is recognised and
actualised to-day as perhaps never before. The history of the sacred,
self-sacrificing anointing of nineteen hundred years ago repeats itself from
time to time. One hundred years ago the Church drew out of its hiding-place,
where for centuries it had lain in almost absolute inutility, the glorious
commission of its Lord. And to-day everywhere in Christian lands the orders of
our Lord are being obeyed and appreciated with something of their far-reaching
meaning and transcendent glory. To-day the Bible is within reach of 500,000,000
of the human race, and many things in connection with the missionary cause--the
Word of God, the history of the past, the condition of the present, the
promises of the future--appear to be hastening “that one Divine, far-off event
to which the whole creation moves,” the conquest of the world by the King of
Glory and the Prince of Peace! (K. B. Tupper, D.D.)
──《The Biblical Illustrator》