Daniel Lesson 24
Mental Attitude Instability –
Daniel 6:1-8
We come
to one of those episodes in Daniel; this is the second of two that is well
known. The first is the story of
Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-nego in the fiery furnace and the second is Daniel in
the lion’s den. These stories are
often told, they’re in children’s Bible story books, they’re frequently told to
kids and unfortunately some people get the idea that these are just nice little
wonderful Bible stories that are for kids. And that’s not the case, there are some fantastic principles
in Daniel 6 that relate to the believer’s life today, relate to the whole issue
of civil disobedience which is an extremely important subject, one that is
abused and misunderstood by many Christians who are involved in Christian
activism today. So it will take us
a couple of weeks to work through this chapter because of these crucial
doctrines that are here.
Civil
disobedience is defined in Webster’s dictionary as the refusal to obey civil
laws in an effort to induce change in governmental policy or legislation,
characterized by the use of passive resistance or other non-violent means. Now that last phrase is one that needs
to be questioned, “characterized by the use of passive resistance or other
non-violent means.” We’re going to
have to look at that and see if it is right or biblically authorized for
believers to be involved in that type of activism. We will get there eventually.
This not
only relates to the issue of civil disobedience but answering the question,
when if ever is it right for a believer to resist the established authorities
in life, the established authorities of parents in the home, the established
authority of parents in the home, the established authority of a husband in
marriage, the established authority of government in the fifth divine
institution of a nation. Is there
ever a time when Christians should get involved in Christian activism? Those are some of the questions we’ll
answer as we get into our study of Daniel.
Now in
Daniel we’re faced with the problem of believer living in the cosmic
system. Daniel is a picture of the
believer in the Church Age that has to live in the world; Jesus Christ prayed
in His high priestly prayer that we were in the world but we were not of the
world, and so when we look at Daniel, because Daniel is a Jew, Daniel is a
believer in the Old Testament, He is taken out of the land, the promised land,
the land where there is blessing and direction from God, and he is living
outside the land in a land that is surrounded by pagans, by the cosmic
system. And there we get a picture
of the fact that a believer can indeed be successful, even when living in the
cosmic system, and how to live in the cosmic system and resist the cosmic
system without getting involved or diluted into 1001 different battles. So one of the doctrines that we have
studied again and again in Daniel has to do with how the believer manages to
live when he is under certain authorities that are forcing him to go in a
direction that 180 degrees opposite from the world.
We see
that Babylon represents the kingdom of man; that is all that man wants to
assert about himself in independence and autonomy from God. The kingdom of man has its political
initiation at the tower of Babel which is the very location of Babylon itself,
and so throughout Scripture there is always this antagonism between Jerusalem
as the future city of God, the place where Jesus Christ will return at the
Second Coming and establish His kingdom versus the kingdom of man represented
by the city of Babylon. And it
will be Babylon herself that is destroyed and is pictured as destroyed in
Revelation 17 and 18. So there is
a long history of Babylon as being representative of the kingdom of man. The kingdom of man is established at the
tower of Babel and when God solves the problem at the tower of Babel He
fragments the culture because mankind is unified against God, raising his fist
in opposition to God to establish his own kingdom on the earth, completely
apart from God where man is redefining everything on his own terms. So God disrupts the core issue in any
kind of social involvement, which is communication. He disrupts that by giving the human race a multipiclity of
languages and with that we can infer from looking at history that God has built
into the very fabric of the breakdown of human society into nations certain
self-destruct mechanisms that when establishment principles are violated beyond
a certain point or a nation begins to act too independently of God, then God
destroys that nation in judgment and another nation replaces it.
So we
see this picture in the flow of the history of nations in Daniel, represented
by the image of Daniel 2. We see
the flow moving from the head of God which is Babylon, down to the second
empire which is the Medo-Persian Empire, represented by the chest and arms of
silver and then the Greek Empire and the Roman Empire and eventually the
Revived Roman Empire. That is the
flow of history and that is the picture of the kingdom of man.
Now the
problem that every believes faces is that while we are living inside the
kingdom of man, we are going to be, at times, under the authority of someone
who is forcing us to do something that goes contrary to the will of God. So that raises the issue of how the
believer is going to operate on divine viewpoint when the culture around us is
trying to force s to conform to a completely different set of values. And that’s where we get into the whole
doctrine of separation: when and how and to what extent does the believer
separate from the world around him.
The most extreme view is that of the monastics who just want to go off
and live in the desert and completely divorce themselves from any involvement
whatsoever with the world around them.
And that is a completely false view as we’ve seen from looking at
Daniel.
There
are four different points I want to review here before we get into Daniel
6. First of all, the believer is
to make the issue, whenever there is a conflict with, especially government
authority, the believer is to make major Scripturally revealed, Scripturally
articulated issues the basis for separation. See, there are too many believers who come along and they
take secondary or tertiary issues as the basis for separation, or some
theological principle. But if we
look at Daniel, what we saw in Daniel 1, remember they didn’t fight, they
didn’t make an issue over the fact that the Babylonians came in and gave them
new names, names that were based on their own pantheon and their own false
gods, they renamed, for example, Daniel was renamed Belteshazzar which has to
do with the Babylonian God Bel, which is another name for Marduk. They didn’t make an issue out of that.
They
didn’t make an issue out of the fact that they were going to have go to a
school and go through what we would call a school system and education
philosophy and curriculum that was designed to indoctrinate them into the
thinking of the kingdom of man.
They were taught all of the occult arts, they were taught astrology,
they were taught good things as well, they were taught algebra in its earliest
stages as it was developed by the Babylonians, they were taught the mathematic
system, their astronomical system, they were taught state craft, they were
taught about foreign policy, taught about history, there were many good things
that they learned but it was all wrapped up in the pantheistic or the
polytheistic religion of the Babylonians.
But they didn’t make an issue out of that. What did they make an issue out of?
They
made an issue out of diet.
Why? Because the Mosaic
Code said this is what you’ll eat and this is what you won’t eat, clearly, it
was black and white, it was clearly revealed, there was no dispute over that
that said, and so when the Babylonian government came in and said this is the
diet you’re going to follow and it completely violated the Mosaic Code that’s
where they took their stand. You
take your stand on something that is specifically, clearly articulated in
Scripture, not something that is merely a deduction that is secondary. So they picked a battle over a clear
Biblical issue.
A sub
point that we made was that you couldn't fight a thousand battles. See, human viewpoint systems are always
going to be opposed to any kind of divine viewpoint thinking. You could out there and go to any
university classroom, any university, high school, junior high curriculum, you
could go look at what’s going on in government, what’s going on in the work
place with all the social programs that are government sponsored that employers
are enforcing on employees and you could make an issue and fight a thousand
different battles, but you have to pick your battle. If you try to fight a thousand different battles or even
twenty different battles then you’ll be self-defeated because you’re spreading
your energy in too many directions.
So the focus is on clear violations of Scripture.
The
second thing we learned is that whenever there is a conflict always respect the
legitimate authority, even though we may not agree with the authority; even
though that authority may be forcing us to do something we don’t agree with,
always respect the authority because that is the established institution of
God. God established human
government in the fourth divine institution and so we are to respect the office
even though the person in the office is not worthy is respect. That has to do with Presidents who have
moral or legal failures; we respect the office of President even if the person
who is in that office isn’t worthy of it.
David demonstrated that when he refused to take the life of Saul. Saul was in deep reversionism, he was
disobedient to God, his reign over Israel had become tyrannical and Saul goes
to relieve himself in a cave and it happens to be a cave (just by chance) where
David is taking his siesta; David wakes up and there is Saul and David just has
to pull out his sword and kill Saul and nobody would be the wiser. Nobody would know what the
circumstances were, he could make up any story he wanted to. Saul was after him and David just kept
still and kept quiet because he would not touch the Lord’s anointed.
So the
principle is that whenever there is somebody in a position of authority, that
goes for children who are dealing with parents who are reversionistic, parents
who are out of line, parents who they think are out of line but really are in
line, whatever it may be, your parents are the ones that have been placed in a
position of authority over you and whether they deserve it or not they are in
that office and so they have to be respected. Same thing goes with wives to husbands; husbands have sin
natures, I know I don’t have to convince the ladies of that, but you guys have
to come face to face with that.
You’ve got sin natures and sometimes you’re tyrannical in the home;
that’s because of the general trend of the curse, and sometimes you’re
not. Sometimes you don’t provide
good leadership, nevertheless, wives have to respect the husband and the
position of authority in the home whether he deserves it or not because the
command isn’t “wives, respect your husbands, or obey your husbands as to the
Lord when they’re right, when you think they’re right, when they do what you
want them to do. The same thing,
it’s not children, obey your parents when they’re going along with the way you
think things ought to be.
Obedience to authority is never conditioned on the subservient person’s
feelings about the person in authority.
We respect the office, even though it may be out of line and there are
different ways to address disagreements.
We’ve seen that in Daniel.
This is the third point in the review. For example, if you have a confrontation and the person
agrees with you then there’s no problem.
But if you have a confrontation and the person says no and they’re going
to stick position and they will not negotiate, then at that point there may be
a case for a polite defiance. So
we have to see just the way in which that is taken. That’s seen in Daniel 3:16-18 when Shadrach, Meshach and
Abed-nego just refused to bow down to the great image on the plain. Daniel is going to do the same thing in
relationship to this law in Daniel 6.
He just doesn’t do it and he’s going to take the consequences. He doesn’t do it in anger, he doesn’t
enter into any mental attitude sin about vengeance or retribution, Shadrach,
Meshach and Abed-nego didn’t become spiteful or bitter or hateful because
Nebuchadnezzar was going to throw them into the fiery furnace, they were
completely relaxed and they understood what the issues were and they just
trusted God. So when there’s a
negative answer then you just have to take whatever is coming to you but the
issue is obedience to God.
The
fourth point is that if there is sort of an unclear, indeterminate answer, then
you appeal to the unbeliever on the basis of his value system. Now I’m not talking about evangelism;
in evangelism you never appeal to the unbeliever on the basis of his value
system; that’s a wrong compromise.
But when we are dealing with an unbeliever and the unbeliever says okay,
this is the policy where we work, we’re not going to do this and that runs
contrary to whatever it is that you want to make an issue out of, then you
appeal to them on the fact that we’ll be more productive and have a greater
profit margin if you let me do this, just let me give it a try. So you appeal to something that is
attractive to them and then you work your tail off in order to demonstrate your
value as an employee. So we are
looking at the doctrine of separation here and when it’s important to make an
issue and when not to make an issue.
So we
come to Daniel 5:31, this is the transition point between the first kingdom and
the second kingdom, the transition from the kingdom of gold to the kingdom of
silver, from Babylon to Medo-Persia.
“So Darius the Mede received the kingdom at about the age of
sixty-two.” It’s not precise, “at
about the age of sixty-two,” and immediately we run into the first problem in
the text here and that is who is Darius the Mede? I’ve already said that history tells us that the
commander of the army and the king of the Medo-Persian Empire is Cyrus, Cyrus
the Great.
Let’s
back up and look at this chart of the kings of Babylon and Medo-Persia. In the left column you have Babylon:
Nebuchadnezzar is the son of Nabopolassar and the grandfather of
Belshazzar. Nebuchadnezzar married
the daughter of the Median king, Astyages; we don’t know her name. So he is tied in to the Median royal
family through marriage. His
brother-in-law is Cyaxares II, who some suggest is the Darius of this
passage. We’ll look at that in a
minute. A sister-in-law to
Nebuchadnezzar was married off by Astyages to Cambyses I of the Persians, of
Anshan. And they had a son who is
Cyrus the great. And Cyrus the
Great took the throne of the Persians and then he invaded the Median Empire and
destroyed the armies of his father-in-law, Astyages, and then they entered into
an alliance together and the Medes and the Persians were united against the
Babylonians and attacked and defeated the Babylonians on October 12, 539
BC. We’ve covered all of that, and
that night on October 12th is the episode covered in Daniel 5.
But who
exactly is Darius, the Mede. A lot
of liberal critics of the Bible will use this as an example to show that the
Bible is inaccurate. This whole
episode of Daniel in the lion’s den is just a nice little story but it didn’t
really happen. It couldn’t happen,
of course, their presupposition is anti-supernaturalism and the basic
assumption of the liberal is that God really can’t enter into human history,
God doesn’t affect human history and God can’t manipulate the laws of physics,
he can’t perform miracles and He is not going to change things. And that is their presupposition so
they look at a passage like this and they say well, obviously history can’t
identify who Darius the Mede is, so this seems somebody that was made up so
this is just a fable or a myth, it’s not an actual historical event.
Now one
thing you need to recognize when you’re faced with that kind of a question is
that we’re dealing with a tremendous act of historical or archeological
material at this point. And the
problem isn’t ours; the problem is theirs. That’s the thing that we always have to develops whenver
we’re interacting with an unbeliever who wants to attack the veracity and
credibility of Scripture, we have to figure out some way to throw the monkey
back on their back because it’s their problem, not our problem. So we have to think about questions
that we can raise when they challenge us on the veracity of Scripture and say
well this is just a myth. How do
you know that? How would you go
about proving that? And then
they’re going to go to history and they’re going to say we have no historical
record of a Darius the Mede so obviously he didn’t exist and they’re making an
assumption that we have a tremendous amount of data, and we do, and that our
data is such that it’s extensive enough to give us a clear picture of who
existed and who did not exist and what they were called.
But I’m
always reminded of the fact that one of the great liberal attacks against the
Bible and the historical veracity of the Bible occurred in the late 19th
century when liberals said that the Bible is clearly wrong when it speaks of
the kingdom of the Hittites because there were no Hittites, we have no record
of Hittites existing, there’s no record of any Hittite kingdom anywhere, and
then I believe it was in 1926 or 1927 archeologists discovered Bogazköy in Turkey which was the capital of
the Hittite Empire; lo and behold we found historical collaboration of
everything the Bible said about the Hittites. So the problem really isn’t that we don’t have historical
verification; the problem is in many cases we just haven’t collated all the
data yet. For example, only a
fractional amount of ancient artifacts have survived through all the years of
erosion and decay, souvenir hunting, human destruction, wars, everything else
that can destroy these things. You
have to realize that it’s only in extremely dry climates in the desert around
the Salt Sea where they discovered the Dead Sea Scrolls in Qumran or in the dry
climate of Egypt are you going to have artifacts that survive over centuries
that we can still utilize and that are still of value.
Of the
fraction that has survived, only a small amount of that, only a tiny fraction,
a tiny, tiny fraction of what has survived has been discovered and
surveyed. Israeli teams, for
example, these figures come from about 15 years ago; have surveyed over 2,000
archeological sites in Israel, of which 800 are previously unknown. These figures are probably much greater
today than they were when I originally came across this 15 years ago. Of the fraction that has been surveyed
only a small portion of that has actually been excavated. In Israel, due to modern obstructions
and the high cost or archeology, only 150 sites of 5,000 have been
excavated. Of the very small
fraction of sites that have been excavated, only a small fraction of those
sites have been examined. They’ve
taken out the artifacts but they haven’t had time to examine them or catalogue
them yet. When a tel is excavated,
usually only very small areas are dug up.
One scholar estimated that to examine completely the Hazor site in
Israel would take 800 more years at the present rate of digging. Finally, of the artifactual material
examined only a fraction has been published. Fifty more years would be required just to publish the
materials already unearthed and examined.
Summarizing the extreme fragmentary nature of the artifactual Professor
Yamaguchi is one of the foremost archeologists in Israel, has stated if one
could, by an optimistic estimate, reckon that one-tenth of our materials and
inscriptions have survived, that would be extreme, it’s probably less than
that, but if we had one-tenth survival rate and that six-tenths of the
available sites have been surveyed, that one-fiftieth of these sites have been
excavated that one-tenth of the excavated sites have been examined, that
one-half of the materials and inscriptions excavated have been published, one
would have six one-hundred thousandths of all the possible evidence. Any time someone says there’s no
evidence of anything in the Bible, remember when they’re relying on archeology
in history they have less than one/one-millionth of the available data that
they’re appealing to. So don’t let
that throw you.
When we
come to identifying Darius there are four different options and we have to be
careful not to be confused with the other three people in the Bible who have
the name of Darius. The first
person called Darius is the person who is in this chapter, also mentioned in
Daniel 9:1 and 11:1 and that is “Darius the Mede.” The second Darius that’s mentioned in Scripture is Darius
the king of Persia, mentioned in Ezra, Haggai Zechariah. He is also known as Darius I Hystaspes
and is the cousin of cousin of Cyrus the Great, and he rules after Cyrus, from
521 BC to 486 BC. The third Darius
is Darius the Persian who’s mentioned in Nehemiah 12:22, and he is known in
history as Darius Codomannus or Darius III and is the last king of Persia
before Alexander the Great takes him out and begins the third empire. This Darius is not to be confused with
the Darius in Ezra, Nehemiah, Haggai or Zechariah.
We have
to remember that God raised up Cyrus the Persian to deliver Israel; Isaiah 45:1
was a prophecy from the 6th century BC, “Thus says the LORD to Cyrus
His anointed, whom I have taken by the right hand, to subdue nations before
him, and to loose the loins of kings; to open doors before him so that gates
will not be shut.” God raised up
Cyrus specifically for a purpose.
The word “anointed” is the Hebrew word “Messiah,” he’s appointed by God
for a mission. Many argue from the
use of that word that that means he was a believer. I think that’s a stretch; he might have been. If Daniel 6 is referring to Darius the
Mede as merely another title for Cyrus and it well could be, then we have the
story perhaps of his conversion in Daniel 6. But history has not given us enough information right now to
make any dogmatic assertions as to the identity of Darius the Mede. But I’m going to give you the
options.
The
first theory, and this is the theory that most evangelicals utilize, and that
is that Darius the Mede is Ugbaru, who was the governor of Babylon under
Cyrus. Now at this point people
get a little confused over the terminology and over the names of… you have two
people, Gubaru and Ugbaru. Now
Ugbaru is the general who leads Cyrus’ army into Babylon. He dies three months after the victory
over the Babylonians. Gubaru is a
governor who is established as a ruler over Babylon and many evangelicals,
scholars, solid conservatives as Gubaru as the identity of Darius the
Mede. There are a number of
problems with this, not the least of which is the fact that the text refers to
the fact that he received the kingdom and that would indicate that he received
the kingdom of the Babylonians, although the answer to that is he was
made…Cyrus put him in charge of the entire Babylonian Empire where Cyrus ruled
elsewhere. I do not think that
this is the best option though.
The
second option is that Darius is a throne-name for Cyrus and this is the
position taken by Dr. Donald Wiseman of the British Museum in London and he
bases this on a number of intricate arguments from pottery and from various
other finds, but one of the strongest arguments goes down to verse 28 where we
read at the end of this episode, “So this Daniel enjoyed success in the reign
of Darius and in the reign of Cyrus the Persian.” And that that should be translated on the basis of the
grammar that he had “success in the reign of Darius, even the reign of Cyrus
the Persian.” And this would mean
that the reign of Cyrus the Persian is appositional to the reign of Darius,
identifying the two. Another
example of that type of grammatical construction in the Bible is found in 1
Chronicles 5:26. Remember that
Cyrus’ mother is Mandane who was the daughter of Astyages, so on his mother’s
side he is a Mede and the argument here is that the name Darius was merely a
throne name. These kings would
have various different names that would be attached to them and this would be a
throne name that identified him and he was called that in relationship to the
reign of the Medes.
The
third option, which I think holds a little weight, is that it’s the son,
Cambyses II, the son of Cyrus the Great, but the text tells us that he’s
sixty-two years old or about sixty two years of age, so that would mean that it
wouldn’t be Cyrus. Another reason
it would be Cyrus is he’s about sixty-two at this stage in history so that
would support the view that Darius is just another name for Cyrus the
Great.
But the
fourth view is one based on a quote from Josephus, and Josephus states in relationship
to this, “Such then as we learn from history was the end of which the
descendants of King Nebuchadnezzar came.
Now Darius, who with his relative, Cyrus,” see he says that Darius is a
relative of Cyrus, “put an end to the Babylonian sovereignty, was in his
sixty-second year when he took Babylon, he was a son of Astyages but was called
by another name among the Greeks.”
So the son of Astyages, who would be an uncle to Cyrus, was Cyaxares II,
and this view, based on what Josephus says, would identify Cyaxares who is in
the royal line of the Medes, that he was portioned off the western half of the
Empire and he was called Darius the Mede and he has responsibility to Cyrus for
the reign and the administration of that half of the Empire.
I think that
the two best cases are either Cyaxares II or this is Cyrus the Great. I tend to lead toward Cyrus the Great,
but as I said at the beginning we can’t be dogmatic about this. There’s just not enough information yet
from extra-Biblical sources as to how to understand this particular
passage. Nevertheless, we don’t
doubt its reality; we simply don’t know how to properly identify the person
that this story is about.
Daniel
6:1, “It seemed good to Darius to appoint 120 satraps, over the kingdom, that
they should be in charge of the whole kingdom.” So after taking over the empire he is going to organize it
and one of the things we noted previously when we went through the statue is
that as you move from gold to silver you move from a softer metal to a harder
metal and the Babylonian Empire only lasted a little over 65 years but the
Medo-Persian Empire lasts much, much longer, it’s a much stronger empire and it
had a much better organization to it.
They were extremely efficient.
So if Darius is a reference to Cyrus, then he had the kingdom divided
into 120 satraps. Esther mentions
the fact that a few years later, under Xerxes there were 127 satraps in the
Babylonian Empire, so this again would suggest that Darius is probably
Cyrus. “It seemed good to Darius
to appoint 120 satraps. “Satrap”
is not a word we use very much but it’s an administrative division in the
kingdom. They didn’t have
townships or counties or states but it was a regional division like that. So he divides up the entire empire into
120 satraps, and then over those 120 satraps he establishes three commissioners
or presidents. So you have 120
satraps and then over those you have three commissioners who oversea, and they
probably divided those 120 satraps into 40 for each one. So these three commissioners are the
ones who are running the empire.
Daniel
6:2, “And over them three commissioners,” or “presidents” I think the King
James named them, “three commissioners (of whom Daniel was one), that these
satraps might be accountable to them, and that the king might not suffer
loss.” See, every kingdom, every
government has a problem with bribery and people taking advantage of them and
corruption in the government, so they needed men who were men of
integrity. And this is extremely
unusual because Daniel is a man who is being taken out of retirement at this
time. Now think about it, this is
important to understand the backdrop of several things here. Daniel has been out of the public eye
for over 20 years; when Nebuchadnezzar died in 562 Daniel probably retired at
that point. Whenever a new
administration comes in they would bring in new people, and Daniel is out of
the public eye from 562 until 539.
So for a period of 23 years Daniel has been in semi-retirement. We don’t know what he did, he’s been
silent, we know there were a few times in there when God gave him a special
revelation regarding the flow of human history, but he’s out of the picture,
he’s in retirement and all of a sudden God is going to come along and bring
this 80 year old man out of retirement and put him back in an incredible
position.
And one
principle there is that there is really no such thing as retirement for the
believer, not in terms of your spiritual life. There may be a time to step back and to change your
responsibilities and to change your role in relationship to whatever energy,
talents and abilities you have as you get older but in Daniel’s case God
clearly brought him out of retirement and God promoted him. Think about what happened back in
Daniel 5. There Daniel was brought
before Belshazzar, Belshazzar promised him that he would make him the third
ruler in a triumvirate over the Babylonian Empire, that he would hang around
his neck a gold chain that would symbolize his power and give him incredible wealth. Daniel wasn’t bribed, he turned it
down; nevertheless, Belshazzar gave that to him. So here on that night in the palace when the Persian army
comes in and they capture everybody and they started going through and
identifying who all the rulers were, making a determination as to who they were
going to kill and who they’re going to throw in prison, and who they’re going
to torture, and as they interview everybody they came to Daniel.
And
Daniel was this Jew who is now robed in a royal robe and given all the
accouterments of power and authority in the land, and they started asking him
some questions, and as they found out who he was, and word got around word got
around and Darius found out who Daniel was and his background, it very well
could have been that Daniel had a reputation that had gone beyond the
Babylonian Empire. Remember, these
people are generally related, they’re not that far apart geographically, so
it’s conceivable that Darius knew all about Daniel and knew the episodes
related to the fiery furnace and the golden statue and the dream of
Nebuchadnezzar and all of that, and so he’s impressed with Daniel as a man who
couldn’t be bribed, a man who didn’t care anything for the accouterments of
power and a man who was going to tell Belshazzar the truth of God no matter
what it would cost him. And so
he’s impressed with Daniel’s integrity and God promotes him. The principle here is that we’re never
promoted until God promotes us.
Daniel
is not trying to make a name for himself, he is trying to live his life before
the Lord as openly and as honestly as he can. He shows tremendous integrity and as a result God promotes
him. And the same thing is true
for every believer. We need to be
serving the Lord in our work, whatever it is; doing everything we do as unto
the Lord. That means if you’re a
believer in the Lord Jesus Christ, what you do in the work place is a direct
reflection upon your Christian testimony and is part of your Christian testimony. And that’s why every believer should be
the best employee they can possibly be, they should have a tremendous work
ethic because they are working for the Lord according to Colossians 3 and
Ephesians 5, they are not just working for whomever you think your boss is. So Daniel, because he is a mature
believer, because of the tremendous integrity in his soul because of his
advanced stage of spiritual maturity, is now being honored by God and being put
in a place of incredible and fantastic authority and power. It’s a wonder that he didn’t have a greater
impact but we can assume that if Darius is Cyrus and I think he is, that Daniel
encouraged Cyrus, pointed out the Scripture, how God had prophesied his coming
back in Isaiah, passages in Jeremiah, and how God had foretold through the
prophets that Cyrus would be the one to send the Jews back to the land. So Cyrus is going to do that.
Daniel
is a man who has gotten a promotion and he has tremendous energy, even at the
age of 80. We can assume that
Daniel lived to be almost 90 and still had this tremendous position of
power. And he’s the only person I
know of in history or that I can think of in history that rises to the level
that he did in one empire, where he is the chief over all of the advisors for
Nebuchadnezzar, he is made, although it was only for a very short time, the
third member of the triumvirate ruling Babylon, he was only in that position
for about and hour maybe, and then in the kingdom that comes in and defeats
that one, he is then elevated to this high position. So he is established as one of the three commissioners that
oversee the 120 satraps of the kingdom because he is a man of integrity and
Darius needs somebody he can trust.
So he recognizes in Daniel somebody who is loyal, somebody who is
faithful and somebody who has integrity.
And then
look at what happens in verse 3.
In Daniel 6:3 Daniel is a picture of the statement in Psalm 92:14, that
they will still yield fruit in old age, they shall be full of sap and very
green. See there’s still
productivity when we get old.
Americans get this idea that it’s all over with by the time you’re 30 or
40 or 50, whatever the next decade is for you, we all think it’s over with
then, but that’s not necessarily true.
Now people have to be careful about health and as you get older that’s a
test in itself for everybody’s spiritual life. You have to decide where you’re effective and how effective
you can be. I know a professor of
mine at Dallas Seminary has told me he’s in his 70’s now and his prayer is that
he will know when it’s time to hang it up because he doesn’t want to embarrass
the Lord. And that’s happened to
pastors over the years. There was
a tremendous pastor by the name of Donald Grey Barnhouse of a previous
generation, and Barnhouse, the last 2 or 3 years of his life started teaching
universal salvation, that everybody would go to heaven, he started making many
other strange pronouncements about Scripture, completely reversed himself on a
number of key foundational doctrines during the last 2 or 3 years of his life. Charles Feinberg who was a Hebrew
professor at Dallas Seminary and later at Talbot Seminary and was kind of
a…[tape turns] of Dr. Chafer’s, they didn’t know it at first but he eventually
died from Alzheimer’s, but before he died he went back…he was born a Jew, he
was kicked out of the family when he was saved when he was 17 or 18 years of
age, he was a fantastic Hebrew scholar, and a fantastic believer, but during
the last 2 or 3 years of his life I understand that he went back into the
synagogue. There’s a seminary up
north of Boston called Gordon Conwell Seminary, it’s named for a man named
Adoniram Judson Gordon and Gordon was one of the great evangelical Bible
teachers about 100 years ago and he taught at the Niagara prophecy conferences
and at numerous other Bible conferences that Moody had up in Massachusetts and
he was a contemporary of C. I. Scofield and Lewis Sperry Chafer and Arnold C.
Gaebelein and many in that era and he was one of the founding fathers and
thinkers of dispensationalism and the last 2 or 3 years of his life he rejected
dispensationalism, he threw out the pre-trib rapture, he condemned everybody
who was a dispensationalist, and he just went off the deep end.
So
growing old is a test, it is a test for each of us as to our own productivity
and we need to be careful what we do and what we’re involved in in relationship
to our own abilities, our own mental capacities and our own energy. And obviously Daniel still had
tremendous capacities and tremendous energy because God promoted him. He wasn’t looking for this slot, God
promoted him and Darius put him in this position. Not only that, but he continued to function at an extremely
successful level, verse 3.
Daniel
6:3, “Then this Daniel began distinguishing himself among the commissioners and
satraps because he possessed and extraordinary spirit, and the king planned to
appoint him over the entire kingdom.”
So he’s 80 something and he’s out-performing all these young bucks that
are coming along and he is doing a tremendous job, he’s much more efficient,
he’s more honest, nobody is bribing him, he understands management, he’s been
in the administration of a kingdom business for most of his life and Darius
recognizes that. That says a lot
about Darius as somebody who is willing to promote those who deserve it and who
work hard. So Daniel
“distinguished himself among the commissioners” and that’s what’s going to
happen to any believer, at some point in your life you’re going to go through
this same test. You will
distinguish yourself because of the way you perform, you will distinguish
yourself because you are a believer performing your job as unto the Lord and
for the glory of the Lord and not for the glory of man and somebody is going to
take notice of it.
Two
kinds of people are going to notice it, one is a person who is going to
recognize the value of a good employee and that’s hard to find today. The other person that is going to
notice is all those other run of the mill lowest common denominator employees
that are just trying to get buy and you’re making them look bad and as soon as
you start performing in an excellent say you’re going to make them look bad and
then their sin nature is going to kick in and they’re going to become jealous
and bitter, vindictive, they’re going to start gossiping about you and
maligning you and doing whatever it takes to run you down because you are not
doing the things that they’re doing, taking advantage of the company, taking
advantage of extra long work breaks, and to just get by and in many companies
today it’s almost impossible because of union rules and other things to ever
fire somebody because they don’t work.
And so people get hired and then they just hang around and don’t do
anything and you start distinguishing yourself and you’re going to make them
look bad and that’s exactly what happens and what always happens in a career,
in a job, in a country, in any situation you’re involved in, when people get
jealous, when the people who are just getting by get jealous they are going to
start to try to tear down those who are successful.
That’s
what happens in a country, it’s called socialism, and when you try to tear down
people who are successful, try to penalize those who make a lot of money. We think well, they make a lot of
money, they’re a millionaire, they make more, and they ought to pay more in
taxes. What we’re doing is we’re
penalizing them for their productivity and that’s always wrong. We don’t want to penalize for
productivity, they ought to be rewarded because their productivity is going to
benefit many other people. So
Daniel is now going to be at the brunt of a test and that is how to handle
people testing when the people who are engaged in some kind of conspiracy
against you, running you down and trying to destroy you, and perhaps spreading
gossip or false rumors and maligning, whatever it might be, trying to destroy
you.
This is
what happens in Daniel 6:4. “Then
the commissioners and satraps began trying to find a ground of accusation
against Daniel in regard to government affairs; but they could not find no
ground,” they couldn’t find anything, they kept watching, they were hiding out
in the hallway and when he wasn’t in his office they were going in his office
and riffling through his desk, looking at his budget reports and try to find
some way in which he was shading the figures in his behalf, and they couldn’t
find anything. They tried to find
“a ground of accusation against Daniel in regard to government affairs; but
they could find no ground of accusation or evidence of corruption, inasmuch as
he was faithful,” there the word “faithful” means he’s loyal and he has
integrity. There was “no
negligence or corruption found in him.”
Then we
come to Daniel 6:5, “Then these men said, ‘We shall not find any ground of
accusation against this Daniel unless we find it against him with regard to the
law of his God.’” In other words,
after they’ve been engaged in this investigation for a while, and looking into
everything in Daniel’s life they discover that Daniel is a man who is loyal to
the God of Israel and that this is the primary issue in his life and the number
one motivation in his life and so they’re going to pick on his religion as the
leverage to get him out of office.
So they
come together and in Daniel 6:6 we read, “Then these commissioners and satraps
came by agreement to the king,” and here we have the Aramaic word regosh, which
in Hebrew is regash and it’s
the same word, same meaning, and it’s the word that’s found in Psalm 2:1 where
we read, “Why are the nations in an uproar,” and that’s the word regash, “and
the people’s devising a vain thing.” regash means to be in rebellion, it means to be conspiring in
defiance of authority, whether it’s a king or some other authority. It implies chaos, disorder and the attempt
to overthrow a government. So this
tells us that they were involved in a conspiracy and they’re going to work to
do whatever it takes to try to overthrow Daniel and to get him out of the way
so that they can take his power because Darius has clearly recognized the fact
that he is superior.
Back in
verse 3 we need to note that it says that “he possessed an extraordinary
spirit,” and the Hebrew there is ruach yattiyr which doesn’t just imply…it’s not
talking about the Holy Spirit here, it’s easy to every time you see the mention
of spirit that it has to do with human spirit or Holy Spirit but there’s about
six different nuances to the word spirit.
And when it talks about the fact that he had an extraordinary spirit
it’s talking about the fact that he had an incredible mental attitude. The word “spirit,” ruach in the Hebrew, or even pneuma in the
New Testament often refers to an attitude or a mental attitude and this is
talking about the fact that Daniel had this incredible mental attitude. It was as a result of his spiritual
growth and his maturity.
So these
men get together and they are going to devise some sort of trap for Daniel in
their conspiracy. And they come
together and they meet with the king, “and spoke to him as follows: ‘King
Darius, live forever!’” And
although that is the polite address to a superior here it shows nothing more
than they don’t really mean it, they’re phony and you’re always going to run
into people that have some kind of loyalty to you and some kind of phony
allegiance and you always have to be careful of this. If you’re in any position of authority the higher you go the
more you’re going to get those who want to flatter you, who always want to tell
you what they know you want to hear so that they’ll look good in your eyes and
the whole time they just want to gain your trust so they’ll be in some position
where they can promote their own agenda and they’re not really loyal at
all. So it takes a tremendous
amount of discernment if you’re a leader to pick out the people that are just
the ones who are trying to further their own agenda and not your agenda.
So they
come to the king and in Daniel 6:7 they says, “All the commissioners of the
kingdom, the prefects and the satraps, the high officials and the governors,”
so they pull everybody together, all 120 satraps and a number of others, and
also there’s a hint of anti-Semitism here, and they “have consulted together
that the king should establish a statute and enforce an injunction to anyone
who makes a petition to any god or man besides you, O king,” so they appeal to
his vanity, they appeal this power lust.
Now this is really an absurd law that they want to have passed. They want to pass a law that says that
no one can make “a petition to any god or man” other than the king, “for thirty
days.” Now how would they get away
with that? Well one view is, and
we can’t be sure, one view is there was also some rivalry going on between some
of the various priestly groups related to Zoroastrianism which was going
through a period of renewal at this time, a reformation, and that one group was
going to…they presented this as if it would give them leverage against another
group, and this was going to be limited for thirty days in order to find some
that were guilty in order to clean up this reform movement that was also making
some of them uncomfortable.
But that
theory goes against what I think is a clear evidence of the text that this
whole thing is designed to go after Daniel, it’s not some secondary issue. It’s an absurd thing because anyone who
is a king who is going to devote his time to answering everybody’s petition and
everybody’s prayer for thirty days is going to put himself in a position
basically to outlaw the entire priesthood for all their polytheistic religions and
say nobody can go to any temple, nobody can pray to anybody but me for the next
thirty days, is someone who has just completely given themselves over to
arrogance. So they have found
Darius’ weak spot, it’s his arrogance, if this is Cyrus then it’s right after
he’s gained victory over the greatest empire to date and so he’s probably
filled with arrogance. So they
convince him that this is a great thing in order to weed out those in the
administration who aren’t truly loyal to him, and they convince him to sign
it.
The
penalty will be that they “shall be cast into a den of lions.” The ancient world had tremendous
punishments. We saw that the
Babylonians were going to have everybody torn apart and their houses turned
into dunghills and the Medes and the Persians were going to throw you into a
den of lions. So I think these are
wonderful punishments for capital criminals.
Now
Daniel knows about this; somehow he is aware of this, it’s not necessarily done
behind his back, but in some way he knew about it. He’s not involved but in some way he knew about it and we’re
going to look at his civil disobedience next time and look at how that relates
to other instances of civil disobedience in the Scripture.