Daniel Lesson 26
Panorama of History – Daniel
7:1
We’re not going to get very far in
Daniel this evening. There is a major shift taking place in the book of
Daniel between Daniel 6 and Daniel 7. Daniel 1-6 is more about Daniel and
his life. Once we get into Daniel 7 we get into one of the most
significant sections of prophecy in the Old Testament. This is really
exciting; there’s such detail here from Daniel 7, 8, 9, details about God’s
plan for history and how God is going to work out his plan, eventually
restoring Israel to the land, details about God’s plan of salvation for mankind
and how God is at work behind the scenes, manipulating the progress, the rise
and fall of nations, and all of this is forecast. All of this is
prophesied down to, in some case, minute detail by the prophet Daniel.
This is one of the greatest evidences that the Bible is not just the word of
men about God or about their religious experiences but it is God’s objective
revelation to man.
As we go through this we’re going to
be impressed again and again with how Daniel, who lived in approximately
600-530 BC, how Daniel who wrote these prophecies and was who was given these
visions by God, accurately foretells down to minute detail which kingdoms will
rise, when they will fall, who will replace them and the characteristics of
these kingdoms. This cannot happen by pure chance; this isn’t like
something you read in Nostradamus, it’s not like something you read in the horoscope, in
the newspaper, this is not something that can be manipulated by people to
mean…now there’s always people who come along who are ignorant of
interpretation, any kind of interpretation techniques and they try to make
Scripture mean whatever they want it to mean and they can come up with all
kinds of crazy things, but interpretation is…and part of interpretation is a
science, there are rules, and God interpreted these visions specifically, as
we’ll see when we get into Daniel 7, God sent an angel who, after Daniel
received the vision the angel tells Daniel specifically what the elements of the
vision mean. It’s not up to Daniel to try to just guess and figure it
out, it’s not left for us to guess and figure out, but these symbols that we’re
going to see in Daniel 7 are figures that are used again and again in the Old
Testament and in the New Testament, so that Daniel 7-12 truly is a key to
understanding prophecy in both the Old and New Testament.
Let’s remind ourselves of the
outline of Daniel. What I want to do tonight is sort of congeal for us
what we’ve studied so far in the first 6 chapters, I want to make sure we’ve
got that down and understand that because that becomes the backdrop and the
framework for understanding what is going to be covered in the next 6
chapters.
In Daniel 1 we see the history of
the prophet; we learn about Daniel, he’s a young man who is faced with a
crisis, and he handles that crisis by applying the truths of the Word of God,
the absolute principles of the Word of God that he has stored in his
soul. He and his three friends, Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah are not
quite kidnapped but they are taken as captives, deported by a foreign power, by
the Chaldean Empire under Nebuchadnezzar, they’re deported to Babylon.
There they are ripped away from their cultural background and because they are
all four members of the aristocracy of Israel they are going to be retrained,
the attempt is going to be made to reprogram them so that they can serve as
bureaucrats in the Chaldean Empire. There we see that Daniel and his
friends take a stand for the Word of God. They maintain their integrity,
they maintain their faithfulness to the Mosaic Law, even when it come into
conflict with the Chaldean Empire, God blesses them and they rise to the
highest positions in the empire. Daniel rises to the chief of all the
advisors to Nebuchadnezzar who was one of the greatest of all the ancient
kings.
In the second section we studied the
history of the Gentiles that is revealed from Daniel 2:1-7:28, and then from
8:1-12:13, the end of the book, the focus is on God’s plan and program for Israel.
So we’re still in the section dealing with the history of the Gentile nations
and this isn’t history in terms of what has already happened, this is
prophecy. Prophecy is history that is revealed by God ahead of
time. So we see God’s plan for the Gentiles and then God’s plan for
Israel. And this is mirrored by the fact that the first chapter is
written in Hebrew, the language of the Jews; the middle section, from 2:1-7:28
is written in Aramaic which is a sister language to Hebrew but that was the
lingua franca of the day in both the Chaldean Empire and the Persian
Empire. And then when the shift goes back to Israel in 8:1-12:13 the
language returns to Hebrew.
Before we get going I want to review
this, why do we study prophecy? Why is this important to study
prophecy? Too often when people get into prophecy they do it for some
sort of sensational aspect, they do it because they want to satisfy their
curiosity, there are all kinds of reasons people study prophecy.
Sometimes I get the objection, why even study prophecy, it’s more important to
study issues that relate to our everyday life, learning about the problem
solving devices, learning more about salvation and how Jesus Christ died on the
cross for our sins and understanding the dynamics of the spiritual life.
But prophecy is an important and vital aspect of Scripture and it covers a
tremendous amount of Scripture. 28% of the Bible was prophetic when it
was revealed; that means that at the time it was revealed to Jeremiah, Isaiah,
Daniel, Zechariah, Haggai, it was yet in the future. Some of that has
already been fulfilled but not all of it. 28% of the Bible was prophetic
when it was revealed. 15% of the Bible is still unfulfilled prophecy;
that means a little less than one out of every five verses. 18% of the
New Testament epistles, those epistles which were written to the Church for the
Church, specifically for the Church Age believer, 18% of New Testament
epistles, which is almost one out of every five verses in the New Testament, is
unfulfilled prophecy.
One in twelve verses in the New
Testament refers to the Second Coming of Christ. And if you don’t
understand the Second Coming of Christ you don’t understand how that will come,
when it comes, what the events are that surround that, then you will not
understand what the Bible is talking about in those verses. One in ten
verses in the epistles refers to the Second Coming of Christ, one in ten, so
that’s 10% of the epistles talk about the Second Coming of Christ. And
then as one writer commented, more than, at least 60% of the verses in the New
Testament are affected by eschatology issues, that’s prophecy, the study of
last things, that’s what eschatology means, are affected by eschatology issues
to be properly understood. That means they talk about the kingdom of God,
they use a term like mystery, they talk about the blessed hope, they talk about
the coming of Christ, something in those verses relates to prophecy. So
if you don’t understand what the Bible says about prophecy you don’t understand
God’s overall plan and purpose for mankind, then you will not properly
understand or interpret those verses and that’s 60% of the New Testament.
So Daniel 7-12 is going to focus on
prophecy. Now what does prophecy do for us? First of all prophecy,
Biblical prophecy reminds us that God is sovereign. That’s a principle
that we’ve seen emphasized again and again in Daniel 1-6. God is
demonstrating to the Jews that He is not just a God of Israel but He is the God
over the Gentiles, He is the God who brought Nebuchadnezzar to his knees,
because of Nebuchadnezzar’s arrogance God caused him to succumb to a mental
illness called boanthropy and for seven years he lived like an animal, ate
grass, slept out in the fields, and then at the end of those seven years God
restored his mind to him at which time Nebuchadnezzar realized that the God of
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, the God of Daniel, was the God of history and the God
who brought him to power, despite his own tremendous abilities, God was in
charge and at which time Nebuchadnezzar became an Old Testament believer.
In the Old Testament you became saved by believing that God would provide a
Savior in the future, and he trusted in the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob,
the God that Daniel and Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-nego had told him about, and
he became a believer, knowing that the Lord Jesus Christ would come and die on
the cross for our sins. So Bible prophecy reminds us that God is
sovereign.
We saw this as a time of chaos for these
men, that Daniel, Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-nego have seen their nation
defeated in war, they have seen, probably family and friends killed, die of
starvation, go through horrible suffering and yet they know that God is in
charge, that there is nothing that happens in history that is outside the
control of God, therefore they can relax in the midst of the most horrible
circumstances.
The study of prophecy reminds us
that God is good; it reminds us that God is good, that despite the fact that
evil exists God eventually is going to triumph over evil. And that’s an
important point to realize because one of the things that you often hear people
raise a question about concerning the Bible is how can you believe in God, how
can a good God let horrible things happen to people. And God allows
creatures to exercise their free will and that includes making bad decisions
and evil decisions and the consequences of those decisions. And we see
that played out in history, and yet only in Christianity is evil eventually
conquered, confined and restricted for all eternity to the lake of fire because
it will be judged at some point and there will be, as R. G. Lee once said in a
famous sermon, there will be payday someday and there will be a final
judgment. So the study of prophecy reminds us that God is good.
Third, the study of prophecy
motivates us to prepare spiritually for eternity. We know that when we
die physically that’s not the end, that man is destined for either heaven or
eternal condemnation, one or the other and the only solution is what do you
think about Jesus Christ. See, God doesn’t place it on works; works
aren’t going to be good enough because nobody can be good enough to merit the
favor of God. God’s standard is absolute perfection; nobody can be good
enough so God sent Jesus Christ to go to the cross to die as a substitute for
our sins, so that he would pay the penalty. Now the issue is simply
whether or not we accept Christ as Savior.
Once you accept Christ as Savior and
you are regenerated, Scripture says we’re justified, “not by works of
righteousness which we have done, but according to His mercy He saved us,” so
once we’re justified, then the issue is what are you going to do with your
life. Those are the two most important decisions that anybody has to
make: number one, what do you think about Jesus Christ, and number two, now
that you are saved, what are you going to do? Are you going to continue
to grow and advance in your spiritual life by studying the Word, making that the
number one priority in life or are you just going to live life the way you want
to, and basically forfeit much that is our birthright as believers. You
won’t lose your salvation but you will lose many of the blessings and many of
the privileges that you would have had otherwise because of God’s grace.
So this is why we study prophecy.
As we look at Daniel we see there’s
two basic divisions in Daniel. In the first six chapters we have Daniel’s
personal history; we have the story of Daniel’s rise from a young teenager
brought in as a captive from Judah, his training in chapter 1, his elevation to
the chief of all the advisors of Nebuchadnezzar. We saw in chapter 2
their testing with the great idol that Nebuchadnezzar set up, all the way up to
Daniel’s test in the lion’s den in chapter 6 when he’s an 83 year old
man. So the first six chapters deal with Daniel’s personal history and
then chapters 7-12 are going to deal primarily with prophetic revelation.
The visions that are given in chapters 7-12 were all given in the time
framework of the first six chapters. So we know that when Daniel saw the
handwriting on the wall, literally the finger writing on the wall in Daniel 5
announcing God’s judgment on the Chaldean Empire, and the Persians were about to
come in through the gates and wipe out that empire, when Daniel saw that he
already had most of the information that we’re learning about in chapter
7. Chapter 7 was given before that. When he went into the lion’s
den he already knew most of this information. But we’re just now learning
it.
So in the first section we studied
the four Hebrews in chapter 1, then in chapter 2 we looked at the four empires,
that’s the chapter where Daniel interpreted the dream that Nebuchadnezzar
had. Nebuchadnezzar had a dream that God gave him that would demonstrate
and give through Nebuchadnezzar the outline of history for the Gentile
nations. And that has played itself out precisely down through history
and that becomes the framework for understanding Daniel 7. You can’t
understand Daniel 7 unless you have the framework of Daniel 2 to begin
with.
The third chapter was the story of
the fiery furnace when Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-nego refused to bow down to
the idol, they’re put in the fiery furnace and then all of a sudden Nebuchadnezzar
looked in there and there weren’t three men in there, there was a fourth man in
there who was like the Son of God. Jesus Christ, the preincarnate Jesus
Christ, in His preincarnate body, appeared there to demonstrate that He is the
One who delivered Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-nego and not even their clothes
were singed. Then we saw the fall of Nebuchadnezzar in chapter 4 as God
taught Nebuchadnezzar who really put him on the throne and then
Nebuchadnezzar’s salvation and his decree to the entire nation, basically his
gospel tract that he wrote to witness to the entire Babylonian Empire about the
power of God and that God is the one who delivers. Then in chapter 5 the
fingers writing on the wall announcing the judgment of the Chaldean Empire and
the destruction that night by the armies of Cyrus under the General
Gobyras. Then in chapter 6 the false accusation against Daniel when he is
put into the lion’s den.
That covered the first 6 chapters;
now let’s get an overview of where we’re going, a little bit of a roadmap of
where we’re headed, chapters 7-12. First we’ll look at the visions of the
four beasts in chapter 7; the four beasts relate to the four kingdoms pictured
by various metals, various precious metals in Daniel 2. Daniel 2 looked
at them as man looks at them in terms of their strength, in terms of their
value. Daniel 7 looks at them from God’s perspective, looking at the
basic nature of man as destructive. All of these beasts are carnivorous,
they eat up man, they destroy man, and so we see a picture of the kingdom of
man is basically self-destructive. Then we’ll see the vision of the ram
and the goat in chapter 8, which talks about the rise of the Greek Empire and
its eventual collapse, and then the rise of the antichrist. Then there’ll
be the vision of the seventy sevens, that is the precise prophecy called
Daniel’s seventy weeks in Daniel 9 where God outlines to Daniel exactly how
many days will occur between the issuing of a decree for the Jews to be
returned to the land, they were returned to the land starting in 536 BC, but
once Artaxerxes issued a decree for the Jews to go back to the land, then from
that day until the time they entered into the land it was 183,000 plus days, I
think it was 183,880 days, and that worked out to the exact day that Jesus
Christ, as Messiah, entered into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday. So here in 538
BC, 537 BC, somewhere in there, Daniel is given a prophecy that outlines down
to the day how long it will be from the issuing of a decree by Artaxerxes, from
the issuing of that decree until the time that Messiah will be cut off, and
that just can’t happen by chance. It came down to the very day that He
entered into the kingdom, and then He’s rejected, and then three days later
he’s put on the cross, the vision of the seventy weeks. Then fourth,
we’ll see the vision of the last days in chapters 10-12. So that’s where
we’re headed in terms of our study of Daniel.
Now there are four things that come
up in Israel’s history around this time in the 6th century BC that
demonstrate that God’s game plan for history is going to radically shift.
Up to this time the focus has been on Israel and Israel in the land, because
God called out Israel as a special people, as a unique people, through whom God
would witness to the world. Now remember that was their primary mission,
was to be a witness to the world. Now in the Church Age the believer is
to be a witness of the grace of God and of the message that salvation comes
through Jesus Christ. Now in the Old Testament the missionary agency was
Israel. In the New Testament the Church is to go out. Jesus said to the
disciples, teaching and baptizing, while you are going, all to obey Me.
And so the apostles were to go out under the great commission in Matthew 28:19-10,
the disciples were to go out and take the gospel and go to the world. So
that’s the mission of the believers, to take the gospel out to all the
different kingdoms and nations in the world.
But in the Old Testament the Jews
didn’t leave Israel and go out, the world came to them because God gave them a
plot of land that sat astride all of the major trade routes linking Europe to
North Africa to Asia, so that the whole world came to Israel, and Israel was to
be a witness living in the land under the Mosaic Law of the grace of God.
They had a system set up under the Mosaic Law that provided the greatest
freedom any nation in the ancient world ever knew. And so as travelers
would come, as caravaners would come, the truck drivers of the ancient world,
and they would bring their goods, they were on their way to Egypt from Babylon
or on their way to Europe from India, wherever they were headed they would go
through Israel and they would see this unique society, this unique culture and
they’d say what makes them different. And the Jews could tell them about
what God did for them in delivering them from slavery in Egypt, brought them
across the Red Sea, took them through the wilderness and then gave them the
land, and the victories that they had conquering the Canaanites as they took
the land.
But they failed; they failed
miserably to fulfill their role and responsibility in the Old Testament.
That’s why God disciplined them and took them out under what we call the fifth
cycle of discipline, five levels of judgments God warned Israel that they would
go through if they disobeyed him, and the ultimate or final or fifth cycle of
discipline of is that they would be defeated militarily and taken from the
land, and that happened to the northern kingdom of Israel in 722 BC when they
were destroyed by the armies of Assyria; it happened in the south in 586 BC to
the southern kingdom of Judah when Nebuchadnezzar’s armies came in in 586
BC. So Israel is brought back to the land but only a remnant comes back
to the land after the Babylonian captivity.
Many are still scattered throughout
the land so there is a vast shift now…a shift. And the first major
characteristic is that God’s historical plan is going to focus on the Gentile
nations. There is the announcement here of God’s historical plan for the
Gentile nations through the dream of Nebuchadnezzar in Daniel 2. Now
these Gentile empires, there were empires that preceded this, there was the
Egyptian Empire, the Assyrian Empire, the Hittite Empire, but they did not
function as world dominate empires in the same way that these empires after 600
BC functioned. So God is now going to work through these Gentile
empires. Now we live in an era when people aren’t too crazy about empires
but that’s what God is announcing. He’s going to work through these
Gentile nations. This is the statue we saw from the vision of
Nebuchadnezzar in Daniel 2. It had a head of gold, it had a chest and
arms of silver, a waist, hips of brass, legs of iron and then the calves or the
ankles and the feet were a mix of iron and potter’s clay.
Daniel interpreted that vision for
Nebuchadnezzar. He said Nebuchadnezzar was represented by the head of
gold, that’s the most valuable metal. He would be succeeded by a second
kingdom, the Medo-Persian kingdom that would exist from 539-331 BC, that
kingdom would then be succeeded by the brass which represented the kingdom of
Greece from 331-146 BC, and then the final kingdom is iron, 146 BC to 1453 AD
is the Roman Empire. But when the Roman Empire faded out it’s not
replaced by another empire. And this shows that the west is going to
continue to be dominant in history until it comes back together with weakened
elements as the final revival of the Roman Empire and that’s indicated by the
iron and clay. Now each of these kingdoms is going to be restated and
more detail is given. See, that’s the divine process of teaching.
First God gives us the overview in Daniel 2, which is what I’m trying to do
tonight is give us the overview of these things, and then in Daniel 7 he’s
going to come in and he’s going to talk about these same succession of kingdoms
under different imagery, the imagery of beasts. And then he’s going to
give more specificity to each of these empires. And then in Daniel 8 and
9 he’s going to come back even again and deal more specifically with just two
or three of these empires. So by the time we get through Daniel 12 we’ll
have learned a tremendous amount, no only about ancient history but also God’s
plan and program for the future of mankind.
So the first indication that
something different was going to happen is the announcement of God’s plan that
He’s going to work through these Gentile nations. Let’s look at this
chart; here is a chart laying out the basic dispensations, the basic outline of
Israel’s history into the Church Age. So we have the initial section
here, the formation of Israel during the time of the patriarchs and
Moses. That’s followed by the period of the theocracy which covers the
time from their entrance into the land until Saul is anointed king; that covers
the period of the Judges, Ruth, and the early chapters of 1 Samuel.
That’s followed by the monarchy and the divided monarchy covered in the books
of Kings and Chronicles. And then they go out into exile, 586 BC this is
followed by a restoration of the southern kingdom only, it’s covered in Ezra
and Nehemiah, and Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi and the Prophets, and that ends
with the coming of Jesus Christ at the cross. The cross is the
centerpiece of history. Everything in the Old Testament leads up to
that.
You have God’s announcement after
the fall of Adam in the Garden, that He would send the seed of the woman that
would destroy the seed of the serpent. And that becomes a picture of what
happens at the cross when Jesus Christ defeats evil by paying the penalty for
sin. You see what happens at the Garden of Eden is that God said I’m
going to give you everything; God provided everything that Adam and Eve would
need in the Garden, He provided every food substance, He provided all the
information they needed, everyday He came and He walked with them and they must
have had incredible conversations as they were going out exploring this
fantastic creation and they were trying to understand it all and they would sit
there and they would have classes every day as they learned about God and
learned about creation. But God said He had a test for them because God
was not going to create a robot to just follow Him blindly, He gave them an
option. Love is not love unless it’s given freely and so there is an
option and their love for God was tested by the fruit of the tree of the
knowledge of good and evil. And if they are from the fruit of the tree of
the knowledge of good and evil, then God said there would be an immediate
consequence of spiritual death. And there would be a number of subsequent
consequences of that which would bring evil into human experience along with a
multitude of suffering and that’s outlined in Genesis 3.
But as God pronounced the condemnation
on them when they disobeyed Him He also gave them hope. He gave them the
first promise that there would be a defeat of sin and that would take place at
another tree, on the cross because it’s on the cross of Calvary that Jesus
Christ paid the penalty for every single sin that would take place in human
history and the Old Testament is leading up to that and in Galatians 4:4 we’re
told it was “in the fullness of time” that Christ came through the woman.
“In the fullness of time” means that God was working in human history to bring
everything together so that it was the perfect situation for the coming of the
Messiah. And it happened during the fourth kingdom, which is the Roman
Empire, under the time of the Pax Romana, when Rome controlled much of the area
in Europe and Asia, so there was a time of remarkable unprecedented peace in
that area and the gospel could go out throughout the world. God prepared
everything so that at just the right time Jesus Christ came to the earth.
Now He paid the penalty for sin so
that we don’t have to. He truly paid the penalty but the issue, then, is
not our sin. Too many churches run around trying to make a big deal out
of everybody’s sin and that’s just legalism and it shows a lack of understanding
of the whole principle in Scripture called grace. Grace means a free
gift; it means unmerited or undeserved favor or blessing. It means you
don’t get what you deserve; it means we get what we don’t deserve. And at
the cross Jesus Christ paid the penalty for every sin and when we put our faith
and trust in Jesus Christ God gives to us through what the Bible calls
imputation, that means He credits to our account the perfect righteousness of
Jesus Christ and when God then looks on us and we have the perfect righteousness
of Christ legally charged to our account, God then pronounces us justified, at
which time we are saved.
Now when it comes to the final
judgment the issue there is our works. See, anybody can come along and
they can say well, I did all kinds of great deeds, good deeds, I was very
altruistic, I went to church, I was involved in religious activities and I was
involved in all kinds of ritual but God adds it all up and it still equals a
lack of perfect righteousness. God says now the sin is paid for, but I
can only have fellowship with a person that has perfect righteousness; if you
don’t have perfect righteousness then we can’t have eternal fellowship.
So God says because you lack perfect righteousness you are condemned; that’s
the point of John 3:18 which says, “he who believes on Him is not condemned,
but he who believeth not is condemned already.” Notice the issue is not
“he that sinned is condemned already,” but “he who believes no is condemned
already.” Why? “Because he has not believed in the name of the only
begotten Son of God.” So that’s the cross, why the cross is the
centerpiece of history. Christ died physically, rose from the dead; the
Jews still rejected Him as Messiah so God has to bring them to a point through
discipline before they will accept Him as Messiah, before He can return.
That’s what happens at the Second
Coming. Here’s the Second Coming [on the chart] so right now we’re in the
Church Age, it ends with what is called the rapture of the Church, when Jesus
Christ returns in the clouds and all believers in the Lord Jesus Christ will be
instantaneously transferred to heaven. And that will be followed by a
period on the earth of seven years of the most horrendous horror, it’s going to
make 9-11 look… that kind of thing is going to happen on a daily basis for
seven years and the earth’s population, over half of the earth’s population
will be killed during that time, before Jesus Christ returns bodily at the end
of the battle of Armageddon to save the human race from final self-destruction.
That’s at the Second Coming. Then He establishes the kingdom on the earth
because at that time, at the Second Coming, Israel, all the Jews finally accept
Him as Savior.
Now that’s the panorama. Now
the Jews would be asking, well how come if the plan and purpose of history
ultimately revolves around us as Jews? What’s going on with us back in the
land, and why are all these Gentile powers in control? That’s why God
gave the vision to Nebuchadnezzar of the statue, is so that the Jews would know
that God’s plan, because they had failed, in the Old Testament God’s plan was
to operate through these Gentile nations in history and these nations were the
Babylonian Empire, the Medo-Persian Empire, the Greek Empire beginning with
Alexander the Great, and then its division among his generals, and then the
Roman Empire and finally ending in the Revived Roman Empire that comes together
during the Tribulation period.
So that gives us a breakdown and
overview of God’s plan, basic plan for history. That’s announced.
Now the second indication that things are going to be different from what the
Jews had expected is the announcement in Jeremiah 22 that occurred in 598
BC. Daniel was a student of Jeremiah. Daniel had the scrolls that Jeremiah
wrote with him in Babylon and we know that he read them and studied them and in
Jeremiah 22 God revealed to Jeremiah and announced the end of the Solomonic
dynasty. Remember God had promised David in the Davidic Covenant that he
would have an eternal seed, in other words, one of David’s descendants would
sit on the throne for all eternity. That referred to the Lord Jesus
Christ. He is the greater son of David who fulfilled over 300 prophecies
given in the Old Testament for the Messiah. He would be born in Bethlehem,
He would be betrayed by a friend, He would be betrayed for a specific price,
and all of the other prophecies related to the coming of Messiah. And He
was not a descendant through Solomon. Solomon’s line ended with the
Coniah curse because Jechoniah was such an evil king God said that never in
history again would one of his descendants sit on the throne. So it was
through another son of David, not Solomon, but through another son that Jesus
Christ would come, that the Messiah would come.
Third point of difference, announced
in Ezekiel 8-11, which occurred in 591 BC, the Shekinah glory that visible
evidence of the presence of God in the temple in Jerusalem departed. The
Shekinah glory had been there, associated with the Ark of the Covenant since the
Exodus. During the time of the Exodus it went before the Jews as a pillar
of fire by night and as a cloud by day and it led them through the
wilderness. It was always there. When Moses went into the Holy of
Holies and God spoke with him, when he came out there was a glow on his face,
he had to wear a veil over it because it was still reflecting the glory of God
from inside the Holy of Holies with the Ark of the Covenant. So the
Shekinah leaves, it’s a sign that God is now going to judge Israel, He’s removing
His presence from the nation.
And then fourth, 2 Kings 25, which
occurred in 586 BC, we have the fall of Jerusalem. All of these were
indications that God’s plan for history was going to go in a new direction and
from this point on, from the 7th century BC from 600 BC on things
would be different. Now there were going to be three new characteristics
that were announced in relationship to the kingdom of man. Remember the
statue that we just looked at, the statue represents the history of the kingdom
of man. The kingdom of man began with the tower of Babel. After the
Noahic flood man was supposed to scatter and fill the earth. He failed;
instead of obeying God he disobeyed God, set up his own kingdom in antagonism
to God. Man was going to make a name for himself and disobey God, so
that’s the beginning of the kingdom of man concept, which goes through
history. It began in Babel; it is characterized by man in autonomy, an
independence from God and in hostility to God. It is man trying to exercise
dominion on the planet apart from God, and what we’ve been studying Sunday
morning, worldly thinking or cosmic thinking, is the human viewpoint thinking
generated by man independently of God.
Now the kingdom of man is kept in
check; the kingdom of man ultimately is being influenced and motivated by Satan
in order to bring in his ultimate kingdom. Now that is held in abeyance
until the Tribulation when God pulls out all restraints and everything goes
crazy in terms of Satan trying to gain control of human history. So there
are these new characteristics and because Satan does not know when that time is
going to come, when Jesus Christ is going to return at the rapture, that means
that in every time in history, every decade, every generation, he has to have
his man, his system, ready to go. That’s why you always here… every now
and then you’ll be in the supermarket and look at the Midnight Globe and you
don’t want anybody to know you read those things but you’ll see the headline on
the National Enquirer or one of them, they’ll say the antichrist is born some
place. Well, it very well could be for that generation, because it’s not
the rapture generation it never comes to fruition, but in every generation
Satan has to be ready with his man, with his plan, with his program, in order
to bring about his attempt for world domination.
Three new characteristics are
revealed in Daniel on the kingdom of man. The first is that the kingdom
of man is going to be based on these Gentile Empires, and it will be through
empires that God protects Israel and sets up the environment in which the
gospel can go forth. We think about the great empires in the ancient
world, during the Babylonian Empire, during the Persian Empire, during the
Greek Empire and Roman Empire Jews are scattered. You have the Diaspora
that took place in 586 BC. “Diaspora” is the Latin word for dispersion,
and the Jews were scattered throughout the Gentile Empire. See, they
wouldn’t witness to the Gentiles when the Gentiles came to them so God said I’m
going to take you out of the land and I’m going to scatter you among all the
Gentile nations, so from this point on if you were a Gentile in Greece, or if
you were a Gentile in modern Iran or Iraq, in the Persian Empire, and you
wanted to know about God then there was a Jew handy who could give you the
gospel and could teach you about God.
And so God is now going to scatter
the Jews throughout these empires, and it is through imperialism that God is
going to bring periods of peace and stability in the history of mankind so that
there can be advances, technological advances in human history. The
greatest advances that have taken place in human history have taken place
during times of great imperial control. It took place under Rome, in the
Middle Ages, you had such a fragmentation that there’s no great advances that
take place until you have […tape turns] …restored through various European
dominion in the 16th, 17th century, and then you have as
Western Europe comes together and is unified then you have an environment
whereby things can advance. Then you have the Pax Britannica, the British
Empire in the 19th century and the advance throughout the ancient
world. But it is always under the dominion of the West and Western
Europe. This is evidenced, even the Bolsheviks in Russia came to control
because of the West. It was in 1917 that Bolsheviks would have been
crushed except for a gold shipment that came from investors in New York and if
it hadn’t been for that gold that the Bolsheviks received that brought them
arms and weapons they never would have been successful against the Czar.
All technology that’s been developed in the last 50 or 60 years had its source
in the west.
Now you may have great imitators in
Japan in other countries in Asia that are manufacturing and developing once the
breakthroughs occur but all the breakthroughs occur because of scientists in
Europe and America. You know the big joke for those of you old enough to
remember, after World War II the story was that our German scientists were
better than the Russian German scientists because after World War II the CIA
pulled all the German scientists they could out of Germany, all the Nazis and
brought them into the US so that we could get a head start on the Russians but
the Russians were doing the same thing. They took all the Nazi scientists
that they could to Russia. So our German scientists were better than
their German scientists, but it ultimately was all development from German
scientists.
So all of this shows that Israel
has been sidelined during this period but they are still the crux, the focal
point of history. Luke 21:24 gives us the terminology. Jesus said
during the Tribulation “they will fall by the edge of the sword and will be led
captive into all the nations,” talking about the Jews, that they “will be led
captive into all the nations,” this took place in 70 AD, “and Jerusalem will be
trampled underfoot by the Gentiles until the times of the Gentiles be
fulfilled.” The “times of the Gentiles” began in 586 BC and from that
time to the present, even when there has been a nation of Israel in the land
they’ve been a minority of Jews; not all the Jews have returned, there’s just
been a minority, most have been in the Diaspora. But once they return to
the land it was still under the protection of some Gentile powers. If
Western Europe, specifically Britain, the US were to withdraw our protection
from Israel it would disappear tomorrow. Israel exists today only because
of the protective umbrella provided by the United States and Britain and
ultimately in this crisis, the President is putting together this coalition,
there’s really only us, Great Britain and Israel. And remember that as
the days approach because once we start having to do something, like go into Iraq
and do some other things we need to do in order to root out these terrorists
you’re going to see a lot of these coalition allies disappear in a hurry.
All of this is based on the
Abrahamic Covenant of the Old Testament. In the Old Testament God promised
Abraham in Genesis 12:1-3 a specific piece of real estate, He promised seed,
the descendants, that would be more numerous than the stars in the sky and the
sand on the sea, and blessing. These were later developed in the land
covenant, the Davidic Covenant, and the New Covenant. We’ll come back to
that in a moment. All of this relates to the Abrahamic Covenant, so God
is going to bless nations because of how they treat Israel. That becomes
one of the major causes in history.
The second characteristic of Gentile
powers is that the gospel and the Word of God is now going to be carried
throughout the nations by the Jews in the Diaspora. The gospel and the
Word of God are carried throughout the nations by the Jews in the Diaspora.
Jews are no longer a threat nationally, until just recently but that is
because, I think, because we are nearing the end of the Church Age and it is
part of the angelic conflict but that’s another study for another night.
Point number three, the third
characteristic is the new norm of the kingdom of man after 600 BC is that God
introduces the concept of hope, confident expectation, long-term expectation.
Technically Israel could have brought in the millennium in the Old
Testament if they had trusted God. But they didn’t. I mean just
hypothetically. They could have brought in the millennium if they had
accepted Jesus as Messiah at the First Advent, but they didn’t. What God
introduces here with this plan of history is telling the Jews in the Old
Testament, it’s going to be a long time baby, it’s going to be a long time, and
it’s not going to come together next year or next century, it’s going to take
centuries before everything is finally fulfilled. So this shows us that
history has significance and meaning from a Biblical perspective. That
means history, as is so often said, is His story, it is the outworking of the
plan and purpose of God. That’s why history should be important to every
believer because he understand something about history.
Now let’s look at something we
covered on Sunday morning. This is just a brief review of what’s happened
in intellectual history or the history of ideas in the last couple hundred
years. What we have is a house, picture a house; you have the downstairs
where you have the staircase going up to the second floor. Downstairs we
have the details of life; tonight we’re studying history so downstairs you have
the details of history, all the events of history, all the details, the ebb and
flow of history. But there’s an upstairs where there are universals that
exist of absolutes and God, and God is the God of history and God tells us the
meaning and significance of history, that it’s going in a particular direction,
that there is a purpose to the events of history and that ultimately history is
going to resolve the various problems that have been generated by evil.
But see what happened historically,
as we studied the other night, when a man by the name of Immanuel Kant came
along at the end of the 1700s, into the 18th century he said that
man really doesn’t know, can’t know actually, can’t know God, can’t know
universals, all he can know is his own perception. In other words what he
said, his a priori idea, that means his preconceived notion was God really
can’t speak to men; all men can do is tell you what they think about God but
it’s impossible…see his preconceived notion is its impossible for God upstairs
to talk downstairs, you can’t get up there any more. He said that
staircase doesn’t exist. And what that did in terms of the ideas of
western civilization was to destroy the meaning in history because now there’s
no upstairs which gives meaning to history; we’re just
left to random details.
And so what happens is historians
and historiographers tend to use just history and manipulate history just to
communicate whatever their agenda is and so they twist and shape it to whatever
they want to. And you had all kinds of different ideas that came up in
the 19th century, from logical positivism, which said that the basic
cause of human history, the basic causative force is just the intellectual
evolution of the human race. Now positivism was optimistic but not all
systems were. Spengler, Oswald Spengler had a cyclical view of history
and he was very negative. Toynbee had a cyclical view of history also, he
was more positive. But see, what all these systems are doing, they’re
trying to interpret history, they’re all looking down here in this lower level
and they’re picking some detail of human experience and they’re elevating it
and trying to make it, push it up the stairs to give meaning to everything
else. That’s exactly what Paul talks about in Romans 1, “professing
themselves to be wise they become fools, and they worship the creature rather
than the Creator.” Once you take the Creator out of the upstairs so that
the Creator can no longer talk to the creature to tell him the purpose and
meaning of life, the purpose and meaning of history, what God is doing, then
everybody is just running around guessing. They’ve all got blindfolds on
trying to play pin the tail on the donkey but they’ve taken the donkey away.
That’s where modern man is so no
wonder most people think history is boring, because for the last 200 years the
intellectuals have done all that they could to destroy history because history
is a foundation to understanding many things in the Word of God and if history
is irrelevant then that is another assault on the Bible and the Word of God.
So they end up with no meaning, no God, existential darkness and despair
and everybody just runs around thinking that anybody who believes in God is
just some kind of irrational idiot.
Now God says there is meaning to
history. Back in Deuteronomy 32 He explained the significance of this to Moses
and to the Jews. And He said that Israel was the key to history. In
Deuteronomy 32:7 He says, “Remember the days of old, consider the years of all
generations. Ask your father, and he will inform you,” see, that’s
history, go back and talk to your parents, talk to your grand-parents, talk to
your great-grandparents about what I did in bringing the nation Israel out of
Egypt; it is history, in a space/time event God came down and brought ten
plagues on the nation of Egypt and virtually destroyed them, wiped out all the
firstborn in every family so that they would finally bring Pharaoh to his knees
to release the slaves. And so the nation left, all three million of them,
maybe more, and then God delivered them by a miracle in space/time history by
separating the waters of the Red Sea, drying the ground instantaneously so that
they could depart Egypt across the Red Sea, it happened historically and there
were markers. Then when they came into the land He did the same thing
again, He split the waters of the Jordan River so that the nation could come in
on dry land. There was a miracle there as He’s giving birth to the
nation, so to speak an then when they crossed the land they were to take these
rocks and build a rock cairn or a monument, twelve rocks, as a historical marker.
God’s not going to do this again but there’s going to be this marker
there so every time you and your kids are out having a picnic and you see this
pile of twelve rocks, you say daddy, what’s that there for, and then your dad
is going to say okay, this is what God did at this point of time in history.
And so God emphasizes the importance of history; history is a record of
His actions objectively.
Now he goes on in Deuteronomy 32:8,
“When the Most High gave the nations their inheritance,” that emphasizes the
sovereignty of God and that God directs history, and the ebb and flow, and the
rise and fall of nations, He gives them their properties, their inheritance
that is, the word in the Hebrew indicates their national boundaries, that
nations are from God. Internationalism is not from God, God established
national distinctions at the tower of Babel for the survival of the human race.
“When the Most High gave the nations their inheritance, when He
separated,” notice this, “when He separated the sons of man,” as He divides up
the nations, “He set the boundaries of the peoples,” that is the Gentiles,
“according to the number of the sons of Israel.” That means God works out
history in relationship to Israel. What’s the number one causative factor
in history? It’s God’s plan and purposes for Israel. Secondly it
relates to believer. Third, it relates to the pagan practices of Gentile
nations, so that when they become perverted to a certain degree, like Sodom and
Gomorrah did He brings judgment on them. But primarily it has to do with
His plan for Israel and in the Church Age His plan for Church Age believers.
This goes back to Genesis 12:1-3
where God established the Abrahamic Covenant. Now the LORD said to Abram,
Go forth from your country, and from your relatives and from your father’s
house, to the land which I will show you. [2] And I will make you” and
that includes Abraham and all his descendants, “a great nation, and I will
bless you,” see, that’s grace, Abraham didn’t do anything to earn it or deserve
it, God freely gave it to him, “I will bless you and make your name great, and
so you shall be a blessing,” and that was a command, it just sounds like it’s a
declarative statement but in the Hebrew it’s a command, you will be a blessing.
[3] “And I will bless those who bless you,” and how would people bless
Abraham down through the ages? By accepting Jesus Christ as Savior
because He is the seed, He is the ultimate focal point; He is the focal point
of blessing through Abraham. “I will bless those who bless you and the
one who curses you,” see the word there for “curse,” there are two times the
English word “curse” is used in this verse but they are different Hebrew words.
“…the one who curses you,” the first curse is the Hebrew word which means
treat you lightly, and the way you treat Abraham lightly, the most basic way,
is to reject Jesus Christ as Savior. Jesus Christ is the son of Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob. “…the one who curses you,” the one who treats you
lightly, “I will curse,” and that comes through the eternal condemnation, “the
one who curses you I will curse. And in you all the families of the earth
shall be blessed.” How? Because it’s through Abraham that Jesus
Christ, the Savior of mankind will eventually come and anyone who puts their
faith alone in Christ alone can have eternal salvation and receive this same
blessing. So Abraham then becomes the key and Israel becomes the key to
understanding history.
Now the next thing that’s going to
happen as we get into this, Daniel 7, we’re going to have to understand some
things about the interpretation of prophecy. There are a number of
symbols that are used in this chapter that are used in Zechariah, they’re used
in Revelation, they’re used in Matthew and to understand all those prophecies
we have to understand what’s going on here in Daniel 7 so we will start there,
in Daniel 7:1. I got through 4 pages of 12 pages of notes I had for
tonight. This is good stuff; we will have a lot of fun coming to
understand this in the coming weeks.