@Da 2:1-49. NEBUCHADNEZZAR'S DREAM: DANIEL'S INTERPRETATION OF IT, AND ADVANCEMENT.
1. second year of . . . Nebuchadnezzar--@Da 1:5 shows that "three
years" had elapsed since Nebuchadnezzar had taken Jerusalem. The
solution of this difficulty is: Nebuchadnezzar first ruled as
subordinate to his father Nabopolassar, to which time the first chapter
refers (@Da 1:1); whereas "the second year" in the second chapter is
dated from his sole sovereignty. The very difficulty is a proof of
genuineness; all was clear to the writer and the original readers from
their knowledge of the circumstances, and so he adds no explanation.
A forger would not introduce difficulties; the author did not
then see any difficulty in the case. Nebuchadnezzar is called "king"
(@Da 1:1), by anticipation. Before he left Judea, he became
actual king by the death of his father, and the Jews always called him
"king," as commander of the invading army.
dreams--It is significant that not to Daniel, but to the then world
ruler, Nebuchadnezzar, the dream is vouchsafed. It was from the first of
its representatives who had conquered the theocracy, that the world
power was to learn its doom, as about to be in its turn subdued, and for
ever by the kingdom of God. As this vision opens, so that in the seventh
chapter developing the same truth more fully, closes the first part.
Nebuchadnezzar, as vicegerent of God (@Da 2:37; compare
@Jer 25:9 Eze 28:12-15 Isa 44:28 45:1 Ro 13:1), is honored with the
revelation in the form of a dream, the appropriate form to one outside
the kingdom of God. So in the cases of Abimelech, Pharaoh, &c.
(@Ge 20:3 41:1-7), especially as the heathen attached such importance
to dreams. Still it is not he, but an Israelite, who interprets it.
Heathendom is passive, Israel active, in divine things, so that the
glory redounds to "the God of heaven."
2. Chaldeans--here, a certain order of priest-magicians, who wore a peculiar dress, like that seen on the gods and deified men in the Assyrian sculptures. Probably they belonged exclusively to the Chaldeans, the original tribe of the Babylonian nation, just as the Magians were properly Medes.
3. troubled to know the dream--He awoke in alarm, remembering that something solemn had been presented to him in a dream, without being able to recall the form in which it had clothed itself. His thoughts on the unprecedented greatness to which his power had attained (@Da 2:29) made him anxious to know what the issue of all this should be. God meets this wish in the way most calculated to impress him.
4. Here begins the Chaldee portion of Daniel, which continues to
the end of the seventh chapter. In it the course, character, and crisis
of the Gentile power are treated; whereas, in the other parts, which are
in Hebrew, the things treated apply more particularly to the Jews
and Jerusalem.
Syriac--the Aramean Chaldee, the vernacular tongue of the king
and his court; the prophet, by mentioning it here, hints at the reason
of his own adoption of it from this point.
live for ever--a formula in addressing kings, like our "Long live
the king!" Compare @1Ki 1:31.
5. The thing--that is, The dream, "is gone from me."
GESENIUS
translates, "The decree is gone forth from me," irrevocable (compare
@Isa 45:23); namely, that you shall be executed, if you do not tell
both the dream and the interpretation. English Version is simpler,
which supposes the king himself to have forgotten the dream. Pretenders
to supernatural knowledge often bring on themselves their own
punishment.
cut in pieces--(@1Sa 15:33).
houses . . . dunghill--rather, "a morass heap." The Babylonian houses
were built of sun-dried bricks; when demolished, the rain dissolves the
whole into a mass of mire, in the wet land, near the river
[STUART]. As
to the consistency of this cruel threat with Nebuchadnezzar's character,
see @Da 4:17, "basest of men"; @Jer 39:5,6 52:9-11.
6. rewards--literally, "presents poured out in lavish profusion."
8. gain . . . time--literally, "buy." Compare @Eph 5:16 Col 4:5,
where the sense is somewhat different.
the thing is gone from me--(See on Da 2:5).
9. one decree--There can be no second one reversing the first
(@Es 4:11).
corrupt--deceitful.
till the time be changed--till a new state of things arrive, either
by my ceasing to trouble myself about the dream, or by a change of
government (which perhaps the agitation caused by the dream made
Nebuchadnezzar to forebode, and so to suspect the Chaldeans of
plotting).
tell . . . dream, and I shall know . . . ye can show . . .
interpretation--If ye cannot tell the past, a dream actually presented
to me, how can ye know, and show, the future events prefigured in it?
10. There is not a man . . . that can show--God makes the heathen
out of their own mouth, condemn their impotent pretensions to
supernatural knowledge, in order to bring out in brighter contrast His
power to reveal secrets to His servants, though but "men upon the earth"
(compare @Da 2:22,23).
therefore, &c.--that is, If such things could be done by men, other
absolute princes would have required them from their magicians; as they
have not, it is proof such things cannot be done and cannot be
reasonably asked from us.
11. gods, whose dwelling is not with flesh--answering to "no man upon the earth"; for there were, in their belief, "men in heaven," namely, men deified; for example, Nimrod. The supreme gods are referred to here, who alone, in the Chaldean view, could solve the difficulty, but who do not communicate with men. The inferior gods, intermediate between men and the supreme gods, are unable to solve it. Contrast with this heathen idea of the utter severance of God from man, @Joh 1:14, "The Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us"; Daniel was in this case made His representative.
12, 13. Daniel and his companions do not seem to have been actually numbered among the Magi or Chaldeans, and so were not summoned before the king. Providence ordered it so that all mere human wisdom should be shown vain before His divine power, through His servant, was put forth. @Da 2:24 shows that the decree for slaying the wise men had not been actually executed when Daniel interposed.
14. captain of the king's guard--commanding the executioners (Margin; and @Ge 37:36, Margin).
15. Why is the decree so hasty--Why were not all of us consulted
before the decree for the execution of all was issued?
the thing--the agitation of the king as to his dream, and his
abortive consultation of the Chaldeans. It is plain from this that
Daniel was till now ignorant of the whole matter.
16. Daniel went in--perhaps not in person, but by the mediation of
some courtier who had access to the king. His first direct interview
seems to have been @Da 2:25 [BARNES].
time--The king granted "time" to Daniel, though he would not do so
to the Chaldeans because they betrayed their lying purpose by requiring
him to tell the dream, which Daniel did not. Providence doubtless
influenced his mind, already favorable (@Da 1:19,20), to show special
favor to Daniel.
17. Here appears the reason why Daniel sought "time" (@Da 2:16), namely he wished to engage his friends to join him in prayer to God to reveal the dream to him.
18. An illustration of the power of united prayer (@Mt 18:19). The same instrumentality rescued Peter from his peril (@Ac 12:5-12).
19. revealed . . . in . . . night vision--(@Job 33:15,16).
20. answered--responded to God's goodness by praises.
name of God--God in His revelation of Himself by acts of love,
"wisdom, and might" (@Jer 32:19).
21. changeth . . . times . . . seasons--"He herein gives a general
preparatory intimation, that the dream of Nebuchadnezzar is concerning
the changes and successions of kingdoms"
[JEROME]. The "times" are the
phases and periods of duration of empires (compare
@Da 7:25 1Ch 12:32 29:30); the "seasons" the fitting times
for their culmination, decline, and fall (@Ec 3:1 Ac 1:7 1Th 5:1). The
vicissitudes of states, with their times and seasons. are not regulated
by chance or fate, as the heathen thought, but by God.
removed kings--(@Job 12:18 Ps 75:6,7 Jer 27:5; compare
@1Sa 2:7,8).
giveth wisdom--(@1Ki 3:9-12 Jas 1:5).
22. revealeth--(@Job 12:22). So spiritually (@Eph 1:17,18).
knoweth what is in . . . darkness--(@Ps 139:11,12 Heb 4:13).
light . . . him--(@Jas 1:17 1Jo 1:4).
Apocalypse (or "revelation") signifies a divine, prophecy a human, activity.
Compare @1Co 14:6, where the two are distinguished. The prophet is
connected with the outer world, addressing to the congregation the words
with which the Spirit of God supplies him; he speaks in the Spirit,
but the apocalyptic seer is in the Spirit in his whole person
(@Re 1:10 4:2). The form of the apocalyptic revelation
(the very term
meaning that the veil that hides the invisible world is taken off)
is subjectively either the dream, or, higher, the vision. The
interpretation of Nebuchadnezzar's dream was a preparatory education to
Daniel himself. By gradual steps, each revelation preparing him for the
succeeding one, God fitted him for disclosures becoming more and more
special. In the second and fourth chapters he is but an interpreter of
Nebuchadnezzar's dreams; then he has a dream himself, but it is only a
vision in a dream of the night (@Da 7:1,2); then follows a vision
in a waking state (@Da 8:1-3); lastly, in the two final revelations
(@Da 9:20 10:4,5) the ecstatic state is no longer needed. The
progression in the form answers to the progression in the contents of his prophecy; at first general outlines, and these afterwards
filled up with minute chronological and historical details, such as
are not found in the Revelation of John, though, as became the New
Testament, the form of revelation is the highest, namely, clear waking
visions [AUBERLEN].
23. thee . . . thee--He ascribes all the glory to God.
God of my fathers--Thou hast shown Thyself the same God of grace to
me, a captive exile, as Thou didst to Israel of old and this on account
of the covenant made with our "fathers" (@Lu 1:54,55; compare
@Ps 106:45).
given me wisdom and might--Thou being the fountain of both; referring
to @Da 2:20. Whatever wise ability I have to stay the execution
of the king's cruel decree, is Thy gift.
me . . . we . . . us--The revelation was given to Daniel, as "me"
implies; yet with just modesty he joins his friends with him; because it
was to their joint prayers, and not to his individually. that he owed
the revelation from God.
known . . . the king's matter--the very words in which the Chaldeans
had denied the possibility of any man on earth telling the dream
("not a man upon the earth can show the king's matter," @Da 2:10).
Impostors are compelled by the God of truth to eat up their own words.
24. Therefore--because of having received the divine communication.
bring me in before the king--implying that. he had not previously
been in person before the king (see on Da 2:16).
25. I have found a man--Like all courtiers, in announcing agreeable tidings, he ascribes the merit of the discovery to himself [JEROME]. So far from it being a discrepancy, that he says nothing of the previous understanding between him and Daniel, or of Daniel's application to the king (@Da 2:15,16), it is just what we should expect. Arioch would not dare to tell an absolute despot that he had stayed the execution of his sanguinary decree, on his own responsibility; but would, in the first instance, secretly stay it until Daniel had got, by application from the king, the time required, without Arioch seeming to know of Daniel's application as the cause of the respite; then, when Daniel had received the revelation, Arioch would in trembling haste bring him in, as if then for the first time he had "found" him. The very difficulty when cleared up is a proof of genuineness, as it never would be introduced by a forger.
27. cannot--Daniel, being learned in all the lore of the Chaldeans
(@Da 1:4), could authoritatively declare the impossibility of
mere man solving the king's difficulty.
soothsayers--from a root, "to cut off"; referring to their cutting the heavens into divisions, and so guessing at men's destinies from the
place of the stars at one's birth.
28. God--in contrast to "the wise men," &c. (@Da 2:27).
revealeth secrets--(@Am 3:7 4:13). Compare @Ge 41:45,
Zaphnath-paaneah, "revealer of secrets," the title given to Joseph.
the latter days--literally, "in the after days" (@Da 2:29);
"hereafter" (@Ge 49:1):It refers to the whole future, including the
Messianic days, which is the final dispensation (@Isa 2:2).
visions of thy head--conceptions formed in the brain.
29. God met with a revelation Nebuchadnezzar, who had been meditating on the future destiny of his vast empire.
30. not . . . for any wisdom that I have--not on account of any
previous wisdom which I may have manifested (@Da 1:17,20). The
specially-favored servants of God in all ages disclaim merit in
themselves and ascribe all to the grace and power of God
(@Ge 41:16 Ac 3:12). The "as for me," disclaiming extraordinary merit,
contrasts elegantly with "as for thee," whereby Daniel courteously, but
without flattery, implies, that God honored Nebuchadnezzar, as His
vicegerent over the world kingdoms, with a revelation on the subject
uppermost in his thoughts, the ultimate destinies of those kingdoms.
for their sakes that shall make known, &c.--a Chaldee idiom for,
"to the intent that the interpretation may be made known to the king."
the thoughts of thy heart--thy subject of thought before falling
asleep. Or, perhaps the probation of Nebuchadnezzar's character through this revelation may be the meaning intended (compare
@2Ch 32:31 Lu 2:35).
31. The world power in its totality appears as a colossal human form:
Babylon the head of gold, Medo-Persia the breast and two arms of
silver, Græco-Macedonia the belly and two thighs of brass, and
Rome, with its Germano-Slavonic offshoots, the legs of iron and feet of
iron and clay, the fourth still existing. Those kingdoms only are
mentioned which stand in some relation to the kingdom of God; of these
none is left out; the final establishment of that kingdom is the aim of
His moral government of the world. The colossus of metal stands on weak
feet, of clay. All man's glory is as ephemeral and worthless as chaff
(compare @1Pe 1:24). But the kingdom of God, small and unheeded as a
"stone" on the ground is compact in its homogeneous unity; whereas the
world power, in its heterogeneous constituents successively supplanting
one another, contains the elements of decay. The relation of the stone
to the mountain is that of the kingdom of the cross
(@Mt 16:23 Lu 24:26) to the kingdom of glory, the latter beginning,
and the former ending when the kingdom of God breaks in pieces the
kingdoms of the world (@Re 11:15). Christ's contrast between the two
kingdoms refers to this passage.
a great image--literally, "one image that was great." Though the
kingdoms were different, it was essentially one and the same world
power under different phases, just as the image was one, though the
parts were of different metals.
32. On ancient coins states are often represented by human figures. The head and higher parts signify the earlier times; the lower, the later times. The metals become successively baser and baser, implying the growing degeneracy from worse to worse. Hesiod, two hundred years before Daniel, had compared the four ages to the four metals in the same order; the idea is sanctioned here by Holy Writ. It was perhaps one of those fragments of revelation among the heathen derived from the tradition as to the fall of man. The metals lessen in specific gravity, as they downwards; silver is not so heavy as gold, brass not so heavy as silver, and iron not so heavy as brass, the weight thus being arranged in the reverse of stability [TREGELLES]. Nebuchadnezzar derived his authority from God, not from man, nor as responsible to man. But the Persian king was so far dependent on others that he could not deliver Daniel from the princes (@Da 6:14,15); contrast @Da 5:18,19, as to Nebuchadnezzar's power from God, whom he would he slew, and whom he would he kept alive" (compare @Ezr 7:14 Es 1:13-16). Græco-Macedonia betrays its deterioration in its divisions, not united as Babylon and Persia. Iron is stronger than brass, but inferior in other respects; so Rome hardy and strong to tread down the nations, but less kingly and showing its chief deterioration in its last state. Each successive kingdom incorporates its predecessor (compare @Da 5:28). Power that in Nebuchadnezzar's hands was a God-derived (@Da 2:37,38) autocracy, in the Persian king's was a rule resting on his nobility of person and birth, the nobles being his equals in rank, but not in office; in Greece, an aristocracy not of birth, but individual influence, in Rome, lowest of all, dependent entirely on popular choice, the emperor being appointed by popular military election.
33. As the two arms of silver denote the kings of the Medes and Persians [JOSEPHUS]; and the two thighs of brass the Seleucidæ of Syria and Lagidæ of Egypt, the two leading sections into which Græco-Macedonia parted, so the two legs of iron signify the two Roman consuls [NEWTON]. The clay, in @Da 2:41, "potter's clay," @Da 2:43, "miry clay," means "earthenware," hard but brittle (compare @Ps 2:9 Re 2:27, where the same image is used of the same event); the feet are stable while bearing only direct pressure, but easily "broken" to pieces by a blow (@Da 2:34), the iron intermixed not retarding, but hastening, such a result.
34. stone--Messiah and His kingdom (@Ge 49:24 Ps 118:22 Isa 28:16).
In its relations to Israel, it is a "stone of stumbling"
(@Isa 8:14 Ac 4:11 1Pe 2:7,8) on which both houses of Israel are
broken, not destroyed (@Mt 21:32). In its relation to the Church,
the same stone which destroys the image is the foundation of the Church
(@Eph 2:20). In its relation to the Gentile world power, the stone
is its destroyer (@Da 2:35,44; compare @Zec 12:3). Christ saith
(@Mt 21:44, referring to @Isa 8:14,15), "Whosoever shall fall on
this stone (that is, stumble, and be offended, at Him, as the Jews were,
from whom, therefore, He says, 'The kingdom shall be taken') shall be
broken; but (referring to @Da 2:34,35) on whomsoever it shall
fall (referring to the world power which had been the instrument of
breaking the Jews),
it will (not merely break, but)
grind him to powder" (@1Co 15:24). The falling of the stone of
the feet of the image cannot refer to Christ at His first advent, for
the fourth kingdom was not then as yet divided--no toes were in
existence (see on Da 2:44).
cut out--namely, from "the mountain" (@Da 2:45); namely, Mount
Zion (@Isa 2:2), and antitypically, the heavenly mount of the
Father's glory, from whom Christ came.
without hands--explained in @Da 2:44, "The God of heaven shall
set up a kingdom," as contrasted with the image which was made
with hands of man. Messiah not created by human agency, but conceived
by the Holy Ghost (@Mt 1:20 Lu 1:35; compare
@Zec 4:6 Mr 14:58 Heb 9:11,24). So "not made with hands," that is,
heavenly, @2Co 5:1; spiritual, @Col 2:11. The world
kingdoms were reared by human ambition: but this is the "kingdom of
heaven"; "not of this world" (@Joh 18:36). As the fourth kingdom,
or Rome, was represented in a twofold state, first strong, with legs of
iron, then weak, with toes part of iron, part of clay; so this fifth
kingdom, that of Christ, is seen conversely, first insignificant as a
"stone," then as a "mountain" filling the whole earth. The ten toes are
the ten lesser kingdoms into which the Roman kingdom was finally to be
divided; this tenfold division here hinted at is not specified in detail
till the seventh chapter. The fourth empire originally was bounded in
Europe pretty nearly by the line of the Rhine and Danube; in Asia by the
Euphrates. In Africa it possessed Egypt and the north coasts; South
Britain and Dacia were afterwards added but were ultimately resigned.
The ten kingdoms do not arise until a deterioration (by mixing clay with
the iron) has taken place; they are in existence when Christ comes in
glory, and then are broken in pieces. The ten have been sought for in
the invading hosts of the fifth and sixth century. But though many
provinces were then severed from Rome as independent kingdoms, the
dignity of emperor still continued, and the imperial power was exercised
over Rome itself for two centuries. So the tenfold divisions cannot be
looked for before A.D. 731. But the East is not to be excluded, five
toes being on each foot. Thus no point of time before the overthrow of
the empire at the taking of Constantinople by the Turks (A.D. 1453)
can be assigned for the division. It seems, therefore, that the definite
ten will be the ultimate development of the Roman empire just before the
rise of Antichrist, who shall overthrow three of the kings, and, after
three and a half years, he himself be overthrown by Christ in person.
Some of the ten kingdoms will, doubtless, be the same as some past and
present divisions of the old Roman empire, which accounts for the
continuity of the connection between the toes and legs, a gap of
centuries not being interposed, as is objected by opponents of the
futurist theory. The lists of the ten made by the latter differ from one
another; and they are set aside by the fact that they include countries
which were never Roman, and exclude one whole section of the empire,
namely, the East [TREGELLES].
upon his feet--the last state of the Roman empire. Not "upon his
legs." Compare "in the days of these kings"
(see on Da 2:44).
35. broken . . . together--excluding a contemporaneous existence of
the kingdom of the world and the kingdom of God (in its manifested, as distinguished from its spiritual, phase). The latter is not
gradually to wear away the former, but to destroy it at once, and
utterly (@2Th 1:7-10 2:8). However, the Hebrew may be
translated, "in one discriminate mass."
chaff--image of the ungodly, as they shall be dealt with in the
judgment (@Ps 1:4,5 Mt 3:12).
summer threshing-floors--Grain was winnowed in the East on an
elevated space in the open air, by throwing the grain into the air with
a shovel, so that the wind might clear away the chaff.
no place . . . found for them--(@Re 20:11; compare
@Ps 37:10,36 103:16).
became . . . mountain--cut out of the mountain (@Da 2:45)
originally, it ends in becoming a mountain. So the kingdom of God,
coming from heaven originally, ends in heaven being established on earth
(@Re 21:1-3).
filled . . . earth--(@Isa 11:9 Hab 2:14). It is to do so in
connection with Jerusalem as the mother Church (@Ps 80:9 Isa 2:2,3).
36. we--Daniel and his three friends.
37. Thou . . . art a king of kings--The committal of power in fullest plenitude belongs to Nebuchadnezzar personally, as having made Babylon the mighty empire it was. In twenty-three years after him the empire was ended: with him its greatness is identified (@Da 4:30), his successors having done nothing notable. Not that he actually ruled every part of the globe, but that God granted him illimitable dominion in whatever direction his ambition led him, Egypt, Nineveh, Arabia, Syria, Tyre, and its Phoenician colonies (@Jer 27:5-8). Compare as to Cyrus, @Ezr 1:2.
38. men . . . beasts . . . fowls--the dominion originally designed
for man (@Ge 1:28 2:19,20), forfeited by sin; temporarily delegated
to Nebuchadnezzar and the world powers; but, as they abuse the trust for
self, instead of for God, to be taken from them by the Son of man, who
will exercise it for God, restoring in His person to man the lost
inheritance (@Ps 8:4-6).
Thou art . . . head of gold--alluding to the riches of Babylon, hence
called "the golden city" (@Isa 14:4 Jer 51:7 Re 18:16).
39. That Medo-Persia is the second kingdom appears from @Da 5:28
and @Da 8:20. Compare @2Ch 36:20 Isa 21:2.
inferior--"The kings of Persia were the worst race of men that ever
governed an empire" [PRIDEAUX]. Politically (which is the main point of
view here) the power of the central government in which the nobles
shared with the king, being weakened by the growing independence of the
provinces, was inferior to that of Nebuchadnezzar, whose sole word was
law throughout his empire.
brass--The Greeks (the third empire, @Da 8:21 10:20 11:2-4) were
celebrated for the brazen armor of their warriors.
JEROME fancifully
thinks that the brass, as being a clear-sounding metal, refers to
the eloquence for which Greece was famed. The "belly," in @Da 2:32,
may refer to the drunkenness of Alexander and the luxury of the
Ptolemies [TIRINUS].
over all the earth--Alexander commanded that he should be called
"king of all the world" [JUSTIN, 12. sec. 16.9;
ARRIAN,
Campaigns of Alexander, 7. sec. 15]. The four successors
(diadochi) who divided Alexander's dominions at his death, of whom
the Seleucidæ in Syria and the Lagidæ in Egypt were chief, held the
same empire.
40. iron--This vision sets forth the character of the Roman
power, rather than its territorial extent [TREGELLES].
breaketh in pieces--So, in righteous retribution, itself will at
last be broken in pieces (@Da 2:44) by the kingdom of God
(@Re 13:10).
41-43. feet . . . toes . . . part . . . clay . . . iron--explained presently, "the kingdom shall be partly strong, partly broken" (rather, "brittle," as earthenware); and @Da 2:43, "they shall mingle . . . with the seed of men," that is, there will be power (in its deteriorated form, iron) mixed up with that which is wholly of man, and therefore brittle; power in the hands of the people having no internal stability, though something is left of the strength of the iron [TREGELLES]. NEWTON, who understands the Roman empire to be parted into the ten kingdoms already (whereas TREGELLES makes them future), explains the "clay" mixture as the blending of barbarous nations with Rome by intermarriages and alliances, in which there was no stable amalgamation, though the ten kingdoms retained much of Rome's strength. The "mingling with the seed of men" (@Da 2:44) seems to refer to @Ge 6:2, where the marriages of the seed of godly Seth with the daughters of ungodly Cain are described in similar words. The reference, therefore, seems to be to the blending of the Christianized Roman empire with the pagan nations, a deterioration being the result. Efforts have been often made to reunite the parts into one great empire, as by Charlemagne and Napoleon, but in vain. Christ alone shall effect that.
44. in the days of these kings--in the days of these kingdoms, that
is, of the last of the four. So Christianity was set up when Rome had
become mistress of Judea and the world (@Lu 2:1, &c.)
[NEWTON].
Rather, "in the days of these kings," answers to "upon his feet"
(@Da 2:34); that is, the ten toes (@Da 2:42), or ten kings,
the final state of the Roman empire. For "these kings" cannot mean the
four successional monarchies, as they do not coexist as the holders
of power; if the fourth had been meant, the singular, not the
plural, would be used. The falling of the stone on the image must
mean, destroying judgment on the fourth Gentile power, not gradual
evangelization of it by grace; and the destroying judgment cannot be
dealt by Christians, for they are taught to submit to the powers that
be, so that it must be dealt by Christ Himself at His coming again. We
live under the divisions of the Roman empire which began fourteen
hundred years ago, and which at the time of His coming shall be
definitely ten. All that had failed in the hand of man shall then
pass away, and that which is kept in His own hand shall be introduced.
Thus the second chapter is the alphabet of the subsequent prophetic
statements in Daniel [TREGELLES].
God of heaven . . . kingdom--hence the phrase, "the kingdom of heaven"
(@Mt 3:2).
not . . . left to other people--as the Chaldees had been forced to
leave their kingdom to the Medo-Persians, and these to the Greeks, and
these to the Romans (@Mic 4:7 Lu 1:32,33).
break . . . all--(@Isa 60:12 1Co 15:24).
45. without hands--(See on Da 2:35).
46. fell upon . . . face, and worshipped Daniel--worshipping God in
the person of Daniel. Symbolical of the future prostration of the world
power before Messiah and His kingdom (@Php 2:10). As other servants
of God refused such honors (@Ac 10:25,26 14:13-15 Re 22:8,9) would
not taste defiled food, nor give up prayer to God at the cost of his
life (@Da 6:7,10), it seems likely that Daniel rejected the
proffered divine honors. The word "answered" (@Da 2:47) implies that
Daniel had objected to these honors; and in compliance with his
objection, "the king answered, Of a truth, your God is a God of
gods." Daniel had disclaimed all personal merit in @Da 2:30, giving
God all the glory (compare @Da 2:45).
commanded . . . sweet odours--divine honors (@Ezr 6:10). It is not
said his command was executed.
47. Lord of kings--The world power shall at last have to acknowledge this (@Re 17:14 19:16); even as Nebuchadnezzar, who had been the God-appointed "king of kings" (@Da 2:37), but who had abused the trust, is constrained by God's servant to acknowledge that God is the true "Lord of kings."
48. One reason for Nebuchadnezzar having been vouchsafed such a dream is here seen; namely, that Daniel might be promoted, and the captive people of God be comforted: the independent state of the captives during the exile and the alleviation of its hardships, were much due to Daniel.
49. Daniel requested--Contrast this honorable remembrance of his humble
friends in his elevation with the spirit of the children of the world in
the chief butler's case (@Ge 40:23 Ec 9:15,16 Am 6:6).
in the gate--the place of holding courts of justice and levees in the
East (@Es 2:19 Job 29:7). So "the Sublime Porte," or "Gate,"
denotes the sultan's government, his counsels being formerly held in the
entrance of his palace. Daniel was a chief counsellor of the king, and
president over the governors of the different orders into which the Magi
were divided.