Daniel 2

Nebuchadnezzar's dream: the composite statue (France, 15th century).

Daniel 2 (the second chapter of the Book of Daniel) tells how Daniel interpreted a dream of Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon. The king saw a gigantic statue made of four metals, from its gold head to its feet of mingled iron and clay; as he watched, a stone "not cut by human hands" destroyed the statue and became a mountain filling the whole world. Daniel explained to the king that the statue represented four successive kingdoms beginning with Babylon, while the stone and mountain signified a kingdom established by God which would never be destroyed nor given to another people. (The dream and its interpretation are given in verses 31-45). Nebuchadnezzar then acknowledges the supremacy of Daniel's God and raises him to high office in Babylon.[1]

Modern scholarship agrees that Daniel is a legendary figure.[2] The book of which he is the hero divides into two parts, a set of tales in chapters 1–6, and the series of visions in chapters 7–12,[3] the tales no earlier than the Hellenistic period, and the visions from the Maccabean era (the mid-2nd century BCE).[2] Chapter 2 in its present form dates from no earlier than the first decades of the Seleucid empire (late 4th/early 3rd centuries BCE), but its roots may reach back to the fall of Babylon and the rise of the Persian Achaemenid empire.[4]

The overall theme of the Book of Daniel is God's sovereignty over history.[5] On the human level Daniel is set against the Babylonian magicians who fail to interpret the king’s dream, but the cosmic conflict is between the god of Israel and the false Babylonian gods.[6] What counts is not Daniel’s human gifts, nor his education in the arts of divination, but "Divine Wisdom" and the power that belongs to God alone, as Daniel indicates when he urges his companions to seek God’s mercy for the interpretation of the king’s dreams.[7]

Summary

In the second year of his reign Nebuchadnezzar, King of Babylon, is troubled by a dream. He summons his magicians and astrologers to interpret it, but demands that they first tell him what the dream was. They protest that no man can do such a thing, and Nebuchadnezzar orders that they all be executed. This decree also falls on Daniel, but he, through the agency of his God, is able to tell the king the dream. It was a dream of a great statue with a head of gold, arms and chest of silver, belly and thighs of bronze, legs of iron, and feet of mingled iron and clay. A great stone, not cut by human hands, fell on the feet of the statue and destroyed it, and the rock became a mountain that filled the whole world. Daniel then interprets the dream: it concerns four successive kingdoms, beginning with Nebuchadnezzar, which will be replaced by the everlasting kingdom of the God of heaven. Nebuchadnezzar affirms that Daniel's god is "the God of gods and Lord of kings and revealer of mysteries." He lavishes gifts on Daniel and makes him chief of all the wise men and ruler over the province of Babylon.[1]

Composition and structure

Book of Daniel

It is generally accepted that the Book of Daniel originated as a collection of folktales among the Jewish community in Babylon and Mesopotamia in the Persian and early Hellenistic periods (5th to 3rd centuries BCE), expanded in the Maccabean era (mid-2nd century) by the visions in chapters 7-12.[8] Modern scholarship agrees that Daniel is a legendary figure;[2] it is possible that this name was chosen for the hero of the book because of his reputation as a wise seer in Hebrew tradition.[9] The tales are in the voice of an anonymous narrator, except for chapter 4 which is in the form of a letter from king Nebuchadnezzar.[10] Chapters 2-7 are in Aramaic (after the first few lines of chapter 2 in Hebrew,) and are in the form of a chiasmus,a poetic structure in which the main point or message of a passage is placed in the centre and framed by further repetitions on either side:[11]

Daniel 2

Daniel 2 forms a chiasmus within the larger structure of Daniel 2-7:[12]

Chapter 1 and the first few lines of chapter 2 are in Hebrew, but in verse 4 the text says, in Hebrew, "Then the Chaldeans spoke to the king in Aramaic," and the book then continues in Aramaic until the end of chapter 7, where it switches back to Hebrew; no convincing explanation for this has been put forward.[13]

Chapter 2 in its present form dates from no earlier than the first decades of the Seleucid empire (late 4th/early 3rd centuries BCE), but its roots may reach back to the fall of Babylon and the rise of the Persian Achaemenid empire, and some scholars have speculated that the dream of four kingdoms was originally a dream of four kings, Nebuchadnezzar and his four successors.[4] The lack of linguistic continuity (the switch from Hebrew to Aramaic at verse 4), and of continuity with other parts of Daniel (e.g., the king needs an introduction to Daniel despite having interviewed him at the completion of his training in Daniel 1:18), as well as various instances of repetitiveness (see verses 28-30), are sometimes cited as evidence that later hands have edited the story, or as signs that the author was working from multiple sources.[14]

Genre and themes

Daniel interprets Nebuchadnezzar's Dream

Genre

The Book of Daniel is an apocalypse, a literary genre in which a heavenly reality is revealed to a human recipient; such works are characterized by visions, symbolism, an other-worldly mediator, an emphasis on cosmic events, angels and demons, and pseudonymity (false authorship).[15] Apocalypses were common from 300 BCE to 100 CE, not only among Jews and Christians, but Greeks, Romans, Persians and Egyptians.[16] Daniel, the book's hero, is a representative apocalyptic seer, the recipient of the divine revelation: has learned the wisdom of the Babylonian magicians and surpassed them, because his God is the true source of knowledge; he is one of the maskil, the wise, whose task is to teach righteousness.[16] The book is also an eschatology, meaning a divine revelation concerning the end of the present age, a moment in which God will intervene in history to usher in the final kingdom.[17]

Daniel 2 exhibits both these genres, but it is also made up numerous subgenres: a court tale, a dream report, a legend, an aretalogy, a doxology, and a midrash.[14] In folkloric terms it can be typifiied as a "court legend," a story set in the royal court, concerned with wonderful events and containing an edifying message.[18] The plot of such tales (another example is the story of Joseph and Pharaoh in Genesis 41) is as follows: a person of low status is called before a person of high status to answer a difficult question or to solve a riddle; the high-status person poses the problem but none present can solve; the person of low status solves it and is rewarded.[19]

Themes

The overall theme of the Book of Daniel is God's sovereignty over history,[5] and the theme of the tales in chapters 1-6 is that God is sovereign over all earthly kings.[20] In Daniel 2 these two merge, and the claim of God's sovereignty extends beyond the immediate story to take in all of history.[20] On the human level Daniel is set against the Babylonian magicians who fail to interpret the king’s dream, but the cosmic conflict is between the god of Israel and the false Babylonian gods.[6] What counts is not Daniel’s human gifts, nor his education in the arts of divination, but "Divine Wisdom" and the power that belongs to God alone, as Daniel indicates when he urges his companions to seek God’s mercy for the interpretation of the king’s dreams.[7]

Interpretation

Daniel intercedes with Arioch.

Overview: dreams in the ancient world

In the ancient world, dreams, especially those of kings, were regarded as portents.[21] An inscription of the historic Babylonian king Nabonidus, for example, tells of a dream he had of his great predecessor Nebuchadnezzar, mentioning a young man who appeared in the dream to reassure him that it was not an evil portent.[22] Giant figures were frequent in ancient dream records, and parallels can be drawn from Greek (Hesiod's Works and Days), Latin (Ovid's Metamorphosis) and the Persian Bahman Yasht.[23]

The king's behaviour implies a distrust of his court dream-interpreters, and sets the scene for his later celebration of Daniel's God. [21] The secret of Nebuchadnezzar’s dream is called a "mystery," a term found in the scrolls from Qumran indicating a secret that can be learned through divine wisdom; appropriately, Daniel receives the divine wisdom as a "vision of the night", a dream.[24] Daniel 2:20-23 emphasizes the Divine as a repository of wisdom and the controller of the destiny of kings; such hymns and prayers are typical of postexilic Biblical narratives.[25] Finally Nebuchadnezzar prostrates himself before Daniel and commands that offerings and incense be offered to him, suggesting that he views Daniel as divine; nevertheless, although he acknowledges and respects the god of Daniel, he is not a convert.[26]

The four world kingdoms and the rock

Main article: Four monarchies

Most scholars agree that the four world empires symbolised by the statue are Babylon (the head), the Medes (arms and shoulders), Persia (thighs and legs) and Seleucid Syria and Ptolemaic Egypt (the feet).[27] The concept of four successive world empires is drawn from Greek theories of mythological history, while the symbolism of the four metals is drawn from Persian writings.[28] The consensus among scholars is that the four beasts of chapter 7 symbolise the same four world empires.[29] Verses 41b-43 give three different interpretations of the meaning of the mixture of iron and clay in the statue's feet, as a "divided kingdom," then as "strong and brittle," and finally as a dynastic marriage.[30] The marriage might be to either of two between the Seleucids and the Ptolemies, the first in c.250 BCE and the second in 193.[31]

The symbolic significance of the stone which destroys the statue and becomes a mountain evokes Biblical imagery of God as the "rock" of Israel, Zion as a mountain rising above all others, and God's glory filling the whole world. Images from the Book of Isaiah seem to be especially favoured: Whether the author was conscious of it or not, the image of the shattered statue blown away in the wind like chaff from the threshing floor brings to mind Isaiah 41:14-15 where Israel is a threshing sled that turns mountains into chaff, and the rock itself reflects the address to the Judean exiles in Isaiah 51:1, "look to the rock from which you were hewn."[32]

Modern Christian millennialism

William Miller, advocate of Adventist millennialism.

Christian historicism is a method of interpretation in Christian eschatology which associates bible prophecy with actual historical events and identifies symbolic beings with historical persons or societies, resulting in a progressive and continuous fulfillment of prophecy. It formed the world-view of almost all Protestant Reformers from the Reformation into the 19th century.[33]

The following Historicist interpretation of the vision of the image has traditionally been prevalent among Christian scholars since the 1st CE.

  1. Head of gold - Babylon
  2. Breast and arms of silver- Medo-Persia
  3. Belly and thighs of brass- Hellenistic Greece
  4. Legs of iron - Rome
  5. Feet partly of iron and partly of molded clay - The divided Roman Empire
  6. Rock - Kingdom of God

The following table lists nearly every known Biblical scholar from the 1st to the 19th centuries who used the Historicist methodology to interpret the vision.

The Historicist interpretation of the visions of Daniel was a major influence for the Protestant Reformation. "The Reformation ... was really born of a twofold discovery--first, the rediscovery of Christ and His salvation; and second, the discovery of the identity of Antichrist and his subversions."[40] "The reformers were unanimous in its acceptance. And it was this interpretation of prophecy that lent emphasis to their reformatory action. It led them to protest against Rome with extraordinary strength and undaunted courage. ... This was the rallying point and the battle cry that made the Reformation unconquerable."[41]

Seventh-day Adventist interpretation

The Seventh-day Adventists also follow the Historicist interpretation of the statue which they inherited from the Millerite movement.

Chapter Parallel sequence of prophetic elements as understood by SDA Historicists[42][43]
Past Present Future
Daniel 2 Head
Gold
(Babylon)
Chest & 2 arms
Silver
(Media-Persia)
Belly and thighs
Bronze
(Greece)
2 Legs
Iron
(Western Roman Empire &
Eastern Roman Empire)
2 Feet
Clay & Iron
(Frankish & Holy Roman Empires,
Ottoman Empire)
Toes
Clay & Iron
(Respective successors)
Rock
God's unending kingdom
left to no other people

Since iron and clay are materials that cannot form a durable structure, Adventist scholars interpret this as the many short-lived attempts throughout European history to form a large empire such as the Holy Roman Empire, Napoleonic France, Nazi Germany, The European Union. Some propose a future religo-political power developed and enforced by a global superpower—a Common Government. The lateral symmetry of the image from the thighs downward is taken to represent the permanent cultural and religious division between West and East.

Jehovah's Witnesses interpretation

The gold head - Babylon

The silver breast and arms - Medo-Persia

The copper belly and thighs - Greece

The iron legs - Rome

The feet partly of iron and partly of molded clay - The Anglo-American World Power

In Jehovah's Witnesses' interpretation of Nebuchadnezzar's dream, only the feet of the statue differ from the typical historicist interpretation. They associate the feet with the Anglo-American World Power, special relationship between the United States and the United Kingdom. The mixture of iron-and-clay are said to represent traditional authoritarian rule uneasily coexisting with democratic rule and political fragmentation in the 'last days'. In particular, the clay is said to represent the common people having a say in how they are ruled during this time. They believe that the "kingdom, which shall never be destroyed", in verse 44 represents God's kingdom ruled by Jesus as a literal government ruling over earth, during which time, humans will be restored to perfection.[44][45]

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon)

The story in Daniel 2 has significant meaning to members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, who believe that the true church was restored to the earth in the "latter days" through a modern prophet, Joseph Smith, in 1830. Like other Christians, the LDS church believes that the "stone cut out of the mountain without hands" is God's kingdom on the Earth, but unlike other Christians, they believe that it has already been established rather than at a future date.

Spencer Kimball explained in 1976, "The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was restored in 1830. ...This is the kingdom, set up by the god of heaven, that would never be destroyed nor superseded, and the stone cut out of the mountain without hands that would become a great mountain and would fill the whole earth." Kimball agreed with the view of most Christians that the third kingdom represented that of Alexander the Great, the fourth represented the Roman Empire, and the feet of iron and clay represented a group of European nations, which were the great political powers at the time the Latter Day Saint movement was founded.[46][47]

Dead sea scrolls

The following Dead sea scrolls, discovered in the Judean desert, contain some passages in Daniel 2:[48]

References

Citations

  1. 1 2 Seow 2003, p. 31-33.
  2. 1 2 3 Collins 1984, p. 28.
  3. Collins 2002, p. 2.
  4. 1 2 Newsom & Breed 2014, p. 63-64.
  5. 1 2 Levine 2010, p. 1234.
  6. 1 2 Hill 2009, pp. 57–58.
  7. 1 2 Seow 2003, p. 37.
  8. Collins 1984, p. 29,34-35.
  9. Redditt 2008, p. 176-177,180.
  10. Wesselius 2002, p. 295.
  11. Redditt 2009, p. 177.
  12. Mangano 2001, p. 179.
  13. Towner 1993, p. 150.
  14. 1 2 Hill 2009, p. 57.
  15. Crawford 2000, p. 73.
  16. 1 2 Davies 2006, p. 397-406.
  17. Carroll 2000, p. 420-421.
  18. Collins 1984, p. 49.
  19. Collins 1984, p. 49-50.
  20. 1 2 Newsom & Breed 2014, p. 63.
  21. 1 2 Levine 2010, p. 1235-1236, footnote 2.1-13.
  22. Newsom & Breed 2014, p. 66-67.
  23. Levine 2010, p. 1237-1238, footnote 2.31-35.
  24. Levine 2010, p. 1236, footnote 2.14-19.
  25. Levine 2010, p. 1237, footnote 2.20-23.
  26. Levine 2010, p. 1238-1239, footnote 2.36-47.
  27. Towner 1984, p. 34-36.
  28. Niskanen 2004, p. 27,31.
  29. Matthews & Moyes 2012, p. 260,269.
  30. Collins 1994, p. 49.
  31. Collins 1994, p. 51.
  32. Newsom & Breed 2014, p. 77.
  33. Horae Apocalypticae - A Commentary on the Apocalypse, Vol. 4, pps. 562, 563.
  34. After table in Froom 1950, pp. 456–7
  35. After table in Froom 1950, pp. 894–5
  36. After table in Froom 1948, pp. 528–9
  37. After table in Froom 1948, pp. 784–5
  38. After table in Froom 1946, pp. 252–3
  39. After table in Froom 1946, pp. 744–5
  40. Froom 1948, p. 243
  41. Froom 1948, pp. 244, 245
  42. Smith, U., 1944, Daniel and Revelation, Southern Publishing Association, Nashvill, TN
  43. Anderson, A., 1975, Pacific PRess Pub. Assoc., Unfolding Daniel's Prophecies, Mountain View, CA
  44. Insight on the Scriptures. 1. Watch Tower Society. p. 578.
  45. "How This World Will Come to an End". The Watchtower. September 15, 2012.
  46. The Stone Cut Without Hands, Spencer Kimball, Ensign, May 1976
  47. Daniel Among the Babylonians
  48. VanderKam 2002, p. 423

Bibliography

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