The Ram – What We’re Told
The Ram – What It Means
The Goat – What We’re Told
This is exactly as described in the vision - the goat moved so fast, it didn't even touch the ground. He comes flying in from the West and hammers into the Medo-Persians, first destroying their main force at the Battle of Issus in 333BC (I love Wikipedia) then chasing Darius about a bit until he was executed by one of his own Persian vassals.
Anyway, back on topic. The big horn was Alexander, but we read that once this horn had become strong, it broke, and was replaced by four other 'notable' horns. Again, scarily accurate. Alexander died suddenly at the age of 33, just at the height of his powers, and since he left no heir, the empire was split between his four generals, Cassander, Lysimachus, Seleucus and Ptolemy.
The Little Horn
The little horn is where it gets tricky, though. Basically, we're told another little horn grew out of one of the four, became great toward the South, the East and the Glorious Land, grew very powerful, exalted itself, and cast down the place of the Sanctuary and took away the daily sacrifices. V12 says the horn 'cast truth down to the ground.'
The book, at this point, offers two suggestions. The first is that this horn refers to a bloke called Antiochus Epiphanes, who was a later ruler of the Selucid part of the ex-Greek empire, and who really took it out on the Jews. This would fit with some of the details, but not all. For instance, he is known to have defiled the altar in the Temple by sacrificing a pig on it (v11 mentions something like this), but does not fit with some of the other bits.
Verses 23-26 is where we really find out more about this horn, however. It's Gabriel again, explaining some stuff and giving us some more to think about. We talked about this a fair bit, and especially about the book's suggestion that all this could refer to Islam.
This seems (to me at least) to be a very reasonable interpretation. Reading through that section again, every detail is important, and every detail could be linked to the rise of Islam and its position in the world today. We discussed a few:
- South, East and towards the Glorious Land: from Greece, if we look in those directions, we end up with an area which covers most of the Middle East, Northern Africa, and some of South Asia. In other words, an area that is almost entirely Muslim (except Israel).
- Sacrifices and Sanctuary taken away/cast down: What stands in place of God's temple right now? A fairly chunky piece of architecture called the Dome of the Rock - a Muslim place of worship. Can the Jews sacrifice there any more? No...
- Oppression: If you've been watching the news at all any time in the last couple of thousand years, you might have noticed that the Jews and the Muslims don't really get on. Even just in the last fifty years, since Israel was reinstated, there have been several wars and terrorist campaigns directed at the Israelites.
Which brings us back to those verses at the end again. They talk mainly of some sort of king - but surely religions don't have kings? I don't think we really discussed this a lot, seeing as we were running out of time a bit, but it's possible that these verses could refer to somebody like Osama bin Laden.
He has 'arisen in the latter times of the kingdom,' and there's no question that he 'understands sinister schemes.' He has power, but not really his own - he works by piggybacking on the Islamic faith, recruiting suicide bombers etc using the teachings in the Qur'an. He 'destroys fearfully' - that's what terrorism is all about, really. He 'destroys the mighty' - look what he did to America. It's no surprise that he would 'exalt himself in his heart' and 9/11 showcases how he has the capacity to 'destroy many in their prosperity.'
So, it would seem he fits. But, again, it's only a suggestion. All we can really do is keep our eyes open, think about things we see in the news and how they could relate to prophecies like this one in Daniel. We've seen how the early part of the vision was spot-on right, and we can logically deduce that the rest of it will be, too. Right now, we are living in those 'latter days' that Chapter 8 talks about, and we can see prophecies coming true all over the place. Eyes peeled, folks.
That's my thoughts and recollections from what we talked about, anyway. If I've missed stuff out, post a comment below. Sorry it's (slightly) late in coming. Oh, and quite long. And slightly rambly towards the end. If you're still reading by this point, kudos.
2 comments:
Thanks for the map - good idea!
It's a really good peice and I particularly like the last paragraph or so. It's worth making the connection with regards to what we know about this portion of the prophecy with what we discussed about ch 9 (read Debbies account...) as Daniel wasn't entirely sure of the details even then! It just helps us to understand that we can't possibly know everything but that more importantly we 'should' be waiting, looking, ready!
Yep, more often than not, prophecy is not to tell us exactly what will happen when, but that God saying X will happen, and when it does, we can
a. take encouragement from the fact that what God says has come true, so we can reaonably assume the rest of what he has said, like the promises, will come true as well
b. look back to see why God said this would happen and what we can learn from that
The comments thing on this site is a bit weird... not particularly easy to view or post comments. It can't be customised anywhere, can it?
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