The Bible Recap - Day 257 (Daniel 4-6) - Year 5
Episode Date: September 14, 2023SHOW NOTES: - Head to our Start Page for all you need to begin! - Join the RECAPtains - Check out the TBR Store - Show credits - To enter to win a trip to the Museum of the Bible, click here! ... FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Want more of The Bible Recap? Join the RECAPtains today to receive additional perks! SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
King Nebby of Babylon kicks us off today with a letter he's written to his people praising
Yahweh the God Most High.
This letter shows an unexpectedly humble side of Nebby, because if you think of all he had
lined up yesterday
with the statue and the calling in all the foreign dignitaries,
he's actually praising God for thwarting his plans.
Nebby goes on to talk about another perplexing dream
he's had.
He calls in the dream team, but no one can interpret it
until Daniel shows up.
Why didn't Nebby just go to Daniel first?
Some commentators think he was testing the others on the dream team, and others say that
this is a sign he isn't fully committed to Yahweh because he's still seeking help from
his familiar wicked resources.
In his dream, a tree grows big and strong, and its impact, which is mostly positive in
this dream, reaches the whole earth.
Then a messenger of Yahweh shows up and commands that the tree be chopped
down and stripped of its branches and fruit, but that its stump, which represents a man,
should be left to soak in the ground for seven years. Daniel is like, yikes, I wish this
stream were for your enemies, but it's not. So buckle up, this isn't going to be easy to hear.
You and Babylon are the tree. Your reign is going to get chopped down, and you're
going to be relegated to living in the fields for seven years among the beasts.
This dream is definitely going to happen, and you can't avoid it, but if you want my advice
on how to delay getting stumped, turn from your sins and show mercy to the oppressed, because
God might postpone the chopping for a later date. A year later, Nebby is walking on his roof,
writing a praise song to himself
when a voice from Heaven yells,
Timber!
So if he did repent, it wasn't for long.
His pride has come back full force.
Then, after seven years of eating grass,
he's sufficiently humbled.
And just like God said through Daniel,
his reign is reinstated.
Nebby sings another praise song, but this time it's for Yahweh.
His closing statement in the chapter blows my mind, because these words came from the man who toppled Jerusalem and the temple.
Verse 37 says, praise and ex-toll and honor the King of Heaven. For all his works are right and all his ways are
just, and those who walk in pride, he is able to humble. In chapter 5 we meet Belcheazar, who is
probably King Nebi's grandson. He's throwing a big party, and when he tastes the wine, he says,
oh, this is the good stuff, we need to serve it out of those awesome antique glasses I inherited.
He's well aware that these are the same goblets nebbi stole from the temple before he destroyed it.
Belchazar and his crew are drinking it up while having a pagan worship ceremony until
God breaks through the fourth dimension and shocks everyone.
Belchazar almost passes out because he sees the hand and the writing.
If you've ever wondered where the phrase, I saw the writing on the wall comes from, now you know.
Belchazar calls in his wicked interpreters,
but they can't make sense of it.
Either they understand the words,
but not the meaning,
or maybe it's written in a foreign language like Hebrew.
A woman who is probably Belchazar's mom
tells him about how Daniel helped King Nebi
all those years ago,
so they call him in to figure things out.
King B opens with a backhanded compliment.
He knows who Daniel is and praises his wisdom, but he refers to him as an exile, not by the title King Nebi gave him.
Then he promises to promote Daniel to third in the kingdom if he can interpret the writing.
And of course, we know he's got what it takes because what it takes is Yahweh.
But it's also clear in Daniel's response
that he doesn't really like King B.
Not only does he say he doesn't want the King's gifts,
but he also leaves up the traditional,
oh, King live forever in his greeting.
Then Daniel says, King B isn't ignorant
of what happened with Nebby.
He's just proud and foolish.
He doesn't pull any punches
in accusing him. After he rebukes him for using the holy vessels and worshipping pagan gods,
he ends by saying, the God in whose hand is your breath and whose are all your ways, you have
not honored. By the way, when Daniel says God's ways are all King B's ways. He's not saying King B follows God, obviously. He's pointing out
God's sovereignty over everything King B does. When Daniel interprets the message, he boils it down to
this. God has deemed you an unworthy leader, and he's going to remove you and divide your kingdom
between the Meads and the Persians. And science point to it happening quickly because the word that
means numbered is doubled. Despite the bad news, King B gives Daniel the promised gifts,
then he dies later that night and the kingdom is given to Darius the Mead.
Something that isn't in the text here is that many commentators believe this is the very night
the Meads invaded, and they're the ones who killed King B. Chapter 6 tells us that the new Persian
King Darius leaves Daniel in his newly appointed role,
which means he's now in charge of lots of other politicians in Babylon, and he's doing such a great
job that Darius wants to give him a promotion, and all the other politicians in Babylon become
super jealous. They try to find fault in him, but not even his internet search history throws any
red flags. The man has integrity.
They realize that the only way they can trap him is to make his religion temporarily illegal,
and it's a brilliant move, because it also gives them the opportunity to appeal to the
King's pride.
They all agree to make it illegal to pray to anyone except King Darius for 30 days, or
else they'll be executed by lions.
Darius is new in this role, so it probably feels especially good to have his ego boosted,
and he hastily agrees to the law.
When Daniel finds out about this, he doesn't change anything about his behavior.
He doesn't try to change the law or run or hide in fear.
He just goes about his faithful business as usual, praying three times a day.
The men catch him praying and tattle to Darius,
and as if Darius doesn't know who Daniel is,
they refer to him as the exile,
even though he's been there for 66 years.
His ethnicity is probably one of the things
that provoked their jealousy all the more,
and it's evident in their choice of insult.
It's kind of like casually referring to someone's race
when that information adds nothing to the conversation.
Darius is devastated because he really likes Daniel.
Not devastated that Daniel refused to pray to him, but that he's going to be executed.
Darius tries to get the new law overturned, but when he fails, he lets Daniel know he's rooting for him and fasting for him.
They throw Daniel into the pit with the lions and
seal it with a big stone. And here's something I didn't learn in Vacation Bible school. Daniel
is at least 82 years old when this happens. He survives the pit because God sends his angel to
shut the lion's mouths. Then, Darius orders his conspirators to be executed by lions instead, and he writes a decree praising
Yahweh.
My God shot today was noticing how often God works through one person at a time.
He granted Daniel faithfulness and integrity that turned the hearts of kings and nations,
not just once, but twice.
When people in the Old Testament read the prophecies of the Messiah, they imagined a political
ruler who would win every war. They never imagined a humble, faithful man like Jesus. Even though Daniel
was a political ruler, he fought his battles in prayer. And even in light of all his great qualities,
he is still not the hero of the story. He didn't close the lion's mouth. He didn't fulfill the prophecy against wicked King Belchazar.
Yahweh is the active agent.
Yahweh is the hero of every story,
and he's where the joy is and get fun perks in return.
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