SPIRITUAL DIARY FOR 11/22/2023 12:19 PM
We continue to look at John
MacArthur’s sermon on the introduction to the book of Daniel.
And
then the apostle Paul. The apostle Paul believed in Daniel. In 1 Corinthians 6:2,
he refers to Daniel. In 2 Thessalonians 2:3,
he refers to Daniel. In 2 Timothy 4:17,
he refers to Daniel. The author of Hebrews in Hebrews 11:33 refers
to Daniel. And even Simon Peter, bless his heart, in 1 Peter 1:10 refers
to Daniel. And so – and by those, I mean not necessarily using the name of
Daniel but either using his name or quoting from his book.
And
do you think John the apostle believed in the book of Daniel? All you have to
do is read Revelation to find out how much he got from Daniel. He must have written
Revelation with a remembrance of Daniel. And by the way, I might add this, that
Ezekiel refers to Daniel no less than three times. They believed in him. So
should we. And you see the stupidity of saying it’s a forgery written by some
Jewish person way later than really claimed, forging it under the name of
Daniel is ridiculous because why would anybody forge something under the name
of Daniel when the only thing ever written by that guy is the book of Daniel?
And if he didn’t write that, he’s nobody.
Somebody
says, “Well they wanted to pass it off as if it was Daniel.” Well if Daniel
isn’t the guy in the book, there is no Daniel. I don’t know if you understand
that. I do. I mean, you can understand them forging a book supposedly written
by Moses, or Isaiah or somebody who wrote another one. But if this is all – by
the way, all we know about Daniel is this book. There are two other Daniels
named in the Bible. They’re both different. And this is a rather a common name.
The only thing we know about this man is in the book and the reference of
Ezekiel. And if he didn’t write this, then what’s the use of forging something
under his name? It wouldn’t make any sense.
Now,
that was the introduction to my introduction. Now I’m going to have a little
fun, so hang with me. I want to give you just a few thoughts as we look at this
opening two verses. All right? “In the third year of the reign of Jehoiakim
king of Judah, came Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon unto Jerusalem and besieged
it. And the Lord gave Jehoiakim king of Judah into his hand, with part of the
vessels of the house of God: which he carried into the land of Shinar to the
house of his god; and he brought the vessels into the treasure house of his
god.” Now stop there.
Now
that’s the introduction to the book. Now you just see names and places and so
forth and let’s see if we could talk about them for a minute. The places, first
of all, all right? Two places are mentioned, Judah and Babylon. You have
Jehoiakim, king of Judah, Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon. Now, what you have
in these two places, beloved, is an infinite contrast. Where did all false
human religion begin? Babylon. Where, according to Revelation 17, will all
false human religion consummate? Babylon, the final form of evil. And where,
may I ask, is the seat of God’s throne? Judah.
So
at the very beginning we see these two very antithetical, very opposite things.
One is Satan’s place and one is God’s place. One is the Promised Land from
where the blessing flows, the other is the cursed land from where flows all of
evil spawned out of the terrible evil of Babylon society originating in the
Tower of Babel.
One
is the place of true worship, the other the place where idolatry was born. One
is the house of God’s people, the other is the house of pagans. And so they are
infinitely contrasted. How ironic it is that when God needed to punish His
people Israel to purge them from their sin, He chose the most despicable and
despised place on all the face of the earth, the place where evil idolatry
originated, Babel, to be the place where they became captive.
Now,
let’s look at Judah for just a moment. Judah was the Southern Kingdom after
Solomon. It was comprised, as I said, of two tribes: Judah and Benjamin. You
remember that among the people of Israel there were twelve tribes, twelve
tribes. The twelve tribes when they were given the Promised Land, they came
into the land of Canaan after living in Egypt. They were told to take the land
and divide it among the twelve tribes so that each tribe had territory. And
after Solomon – Solomon succeeded in ripping the land in half, as it were,
dividing the kingdom – it split. Ten tribes took the north and two, Judah and
Benjamin, the south.
And
these two tribes continued faithful to God, didn’t they, for a while? Faithful
to Jerusalem, at least, faithful to the family of David. And so the Southern
Kingdom existed until its captivity. By the way, Judah, the Southern Kingdom,
had nineteen kings over a period of nearly 350 years. So after Solomon came the
splitting of the kingdom, Jeroboam and Rehoboam. And for 350 years Judah
existed with 19 kings. And the Bible says eight were good and eleven were
wicked.
The
Northern Kingdom, by the way, of ten tribes never had one good king, not one.
They were all evil. And that’s why the Northern Kingdom went into captivity
before the Southern Kingdom, and the Northern Kingdom never returned, never
returned. So Judah has reference to the Southern Kingdom, the southern division
of Israel.
Now
look at Babylon. What is Babylon? It’s also called the land of Shinar you
notice down in verse 2, the land of Shinar. That is simply the ancient name of
Babylonia. That’s just the way it’s designated. For example, in Genesis
10 and Genesis 11, it’s called the land of Shinar. That’s its old name. We
know it as Babylon, or Babylonia. And I think he uses the old name in verse 2
to point up its ancient heritage of wickedness. Now, I want you to stay with
me, a little geography, okay?
Babylonian
territory, or Babylonia proper – I want you to see this now – covered the lower
part of Mesopotamia. Now, I’ll give you a little idea. If you go east from
Israel you get into all that Arab territory, right? And you remember the
Tigris, the Euphrates River and so forth, that whole territory going east:
Iran, Iraq, and all of those countries that are there, Arabic countries today.
There was pretty much a dividing line down the middle going east and west. And
the southern part was known as Babylon and the northern part was known as
Assyria. Okay?
When
the Babylonian Empire came, it swept to the north and gobbled up everything.
But originally, it had to do with lower parts of Mesopotamia. But by the time
we arrive in Daniel’s day, it has swept north, wiped out everything, come all
the way west to the north of Israel, all the way down the coast and taken over
all that territory and really rules the known world. Now, in the area of the
whole Babylonian Empire was this special area of Babylonia and in the middle of
Babylonia was Babylon.
Babylon
was a capital city located on the Euphrates River approximately 50 miles south
of modern Baghdad. And by the way, within the city of Babylon, there were 50 –
at least they know of from archaeology – 50 different temples to 50 different
gods. But the number one god was a god named Marduk and Marduk was the
principle God. And it’s most likely that when Nebuchadnezzar, in verse 2, took
all the vessels of gold out of the house of the Lord and took them to his
treasure house of his god that he took them to the god Marduk. So that’s Judah and
Babylon.
11/22/2023 12:20 PM
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