Verse 1
Daniel 7:1. In the first year of
Belshazzar, &c. — The prophet,
having related some remarkable
passages concerning himself and
his brethren in captivity, and
having given proof of his
supernatural illumination in
interpreting other men’s dreams,
proceeds to give an account of
his own visions; and thereupon
goes back to the first year of
Belshazzar’s reign, which was
seventeen years before the
history contained in the last
chapter. This vision concerns
the same events with those
referred to in Nebuchadnezzar’s
dream, chap. 2., with some
enlargements and additions, and
different images.
Verse 2-3
Daniel 7:2-3. Behold, the four
winds strove upon the great sea
— This denotes those commotions
in the world, and that
troublesome state of affairs,
out of which empires and
kingdoms commonly take their
rise. And four great beasts came
up from the sea — Signifying the
four great monarchies, or
kingdoms, that should
successively arise in the world,
and have their origin from wars
and commotions, which generally
end in setting up the conqueror
to be a great monarch over those
whom he hath subdued: compare
Revelation 13:1. The reason why
these monarchies, which were
represented to Nebuchadnezzar in
the form of a great image,
formed of gold and silver, brass
and iron, are here exhibited by
fierce and savage beasts, has
been observed in the note on
Daniel 2:31.
Verse 4
Daniel 7:4. The first was like a
lion — The Chaldean or
Babylonian empire: compared to
the head of gold, the chief of
metals, in the image represented
to Nebuchadnezzar in his dream,
Daniel 2:32; Daniel 2:37-38, is
here represented as a lion, the
king of beasts. Instead of a
lion, the Vulgate, Greek, and
Arabic read, a lioness,
signifying, says Jerome, the
cruelty of that empire,
lionesses, according to
naturalists, being fiercer than
lions. It is represented as
having eagles’ wings, to denote
the extent and rapidity of its
conquests, that empire being
advanced to its height within a
few years, by the conduct and
arms of one single person,
namely, Nebuchadnezzar. I beheld
till the wings thereof were
plucked — Or, torn out, as
מריתוmay be rendered: that is,
it was checked in its progress
by frequent defeats, and
rendered unable to make further
conquests. Its wings were
beginning to be plucked at the
time of the delivery of this
prophecy; for at this lime the
Medes and Persians were
encroaching upon it. Belshazzar,
the king now reigning, was the
last of his race; and in the
seventeenth year of his reign
Babylon was taken, and the
kingdom transferred to the Medes
and Persians. And it was lifted
up from the earth — Removed from
its foundation, and lost its
stability: or, as some render
the clause, the wings thereof
were plucked, wherewith it had
been lifted up from the earth,
that is, had been enabled to fly
swiftly, in extending its
conquests; and made stand upon
the feet as a man, and a man’s
heart was given to it — When it
was thus curtailed and humbled,
it became more peaceable and
humane, agreeably to the idea of
the psalmist, Psalms 9:20, Put
them in fear, O Lord, that the
nations may know themselves to
be but men. The minds of the
people were humbled by their
misfortunes, and by the
calamities coming more and more
upon the empire; and they who
vaunted as if they had been
gods, now felt themselves to be
but men.
Verse 5
Daniel 7:5. And behold another
beast like a bear — This is the
kingdom of the Medes and
Persians, who, for their cruelty
and greediness after blood, are
compared to a bear, which is a
most voracious and cruel animal.
Bochart recounts several
particulars wherein the Persians
resembled bears; but the chief
likeness consisted in what has
been just mentioned, and this
likeness was principally
intended by the prophet, as may
be inferred from the words of
the text, Arise, devour much
flesh. A bear, saith Aristotle,
is an all-devouring animal; and
so the Medo-Persians were great
robbers and spoilers, according
to Jeremiah 51:48; Jeremiah
51:56 : see Bishop Newton and
the note on Isaiah 13:18. And it
raised up itself on one side —
Some think the allusion is to
the eastern quarter of the
world, from whence the Persians
came; others, to the elevation
of the Persians above the Medes
and Babylonians, which three
powers are conceived to be meant
by the three ribs in the mouth
of the bear: but Sir Isaac
Newton and Bishop Chandler, with
great propriety, explain them as
signifying the kingdoms of
Babylon, Lydia, and Egypt, which
were conquered by it, but were
not properly parts and members
of its body. They might be
called ribs, as the conquest of
them much strengthened the
Persian empire; and they might
be said to be between the teeth
of the bear, as they were much
grinded and oppressed by the
Persians.
Verse 6
Daniel 7:6. After this I beheld,
and lo, another like a leopard —
“This third kingdom is that of
the Macedonians, or Grecians,
who, under the command of
Alexander the Great, overcame
the Persians, and reigned next
after them: and it is fitly
compared to a leopard upon
several accounts. The leopard is
remarkable for swiftness, and
Alexander and the Macedonians
were amazingly swift and rapid
in their conquests. The leopard
is a spotted animal, and so was
a proper emblem, according to
Bochart, of the different
manners of the nations which
Alexander commanded; or,
according to Grotius, of the
various manners of Alexander
himself, who was sometimes
merciful, and sometimes cruel;
sometimes temperate, and
sometimes drunken; sometimes
abstemious, and sometimes
incontinent. The leopard, as
Bochart observes, is of small
stature, but of great courage,
so as not to be afraid to engage
with the lion and the larger
beasts; and so Alexander, a
little king, in comparison, of
small stature too, and with a
small army, dared to attack the
king of kings, that is, Darius,
whose kingdom was extended from
the Ægean sea to the Indies.
Which had upon the back of it
four wings of a fowl — The
Babylonian empire was
represented with two wings, but
this is described with four.
For, as Jerome says, nothing was
swifter than the victories of
Alexander, who ran through all
the countries from Illyricum and
the Adriatic sea to the Indian
ocean and the river Ganges, not
so much fighting as conquering;
and in six years (he should have
said in twelve) subjugated part
of Europe and all Asia to
himself. The beast had also four
heads — To denote the four
kingdoms into which this same
third kingdom should be divided,
as it was after the death of
Alexander, among his four
captains; Cassander reigning
over Macedon and Greece,
Lysimachus over Thrace and
Bithynia, Ptolemy over Egypt,
and Seleucus over Syria. And
dominion was given to it — Which
shows, as Jerome observes, that
it was not owing to the
fortitude of Alexander, but
proceeded from the will of the
Lord. And, indeed, unless he had
been directed, preserved, and
assisted by the mighty power of
God, how could Alexander, with
thirty thousand men, have
overcome Darius with six hundred
thousand, and in so short a time
have brought all the countries,
from Greece as far as to India,
into subjection.” — Bishop
Newton.
Verse 7
Daniel 7:7. Behold a fourth
beast — This fourth kingdom can
be no other than the Roman
empire, which answers this
emphatical description better
than any of the former kingdoms.
Dreadful, and terrible, and
strong exceedingly — And
therefore compared to iron,
Daniel 2:40. It devoured and
brake in pieces — It spread its
arms and its terrors to a much
greater extent than any of the
preceding powers, and entirely
subdued all the remains of the
former kingdoms, and all the
nations that had been subject to
them. It reduced Macedon into a
Roman province about one hundred
and sixty-eight years, the
kingdom of Pergamus about one
hundred and thirty-three years,
Syria about sixty-five years,
and Egypt about thirty years,
before Christ. And besides the
remains of the Macedonian
empire, it subdued many other
provinces and kingdoms; so that
it might, by a very usual
figure, be said to devour the
whole earth, to tread it down
and break it in pieces; and
become, in a manner, what the
Roman writers delighted to call
it, “The empire of the whole
world.” The words of Dionysius
Halicarnassus are very apposite
to this subject. “The city of
Rome,” says he, “ruleth over all
the earth as far as it is
inhabited, and commands all the
sea, not only that within the
Pillars of Hercules, but also
the ocean, as far as it is
navigable; having first and
alone, of all the celebrated
kingdoms, made the east and west
the bounds of its empire, and
its dominion hath continued
longer than that of any other
city or kingdom.” And it was
diverse from all the beasts that
were before it — This is
intimated by its having no name,
being more cruel and horrid than
any sort of beast whatever; and
the Roman power was so
multiform, that it could not be
pointed out by any one species
of resemblance. And it was
different from all kingdoms in
its republican form of
government, its greatness,
length of duration, and extent
of dominion. But its chief
distinction consisted in its
having ten horns, which we find
at Daniel 7:24 are ten kings or
kingdoms: see also Revelation
17:12. And these answer to the
ten toes of the image, Daniel
2:42. The empire continued in
its greatness fill the reign of
Theodosius the Great, and soon
afterward the partition
happened, and the broken form
remained, for the ten kingdoms
were to be no more united, till
the Ancient of days should come.
Verse 8
Daniel 7:8. I considered the
horns — Viewed and observed them
exactly, otherwise he could not
have observed the little horn,
whose rise was scarce
discernible at first; and behold
there came up among them — Much
about the same time, Revelation
17:12; another little horn —
Distinct from the ten horns, and
of a different constitution.
Some have understood by this the
Turkish empire, and consider
Egypt, Asia, and Greece as being
the three horns torn up or
reduced thereby; but the more
generally received and probable
opinion refers it to antichrist,
or the Papal hierarchy, which
rose to the height here
described from very small
beginnings: see on Daniel 7:24.
The eyes, like human eyes,
indicate the perspicacity,
foresight, and cunning of this
power; and the mouth speaking
great, or presumptuous things,
is not unlike the man of sin,
described by St. Paul, “whose
coming should be after the
working of Satan with all
deceivableness of
unrighteousness,” 2
Thessalonians 2:9-10 : see also
Revelation 13:5-6.
Verse 9-10
Daniel 7:9-10. I beheld till the
thrones were cast down — Till
all these earthly kingdoms were
brought to an end, and all
enemies and opposite powers were
destroyed. But the word רמיו,
here used, maybe rendered, were
pitched, or placed, namely, for
the reception of God, and his
assessors in judgment, the
saints and angels. Thus the
LXX., εως οτου οι θρονοι
ετεθησαν, till the thrones were
placed, or set, or fixed; and so
the Vulgate. And the verb in the
text is used in the same sense
in the Chaldee paraphrase on
Jeremiah 1:15; where our
translation reads, They shall
set every one his throne, &c.
The following words justify this
translation; And the Ancient of
days did sit — That is, the
eternal Judge of the world, who
has been from everlasting, who
is at present, and who shall
always be: and whom the prophet
thus describes, to adapt himself
to human apprehensions, and to
make the following part of his
description more intelligible;
but no similitude is pointed
out, nor ought we from hence to
attempt to represent the
invisible God by any figure. The
metaphors here used, says Bishop
Newton, “are borrowed from the
solemnities of earthly
judicatories, and particularly
of the great sanhedrim of the
Jews, where the father of the
consistory sat, with his
assessors seated on each side of
him, in the form of a
semicircle, with the people
standing before him: and from
this description again was
borrowed the description of the
day of judgment in the New
Testament.” Whose garment was
white as snow — Signifying the
unspotted righteousness of his
proceedings. He is elsewhere
described as covering himself
with light as with a garment,
Psalms 104:2 : see also 1 John
1:5. Kings and princes used
anciently to wear white
garments, as an emblem of
perfect justice. And the hair of
his head like the pure wool — To
denote the eternity and maturity
of his counsels, and that his
decisions are all perfectly
right and true, without the
least mixture of any partial
affections. His throne was like
the fiery flame — Denoting his
awful majesty, and the severity
of his judgments on the ungodly;
and his wheels of burning fire —
Emblematical of the revolutions
and dispensations of his
providence, Ezekiel 1:15, being
dreadfully severe and
destructive to the wicked. The
reader will observe, God’s
throne is here described in the
nature of a triumphal chariot,
supported by angels as so many
fiery wheels. Grotius remarks,
that the ancient thrones and
sellæ curules had wheels. A
fiery stream issued and came
forth from before him —
Signifying his justice and wrath
in giving forth and executing
sentence against the ungodly.
Thousand thousands ministered
unto him — His retinue was an
innumerable company of angels;
and ten thousand times ten
thousand stood before him — To
receive their sentence from his
lips. The judgment was set —
That is, the court, namely, God
the supreme judge, and the
saints as his assessors, made
their public appearance. And the
books were opened — That is,
“those evidences which contained
the laws and will of God,
whether natural or revealed;
those in which the actions of
men, with all their
circumstances of aggravation or
extenuation were recorded; those
from which the clearest and
completest conviction might be
adduced, in order to render the
judgment such as that all should
be obliged to acknowledge it to
be the result of the most
perfect truth and consummate
justice: see Revelation 20:12.”
— Wintle.
Verse 11-12
Daniel 7:11-12. I beheld then —
Chaldee, חזה הוית, I was
attentive, spectabam attentus, I
beheld attentively, as Grotius
renders it; because of the voice
of the great words which the
horn spake — See on Daniel 7:25.
I was desirous of knowing, and
looked carefully to see what
would be the end of this matter,
more particularly on account of
the arrogant and boasting words
which the horn spake. I beheld
even till the beast was slain,
and his body destroyed — This
signified, that no other earthly
kingdom should succeed to this,
but that when an entire end
should be put to it, and the ten
kingdoms included in it, then
the kingdom of Christ should
succeed, as is more fully set
forth toward the end of this
chapter. We may observe, that it
is not only said of this fourth
beast, that he was slain, but
that his body was destroyed and
given to the burning flame; that
is, made entirely extinct, as
every thing is that is burned in
the fire; whereas it is said,
concerning the rest of the
beasts, that though they had
their dominion taken away, their
lives were prolonged for a
season and time. Their bodies
were not destroyed, as that of
the fourth beast, but they were
suffered to continue still in
being; that is, other kingdoms
of the same nature, though
different in some particulars,
succeeded to them. The
destruction of the beast, it
must be observed, will be the
destruction of the horn also,
and consequently the horn is a
part of the fourth beast, or of
the Roman empire.
Verse 13
Daniel 7:13. I saw in the night
visions, &c. — Here is described
by what means these changes were
to be brought about; behold, one
like the Son of man came with
the clouds of heaven — One in
the shape and likeness of a man,
but clothed with such ensigns of
majesty and honour, (signified
here by the clouds of heaven,)
as showed him to be an
extraordinary person, (compare
Revelation 1:13; Revelation
14:14,) indeed no less than the
Messiah, as the following
description of him declares. As
the two foregoing verses declare
why the fourth beast was
destroyed, this part of the
vision shows by whom it was
done; setting Christ forth in
his judicial capacity, and
describing him by that title,
which, in allusion to this
place, he often gave himself,
namely, the Son of man. He
particularly alludes to this
text, Matthew 26:64, where he
speaks of his coming in the
clouds of heaven; by which
expression he acknowledged
himself to be the true Messiah
here described, and gave a
direct answer to the question
there proposed to him, Art thou
the Christ, the Son of the
blessed? Compare Mark 14:61-62;
Revelation 1:7. Whereupon they
condemned him as guilty of
blasphemy. A learned prelate, in
his Defence of Christianity from
the ancient Prophecies, p. 131,
observes, that ענני, anani, the
clouds, was a known name of the
Messiah among the Jewish
writers, which shows that they
understood this text as spoken
of him.
Verse 14
Daniel 7:14. There was given him
dominion, &c. — “All these
kingdoms shall in their turns be
destroyed, but the kingdom of
the Messiah shall stand for
ever. It was in allusion to this
prophecy that the angel said of
Jesus, before he was conceived
in the womb, Luke 1:33, He shall
reign over the house of Jacob
for ever, and of his kingdom
there shall be no end. After
what manner these great changes
will be effected, we cannot
pretend to say, as God hath not
been pleased to reveal it. We
see the remains of the ten horns
which arose out of the Roman
empire. We see the little horn
still subsisting, though not in
full strength and vigour, but as
we hope upon the decline, and
tending toward a dissolution.
And having seen so many of these
particulars accomplished, we can
have no reason to doubt that the
rest also will be fulfilled in
due season; though we cannot
frame any conception how Christ
will be manifested in glory; how
the little horn, with the body
of the fourth beast, will be
given to the burning flame; or
how the saints will take the
kingdom, and possess it for ever
and ever. It is the nature of
such prophecies, not to be
perfectly understood till they
are fulfilled. The best comment
upon them will be their
completion.” — Bishop Newton.
Verses 15-18
Daniel 7:15-18. I Daniel was
grieved in my spirit — Upon
account of the extraordinary
changes which seemed to be
signified by the vision, the
particulars of which troubled
me, though I had not a perfect
apprehension of their meaning. I
came near unto one of them that
stood by — Namely, to one of the
angels who were attending as
ministering spirits. And asked
him the truth, &c. — Desired him
to give me a clear understanding
of all this. So he told me, &c.
— Explained to me the true and
plain meaning of these things.
These great beasts are four
kings — Four kingdoms, or
monarchies. So the word king is
used Isaiah 23:15. Which shall
arise out of the earth — Which
shall raise themselves merely
upon carnal, worldly grounds and
considerations, and that by wars
and troubles, and which shall
think of and concern themselves
with only earthly things;
whereas the kingdom of Christ is
described, in the next verse, as
a heavenly, spiritual kingdom,
fitting men for heaven. But the
saints of the Most High shall
take the kingdom — When the
earthly kingdom shall be
destroyed, the heavenly, or
spiritual kingdom of the saints
shall commence; they shall enter
upon it on earth, but shall
retain it in heaven for ever.
The Chaldee word עליונין,
rendered Most High, is literally
high ones, as it is translated
in the margin: and these saints
are indeed high ones, being
children and heirs of God, and
joint-heirs with Christ.
Sometimes, however, the one true
God is spoken of in the plural
number by way of eminence, as
Joshua 24:19, where it is in the
Hebrew, He is the holy Gods. The
expression may therefore mean as
we have it rendered.
Verses 19-22
Daniel 7:19-22. Then I would
know the truth of the fourth
beast — Namely, what was
intended to be signified by it.
And of the ten horns that were
in his head — Of what they were
emblems; and of the other which
came up, &c. — See Daniel 7:8;
whose look was more stout than
his fellows — Or more great and
magnificent; or, who was more
arrogant, and claimed a
superiority over the rest: for
though this horn, or power, was
small at first, it at length
exceeded all other powers in
pomp and pre-eminence, exalting
itself not only above all
temporal authorities, but above
all that is called God, or that
is worshipped, 2 Thessalonians
2:4. I beheld — Chaldee, I was
seeing, or considering
attentively; and the same horn
made war with the saints — By
the saints here is to be
understood the servants of
Christ. So antichrist is
described as making war with the
saints, and overcoming them for
a time: see the margin. Until
the Ancient of days came — To
vindicate their cause, to crush
the idolaters, and to extirpate
the dominion of antichrist: or
until the final judgment, when
the saints shall sit as
assessors with Christ, shall be
seated on thrones, and reign as
kings and priests with God and
Christ, and possess the kingdom
for ever. And judgment was given
to the saints, &c. — Power to
judge and rule over their
enemies. And the time came that
the saints possessed the kingdom
—
See on Daniel 7:14.
Verse 23-24
Daniel 7:23-24. The fourth beast
shall be diverse from all
kingdoms — As being managed
under different forms of
government; having a form of
commonwealth at the beginning of
its greatness, and afterward
governed by kings and emperors;
and in process of time being
divided into ten kingdoms, or
principalities; and all of them
under the direction of one
spiritual head. And the ten
horns are ten kings — Or,
kingdoms. A horn is an emblem of
strength, so it comes to signify
power and authority; and from
thence it is applied to denote
sovereignty, or dominion. The
ten horns, or kingdoms, were to
arise out of the dissolution of
the Roman empire, which came to
pass accordingly. There are
various enumerations of these
ten kingdoms in the division of
the Roman empire, none of which
are reckoned to commence earlier
than the latter end of the
fourth, or the beginning of the
fifth century. Bishop Newton, in
his fourteenth Dissertation, has
given several lists, by
Machiavel, by Mr. Mede, by
Bishop Lloyd, and by Sir Isaac
Newton; and at last has added
one which he has selected from
the others, and which he has
placed in the eighth century.
His words are, “The principal
states and governments then
were, 1. The senate of Rome, who
revolted from the Greek
emperors, and claimed and
exerted the privilege of
choosing a new western emperor;
2. The Greeks in Ravenna; 3. The
Lombards in Lombardy; 4. The
Huns in Hungary; 5. The
Alemannes in Germany; 6. The
Franks in France; 7. The
Burgundians in Burgundy; 8. The
Goths in Spain; 9. The Britons;
10. The Saxons in Britain. Not
that there were constantly ten
kingdoms, they were sometimes
more and sometimes fewer; but,
as Sir Isaac Newton says,
‘whatever was their number
afterward, they are still called
the ten kingdoms, from their
first number.’“
And another shall arise after
them — Greek, οπισω αυτων,
behind them, as the words may be
rendered; that is, either
unperceived by them, or whose
height, or dominion, should not
acquire its summit till long
after their establishment. This
is generally agreed, by all
Protestant interpreters, to be
the kingdom of the pope, which
was certainly of a very
different nature from any of the
former, being first
ecclesiastical, or spiritual,
and afterward claiming a
temporal or civil jurisdiction.
The LXX. add, that it should be
distinguished from the former,
κακοις, in evils, or
malignancies. And the kings, or
kingdoms, which it should pluck
up by the roots, or humble, as
ταπεινωσει, the word used by the
LXX., signifies, (which is also
the reading of the Vulgate,) are
pointed out by the same prelate
to be the exarchate of Ravenna,
the kingdom of the Lombards, and
the state of Rome. These states
were reduced in the eighth
century; and the epistles and
bulls issued by the pope are,
after that time, dated from the
years of the commencement of the
pope’s temporal jurisdiction, or
advancement to the papal chair;
and the pope, by wearing his
triple crown, hath in a manner
pointed himself out for the
person here intended: see Bishop
Newton and Mr. Wintle.
And what still more fully
characterizes this power, and
proves it to be intended of the
Papacy, is, that it is said, in
Daniel 7:8, in this horn were
eyes like the eyes of a man;
which denotes cunning and
foresight, exercised in looking
out and watching all
opportunities of promoting one’s
interest. “And the policy of the
Roman hierarchy hath almost
passed into a proverb. The pope
is properly called an
overlooker, or overseer: an
επισκοπος, or bishop, in the
literal sense of the word. In
Daniel 7:8; Daniel 7:20, it is
said, He had a mouth, speaking
great things: and who hath been
more noisy and blustering than
the pope, especially in former
ages; boasting of his supremacy,
thundering out his bulls and
anathemas, excommunicating
princes, and absolving subjects
from their allegiance? His look
was more stout than his fellows,
Daniel 7:20. And the pope
assumes a superiority, not only
over his fellow-bishops, but
even over crowned heads: and
requires his foot to be kissed,
and greater honours to be paid
to him than to kings and
emperors themselves.”
Verse 25
Daniel 7:25. He shall speak
great words against the Most
High — Symmachus reads, He shall
speak great words, as the Most
High; “setting himself above all
laws, divine and human:
arrogating to himself godlike
attributes, and titles of
holiness and infallibility;
exacting obedience to his
ordinances and decrees, in
preference to, and in open
violation of, reason and
Scripture; insulting men and
blaspheming God. In Gratian’s
Decretals, the pope has the
title of God given to him. And
shall wear out the saints — By
wars, and massacres, and
inquisitions, persecuting and
destroying the faithful servants
of Jesus, and the true
worshippers of God; who protest
against his innovations, and
refuse to comply with the
idolatry practised in the Church
of Rome. He shall think to
change times and laws —
Appointing fasts and feasts,
canonizing saints, granting
pardons and indulgences for
sins, instituting new modes of
worship, imposing new articles
of faith, enjoining new rules of
practice, and reversing at
pleasure the laws of God and
man.” — Bishop Newton.
And they shall be given, &c. —
“A time, all agree, signifies a
year; and a time, and times, and
the dividing of time, or half a
time, are three years and a
half; and the ancient Jewish
year, consisting of twelve
months, and each month of thirty
days, a time, and times, and
half a time, or three years and
a half, are reckoned in the
Revelation 11:2-3; Revelation
12:6; Revelation 12:14, as
equivalent to forty-two months,
or twelve hundred and sixty
days; and a day, in the style of
the prophets, is a year; (see
Ezekiel 4:4;) and it is
confessed that the seventy
weeks, in Daniel 9. are weeks of
years, and consequently twelve
hundred and sixty days are
twelve hundred and sixty years.
So long antichrist, or the
little horn, will continue: but
from what point of time the
commencement of these twelve
hundred and sixty years is to be
dated, is not easy to determine.
It should seem that they are to
be computed from the full
establishment of the power of
the pope, and no less is implied
in the expression, given into
his hand. Now the power of the
pope, as a horn, or temporal
prince, it hath been shown, was
established in the eighth
century; and twelve hundred and
sixty years from that time, will
lead us down to about the year
of Christ 2000, or the year of
the world 6000: and there is an
old tradition, both among Jews
and Christians, that at the end
of 6000 years the Messiah shall
come, and the world shall be
renewed; the reign of the wicked
one shall cease, and the reign
of the saints upon earth shall
begin. But, as Irenæus says in a
like case, it is surer and safer
to wait for the completion of
the prophecy than to conjecture
and divine about it. When the
end shall come, then we shall
know better whence to date the
beginning.” — Bishop Newton.
Verse 26-27
Daniel 7:26-27. But the judgment
shall sit, &c. — God, in the
course of his providence, will
sit (speaking after the manner
of men) in judgment on this
usurping, tyrannical, and
persecuting power, which shall
be judged, condemned, degraded,
consumed, and destroyed, and his
authority never more revived, to
the end of the world: see note
on Daniel 7:10-11. And the
kingdom and dominion, &c., shall
be given to the saints of the
Most High — True religion shall
universally prevail under the
countenance and protection of
Christian princes; and the
kingdom of Christ shall be
erected in power and glory in
all parts of the earth. In other
words, The stone cut out of the
mountain without hands shall
become itself a mountain, and
fill the whole earth: see note
on Daniel 2:44-45, and on Daniel
7:14 of this chapter. If the
reader will be at the pains to
compare this vision of Daniel,
concerning the four great wild
beasts, and the exposition of it
by the angel, with
Nebuchadnezzar’s dream of the
great image, as explained by
Daniel, he will be struck with
their perfect agreement with
each other, and find the one
illustrative of the other.
Verse 28
Daniel 7:28. Hitherto is the end
of the matter — Here the angel
that spoke to me concerning
these matters finished his
discourse. As for me, my
cogitations much troubled me —
The extraordinary circumstances
of the vision made a great
impression upon my mind; and it
was matter of great trouble to
me, to foresee the profanation
of God’s laws and worship, and
the persecutions and calamities
which should come upon his
church and people. And my
countenance changed in me — The
impression which this vision
made upon me, weakened my
spirits, and altered my
complexion, as if I had had a
fit of sickness. But I kept the
matter in my heart — I laid the
matter up in my memory and
heart, and meditated frequently
upon it, and by that means was
enabled to give an exact account
of the vision, and its
interpretation, in writing, for
the use and benefit of others as
well as myself; and that after
ages might have this great proof
of the Almighty’s governing all
the affairs of the world, and of
his foreknowledge of future
events. |