Verse 1
Daniel 8:1. In the third year of
King Belshazzar — Daniel’s
former vision of the four great
beasts, representing the four
great empires of the world, took
place in the first year of
Belshazzar; now, in the third
year of that king’s reign, he
had another vision, which
chiefly respected two of those
empires. Thus God showed the
same things to Daniel at
different times, and under
different symbols; doubtless in
order that they might be more
deeply impressed on his mind,
and that he might more
distinctly understand them in
all their circumstances. We find
God acting in the same manner
with some of the other prophets,
particularly Ezekiel, to whom he
showed the destruction of
Jerusalem by a great many
different types, or symbols.
This vision was communicated to
Daniel about the year before
Christ 553, according to Usher,
Prideaux, and other chronologers.
Verse 2
Daniel 8:2. I saw in a vision —
When I was awake, and had my
bodily senses: see Daniel 8:3,
and compare Daniel 10:4-5. This
was accounted a more perfect
degree of revelation than the
having a representation of
things imprinted on the
imagination during sleep. When I
saw, I was at Shushan in the
palace — This circumstance shows
that Daniel continued in some
post of honour, at least during
the former part of the reign of
Belshazzar. Which is in the
province of Elam — The province
of Elam, or Persia, properly so
called, was taken from Astyages,
king of Media, by
Nebuchadnezzar, according to the
prophecy of Jeremiah against
Elam, Jeremiah 49:34. And it was
subject to the king of Babylon
when Daniel saw this vision;
though afterward the viceroy of
that country revolted to Cyrus,
and joined with him in taking
Babylon. And I was by the river
Ulai — Or, Eluæus, as it was
called by the Greeks and Romans.
This river divided Susiana from
the province of Elam, properly
so called: see Plin., lib. 6.
cap. 27. Elam, however, is often
taken in a larger sense, so as
to comprehend Susiana under it.
It was usual for the prophets to
see visions by river sides, of
which Daniel gives us another
instance, chap. Daniel 10:4; and
Ezekiel likewise saw visions by
the river Chebar, Ezekiel 1:3;
as if the Holy Spirit delighted
to manifest himself in such
retired scenes. And the gifts
and graces of the Spirit are
often, in Scripture language,
described by the metaphors of
springs and streams of water,
than which nothing is more
agreeable and refreshing in hot
and dry countries.
Verse 3
Daniel 8:3. I saw, and behold, a
ram with two horns — In the
former vision there appeared
four beasts, because there four
empires were represented; but in
this two only, because here we
have a representation of what
was transacted chiefly within
two empires. The first of the
four empires, that is, the
Babylonian, is wholly omitted
here; for its fate was
sufficiently known, and it was
now drawing very near to a
conclusion. The second empire in
the former vision is the first
in this; and what is there
compared to a bear, is here
prefigured by a ram. This ram
had two horns; and, according to
the explication of the angel
Gabriel, Daniel 8:20, it was the
empire of the Medes and
Persians. The source of this
figure of horns for kingdoms,
must be derived from the
hieroglyphics of Egypt, from
which most of the metaphors and
figures in the oriental
languages were originally
derived; and in these languages
the same word signifies a horn,
a crown, power, and splendour,
whence a horn was an ensign of
royalty among the Phenicians;
and the Hebrew word קרן, keren,
signifying a horn, is several
times by the Chaldeans rendered
מלכותא, malchutha, or a kingdom;
and horns are frequently used
for kings and kingdoms in the
Old Testament. This empire,
therefore, which was formed by
the conjunction of the Medes and
Persians, was not unfitly
represented by a ram with two
horns. Cyrus, the founder of
this empire, was the son of
Cambyses, king of Persia, and,
by his mother Mandane, was
grandson of Astyages, king of
Media; and afterward marrying
the daughter and only child of
his uncle Cyaxares, king of
Media, he succeeded to both
crowns, and united the kingdoms
of Media and Persia. It was a
coalition of two very formidable
powers, and therefore it is said
that the two horns were high;
but one, it is added, was higher
than the other, and the higher
came up last. The kingdom of
Media was the more ancient of
the two, and more famous in
history. Persia was of little
note or account till the time of
Cyrus; but under him the
Persians gained and maintained
the ascendant. But a question
remains, why that empire, which
was before likened to a bear for
its cruelty, should now be
represented by a ram? Now the
Hebrew word for a ram, which is
איל, ail, and עילם, eelam, which
is the Hebrew word for Persia,
both sprang from the same root;
and both implying something of
strength, the one is not
improperly made the type of the
other. The propriety of it
appears further from hence, that
it was usual for the king of
Persia to wear a ram’s head made
of gold, and set with precious
stones, instead of a diadem. We
may add, that a ram’s head with
horns, one higher and the other
lower, was the royal ensign of
the Persians, and is still to be
seen on the pillars of
Persepolis: see Bishop Newton.
Verse 4
Daniel 8:4. I saw the ram
pushing westward, &c. — Under
Cyrus himself the Persians
pushed their conquests westward,
as far as the Ægean sea,
subduing Babylonia, Syria, and
Asia Minor; and extended them to
part of Greece under his
successors, Darius the son of
Hystaspes, and Xerxes: northward
they subdued the Lydians,
Iberians, Albanians, Armenians,
Cappadocians, and the adjacent
countries: southward they
conquered Arabia, Egypt, and
Ethiopia, if not under Cyrus, as
Xenophon affirms, yet most
certainly under Cambyses, the
son and successor of Cyrus.
Under Darius they subdued India;
but in the prophecy no mention
is made of their conquests in
the East, because those
countries lay very remote from
the Jews, and were of little
concern or consequence to them.
Verse 5
Daniel 8:5. As I was
considering, behold, a he-goat,
&c. — This is interpreted,
Daniel 8:21, to be the king, or
kingdom, of Grecia. “A goat is
very properly made the type of
the Grecian or Macedonian
empire; because the Macedonians
at first, about two hundred
years before Daniel, were
denominated Ægeadæ, or the
goats’ people; and upon this
occasion, as heathen authors
report: Caranus, their first
king, going with a great
multitude of Greeks to seek new
habitations in Macedonia, was
commanded by the oracle to take
the goats for his guides to
empire: and afterward, seeing a
herd of goats flying from a
violent storm, he followed them
to Edessa, and there fixed the
seat of his empire, made the
goats his ensigns, or standards,
and called the city Ægeæ, or,
The Goats’ Town, and the people
Ægeadæ, or, The goats’ people.
And to this may be added, that
the city Ægeæ, or Ægæ, was the
usual burying-place of the
Macedonian kings. It is also
very remarkable, that
Alexander’s son, by Roxana, was
named Alexander Ægus, or the son
of the goat; and some of
Alexander’s successors are
represented on their coins with
goats’ horns. This he-goat came
from the west; and who is
ignorant that Europe lies
westward of Asia? He came on the
face of the whole earth,
carrying every thing before him
in all the three parts of the
world then known; and he touched
not the ground — His marches
were so swift, and his conquests
so rapid, that he might be said,
in a manner, to fly over the
ground without touching it. For
the same reason, the same
empire, in the former vision,
was likened to a leopard, which
is a swift, nimble animal; and,
to denote the greater quickness
and impetuosity, to a leopard
with four wings.” “He flew,”
says Dean Prideaux, “with
victory, swifter than others can
travel; often with his horse
pursuing his enemies upon the
spur whole days and nights; and
sometimes making long marches
for several days one after the
other, as once he did in pursuit
of Darius, of near forty miles a
day, for eleven days together.
So that, by the speed of his
marches, he came upon his
enemies before they were aware
of him, and conquered them
before they could be in a
posture to resist him.” The goat
had a notable horn between his
eyes — “This horn, says the
angel, is the first king, or
kingdom, of the Greeks in Asia,
which was erected by Alexander
the Great, and continued for
some years in his brother,
Philip Aridæus, and his two
young sons, Alexander Ægus and
Hercules.” — Bishop Newton.
Verse 6-7
Daniel 8:6-7. And he came to the
ram that had two horns, &c. —
“The ram had before pushed
westward, and the Persians, in
the reign of Darius Hystaspes
and Xerxes, had poured down with
great armies into Greece; but
now the Grecians, in return,
carried their arms into Asia,
and the he- goat invaded the ram
that had invaded him. And he
came to the ram &c., which I had
seen standing before the river,
and ran unto him in the fury of
his power. One can hardly read
these words without having some
image of Darius’s army standing
and guarding the river Granicus,
and of Alexander on the other
side, with his forces plunging
in, swimming across the stream,
and rushing on the enemy with
all the fire and fury that can
be imagined. And I saw him come
close unto the ram — He had
several close engagements, or
set battles, with the king of
Persia, and particularly at
Granicus in Phrygia, at the
straits of Issus in Cilicia, and
in the plains of Arbela, in
Assyria. And he was moved with
choler against him — For the
cruelties which the Persians had
exercised toward the Grecians;
and for Darius’s attempting to
corrupt sometimes his soldiers
to betray him, and sometimes his
friends to destroy him: so that
he would not listen to the most
advantageous offers of peace,
but determined to pursue the
Persian king, not as a generous
and noble enemy, but as a
poisoner and a murderer, to the
death which he deserved. And
smote the ram, and brake his two
horns — He subdued Persia and
Media, with other provinces and
kingdoms of the Persian empire;
and it is remarkable, that in
Persia he barbarously sacked and
burned the royal city of
Persepolis, the capital of the
empire; and in Media, Darius was
seized and made prisoner by some
of his own treacherous subjects,
who not long afterward basely
murdered him. And there was no
power in the ram to stand before
him, &c. — He conquered wherever
he came; routed all the forces,
took all the cities and castles,
and entirely subverted and
ruined the Persian empire. And
there was none that could
deliver the ram out of his hand
— Not even his numerous armies
could defend the king of Persia,
though his forces in the battle
of Issus amounted to 600,000
men, and in that of Arbela, to
10 or 1100,000, whereas the
whole number of Alexander’s was
not more than 47,000 in either
engagement.” — Bishop Newton.
Verse 8
Daniel 8:8. Therefore the
he-goat waxed very great — See
note on chap. Daniel 2:39. The
empire of the goat was in its
full strength when Alexander
died. He was succeeded by his
natural brother Philip Aridæus,
and by his own two sons before
mentioned; but in the space of
about fifteen years they were
all murdered, and the firstborn,
or kingdom, was entirely broken.
And for it came up four notable
ones — The royal family being
thus extinct, the governors of
provinces, who had usurped the
power, assumed the title of
kings, and by the defeat and
death of Antigonus in the battle
of Ipsus they were reduced to
four, Cassander, Lysimachus,
Ptolemy, and Seleucus; who
parted Alexander’s dominions
between them, and divided and
settled them into four kingdoms,
which are the four notable horns
that came up in the room of the
first great horn, and are the
same as the four heads of the
leopard, chap. 7. Toward the
four winds of heaven — In the
partition of the empire
Cassander held Macedonia and
Greece, and the western parts;
Lysimachus had Thrace, Bithynia,
and the northern regions;
Ptolemy possessed Egypt and the
southern countries; and Seleucus
obtained Syria and the eastern
provinces. Thus were they
divided toward the four winds of
heaven.
Verse 9
Daniel 8:9. And out of one of
them — Namely, out of one of the
four notable horns, mentioned in
the preceding verse, came forth
a little horn — The reader will
be pleased particularly to
observe this, as being a key to
the right interpretation of the
subsequent prophecy. The little
horn proceeded from one of the
four kingdoms just mentioned,
into which Alexander’s empire
was divided after his death:
therefore to look for it
elsewhere, or to interpret it of
any power, king, or kingdom,
which had not its origin in one
of them, must be a
misinterpretation of the
prophecy. From one of the four
successors of Alexander, namely,
from Antiochus the Great, came
forth Antiochus, afterward
called Epiphanes, or
Illustrious, by his flatterers;
but by Polybius termed more
properly Epimanes, or the
madman. He was indeed a vile
person, as the angel
characterizes him, Daniel 11:21,
to whom the honour of the
kingdom did not belong,
Demetrius, his eldest brother’s
son, being the rightful heir. He
is here called a little horn: as
he was originally of no great
fortune or dignity, a younger
brother, a contemptible person,
and a sort of captive at Rome.
Some have objected, that the
word horn, in these visions,
never signifies a single king,
but always a kingdom or empire;
but this is evidently a mistake,
as the notable horn, mentioned
Daniel 8:5, which the goat had
between his eyes, manifestly
means Alexander the Great. This
little horn belonging to the
third, or Macedonian monarchy,
must not be confounded with the
little horn belonging to the
fourth, mentioned Daniel 7:8-20,
although this here spoken of may
be allowed to be a type or
figure of the latter. Which
waxed exceeding great toward the
south — He extended his dominion
toward the south, when, taking
advantage of the youth of
Ptolemy Philometer, (see 1
Maccabees 1:16-19,) he made
himself master of Egypt, called
the south, in several places of
chap. 11. of this prophecy. And
toward the east — Where he
conquered Armenia, and
penetrated into Persia. And
toward the pleasant land — Or,
the land of Judea, called the
pleasant land, by the holy
writers, as being chosen by God
for the place of his people’s
habitation, and of his house or
temple; where also the Messiah
was to appear, called elsewhere
the glory of all lands, Ezekiel
20:6; Ezekiel 20:15. The
cruelties which Antiochus
Epiphanes exercised in Judea
seem to be the primary subject
of the following verses. In
which, however, he may be
considered as a type of
antichrist, exercising still
greater cruelties on the
Christian Church.
Verse 10-11
Daniel 8:10-11. And it waxed
great, even to the host of
heaven — By the host of heaven,
seems to be here meant the
Jewish priesthood, so called
from their continual attendance
on God’s service in the temple,
as the angels do in heaven. The
word צבא, here rendered host, is
applied to the attendants in the
sanctuary, Exodus 38:8; Numbers
4:23. And it cast down some of
the host and of the stars to the
ground — Persons of principal
dignity and high offices are
often called stars in the
Scriptures. In Isaiah 24:21, The
host of the high ones that are
on high, is explained by
Vitringa of the Jewish rulers
and people: see Daniel 12:3, and
Revelation 1:20, where the
angels, or governors of the
church, are called stars. The
words here seem to import,
either that Antiochus should put
an end to the services of the
temple, by taking away the daily
sacrifice, Daniel 8:12; or else
that he should seduce some of
the priests and rulers, by
threats and flatteries, to turn
apostates. And stamped upon them
— Utterly subdued and destroyed
them: see Daniel 7:7. Yea, he
magnified himself even to [or
against] the prince of the host
— This may be understood of the
high-priest Onias, (compare
Daniel 11:22,) whom Antiochus
deprived of his office, putting
Jason in his place, an ungodly
wretch, who set up heathen rites
in God’s temple, 2 Maccabees
4:13-17. But Jerome and
Theodoret understand it of God
himself, as do many others; or
of Christ, the High-Priest over
the house of God, whose
sanctuary the temple is called
in the following words.
Antiochus erected in the temple
a statue to Jupiter Olympus,
deservedly esteemed the
abomination of desolation, and
thus magnified himself against
God, to whom the sanctuary and
its services were appropriated.
And by him the daily sacrifice
was taken away — The sacrifice
which was offered, in the name
of the whole nation, every
morning and evening: see Numbers
28:3. This was taken away by
Antiochus, together with the
whole customary worship, and
both altar and temple profaned:
see 1 Maccabees 1:44-64. And the
place of his sanctuary was cast
down — Or cast out, or rendered
profane: comp. Revelation 11:2.
It was deprived of the honour
and privileges that belonged to
a holy place, as if the
enclosures had been thrown down
which separated it from common
ground. It may include also the
profanation of the high-
priesthood, which Antiochus set
up to sale, and let men of the
most profligate lives have it;
so that both the sanctuary
itself, and the priesthood,
might truly be said to be
rendered profane.
Verse 12
Daniel 8:12. And a host was
given him against the daily
sacrifice by reason of
transgression — Antiochus
prospered so far in his attempts
against the Jews and their
religion, that he built a
citadel in the city of David,
and placed a garrison of
soldiers there, to disturb those
that should come to worship God
at the temple: see 1 Maccabees
1:33-36. This God permitted, as
a just punishment for the sins
of the people, and particularly
of those who professed a
willingness to forsake the
worship of God, and to join with
the heathen in their idolatry, 1
Maccabees 1:11; 2 Maccabees
4:13-17. Some translate the
words, And a set time was
appointed against the daily
sacrifice; for the word צבא,
rendered host, signifies
likewise a set time: see Daniel
10:1. And it cast down the truth
to the ground, and prospered —
The book of the law, or the
divine ordinances delivered to
the Jews by Moses, is here
called the truth. He prospered
so far in his attempts against
the true religion, as to
suppress it for a time, and
hinder the open profession of
it: see Daniel 8:24, and Daniel
11:28-32. We read, 1 Maccabees
1:56, that Antiochus ordered the
copies of the law to be cut in
pieces and burned.
Verse 13-14
Daniel 8:13-14. Then I heard one
saint speaking — The word saint
here is equivalent to angel: see
Daniel 4:13. What this saint or
angel said, is not expressed; no
more than the words spoken by
that illustrious person who
appeared to Daniel 10:5, are
recorded. And another saint said
to that certain saint which
spake — Several angels are
introduced in Daniel’s visions,
and so in Zechariah’s. This
appears to be spoken of one of a
higher rank, as being able to
unfold those secrets which were
hid from the other angels; and
is therefore justly supposed to
mean the Son of God, called the
Wonderful Counsellor, Isaiah
9:6, as being acquainted with
all God’s purposes and designs.
How long shall be the vision
concerning the daily sacrifice?
&c. — The words, says Lowth, may
be translated more agreeably to
the Hebrew thus: For how long a
time shall the vision last, the
daily sacrifice be taken away,
and the transgression of
desolation continue? Since,
however, there are no words in
the Hebrew for taken away and
continue, Mr. Wintle rather
thinks the inquiry respects only
the duration of the vision, and
that the other words are by way
of explaining what the vision
is, namely, “of the daily
sacrifice, and of the
transgression of desolation, and
of the sanctuary and host,” or
its attendant ministers, “being
suppressed and trampled on.” He
therefore translates the clause
thus: How long will be the term
of the vision of the daily
sacrifice, and the transgression
that maketh desolate, exposing
both the sanctuary and the host
to be trampled on? The plain
meaning of the verse is, that
one of the angels asked the
superior personage,
distinguished here by the title
of that certain saint, How long
the evils signified in this
vision, and particularly the
taking away, or interruption, of
the daily sacrifice, &c., should
last. By the transgression of
desolation seems to be meant the
harassing and ravaging of the
city by the garrison of
Antiochus, setting up an idol to
be worshipped in God’s temple,
and, by that and other
heathenish superstitions,
profaning it, and also the host,
or the Levites; persuading them,
either by threats or
enticements, to quit the worship
of Jehovah, the true God, or to
mix it with the worship of
idols, contrary to the divine
law. And he said, Unto two
thousand and three hundred days
— Hebrew, Until the evening
[and] morning two thousand and
three hundred. This signifies a
space of about six years, and is
to be taken from the first
invasion of Judea by Antiochus,
when he profaned the priesthood,
and includes his second coming
into that country, when he
forbade the worship of God in
the temple, and set up an idol
there. After this time of two
thousand three hundred days, or
about six years from the first
coming of Antiochus, it is here
declared that the temple should
be purged, or cleansed from the
polluted or unclean things which
Antiochus had brought into it,
or from those things in it which
he had defiled, by using them
for idolatrous rites: see 1
Maccabees 4. It must, however,
be remembered, that many
interpreters understand these
days in the same sense in which
days are generally understood by
this prophet, namely, for years;
and thus refer the prophecy to
antichrist, of whom Antiochus
was a type. This will carry us
on to a still distant time in
the church of God, to the
completion of that opposition to
the church of Christ which has
been wished for long since, when
the sanctuary will be perfectly
cleansed, and to which the
twelve hundred ninety and
thirteen hundred thirty-five
years of chap. 12. must have a
reference. Sir Isaac Newton,
Obs., chap. 9., not only reckons
the days to be years, but will
have the horn to be Rome, and
does not refer it at all to
Antiochus; and in this he is
followed, in a great measure, by
Bishop Newton, who makes the
years commence from the time of
Alexander’s invading Asia, three
hundred thirty-four years before
Christ, and thus to end with
near the sixth millennium of the
world. With this interpretation
of Bishop Newton, Mr. Faber (a
late writer) finds great fault,
and endeavours to prove that the
Mohammedan delusion, and not
that of the Papacy, is intended
here by the little horn. His
reasonings, calculations, and
quotations on this subject,
cannot possibly be inserted
here, nor even an abstract of
them. The reader that wishes to
be acquainted with his scheme,
must necessarily be referred to
the book itself. There seems,
however, to be one insuperable
objection, both to Bishop
Newton’s and this
interpretation, and that is,
that they are utterly
irreconcileable with Daniel 8:9,
where it is expressly said, that
this little horn came forth from
one of the four notable horns,
or kingdoms, into which
Alexander’s empire was divided.
Now it cannot be said that
either the Papacy, which arose
in the west of Europe, or
Mohammedanism, which had its
rise and first prevailed in
Arabia, sprang from any of the
four branches of the Macedonian
empire.
Verse 15-16
Daniel 8:15-16. When I had seen
the vision, and sought for the
meaning — Here we are informed
of Daniel’s earnest desire to
have the vision explained to
him. For those that rightly know
the things of God, cannot but
desire to be led still further
into the mystery of them. And
those who desire to know the
meaning of what they have seen
or heard from God, must seek it,
and that diligently, namely, by
earnest prayer and close
meditation. Then there stood
before me as the appearance of a
man — The Scriptures frequently
represent the angels as
appearing in human forms, which
it is likely they do, because,
perhaps, there is nothing
visible to us that so much
resembles what they really are,
as the human form does. And I
heard a man’s voice between the
banks of Ulai — That is, between
me and the river Ulai. Which
said, Gabriel, make this man
understand the vision — Explain
it more clearly to him, if there
be any thing in it which he does
not perfectly understand. He who
spake this seems to be the same
angel who is spoken of Daniel
8:13, and called there that
certain saint, by way of
distinction; for he here speaks
as one that had authority over
the angel Gabriel.
Verse 17
Daniel 8:17. So he came near
where I stood — That he might
speak more familiarly with him.
And when he came, I was afraid —
This fear was probably
occasioned by the effulgent
brightness of the heavenly
messenger, which quite amazed
Daniel upon his drawing near to
him. And I fell upon my face —
Not to worship the angel, but
because he could not bear the
lustre of his glory. But he said
unto me, Understand, O son of
man — We find this is a title
given to none of the prophets
but Ezekiel and Daniel, who had
more frequent converse with
angels than any of the rest: and
it is given to the prophet here,
either to put him in mind that
he was but flesh and blood, that
he might not be exalted for
having these heavenly visions
imparted to him; or else it was
used as a mark of honour,
implying that he was something
more than an ordinary man, even
one highly favoured and beloved
of God. For at the time, or, to
the time, of the end shall be
the vision — That is, there is a
precise time determined for the
accomplishment of the vision,
when it shall certainly be
fulfilled. Or the meaning may
be, that the fulfilling of the
vision should not come to pass
for a considerable space of
time; that it was concerning
matters at a distance, namely,
at the distance of almost four
hundred years.
Verse 18-19
Daniel 8:18-19. Now as he was
speaking, I was in a deep sleep
— I was as one that faints away,
and falls into a swoon through
fear and astonishment. But he
touched me, and set me upright —
By only a touch of him my
strength revived, and I came to
myself. And he said, Behold, I
will make thee know — I will
inform thee, and give thee to
understand, what shall be in the
last end, or, to the last end,
of the indignation — I will
acquaint thee with the whole
series of God’s judgments upon
his people, to the end and
conclusion of them. “The prophet
had doubtless a regard to the
captivity in the first place;
and therefore, beginning from
this, the angel hints at a sort
of epitome of the evils which
would fall upon the posterity of
God’s chosen people, till their
iniquity was taken away, and
their sin purged, when the
indignation would be overpast,
Isaiah 26:20.” — Wintle.
Verses 20-22
Daniel 8:20-22. The ram, &c.,
having two horns, are the kings,
or kingdoms rather, of Media and
Persia. And the rough goat is
the king, or kingdom, of Grecia.
And the great horn, &c., is the
first king — Namely, Alexander
the Great, the first Grecian
king that reigned over Asia. Now
that being broken — That is,
this first king being deceased;
four kingdoms shall stand up,
&c. — Shall arise from it, under
the rule of the same nation that
the first king was of, namely,
the Grecian. But not in his
power — They were to be kingdoms
of Greeks, not of Alexander’s
own family, but only of his
nation; neither were they to be
equal to him in power and
dominion, as an empire united is
certainly more powerful than the
same empire divided, and the
whole is greater than any of its
parts.
Verse 23
Daniel 8:23. And in the latter
end of their kingdom — When
their power was diminishing, and
the Roman empire beginning to be
established in Greece, from
whence the Grecian kingdoms in
Asia had their origin: for the
bringing of Greece into
subjection to the Roman power
was a manifest indication of the
declension of the Macedonian, or
third monarchy, with its four
heads, and the advancement of
the fourth monarchy. Now this
was remarkably brought to pass
when Æmilius, the Roman consul,
vanquished Perseus, king of
Macedonia, and thereby brought
all Greece under the power of
the Romans, which happened one
hundred and sixty-six years
before Christ, and about the
time when Antiochus profaned the
temple, and set up therein the
abomination of desolation. It
must be observed likewise, that,
before that time, the four
horns, or kingdoms, had been
reduced to two principal ones,
Syria and Egypt. Antiochus had
attempted to gain the latter,
and had marched toward
Alexandria to besiege that city,
the conquest of which would have
made him absolute master of the
whole kingdom; but in order to
prevent his success, Ptolemy
Euergetes and his sister
Cleopatra had sent ambassadors
to the Romans, to beg their
relief; and when Popilius was
deputed by the senate to go into
Egypt, he proposed terms to
Antiochus which he was obliged
to accept, and obey the commands
of the senate. Thus both Syria
and Egypt became, in some sort,
vassals to Rome. When the
transgressors are come to the
full — Here the reason is
assigned why God permitted these
calamities to fall on his
people, namely, their wickedness
had risen to a very great
height: of which Bishop Newton
gives the following account.
“The high-priesthood was exposed
to sale. Good Onias was ejected
for a sum of money, to make room
for wicked Jason; and Jason
again was supplanted for a
greater sum of money, by a worse
man, if possible, than himself,
his brother Menelaus; and the
golden vessels of the temple
were sold, to pay for the
sacrilegious purchase. At the
same time, the customs of the
heathen nations were introduced
among the Jews; the youth were
trained up and exercised after
the manner of the Greeks; the
people, apostatized from the
true religion, and even the
priests, (2 Maccabees 4:14,)
despising the temple, and
neglecting the sacrifices,
hastened to be partakers of
unlawful diversions. Nay, the
temple was profaned under the
conduct of the high-priest
Menelaus, was defiled with
swine’s blood, and plundered of
every thing valuable; and in the
same year that Paulus Æmilius
vanquished Perseus, the last
king of Macedonia, and thereby
put an end to that kingdom, the
Jewish religion was put down,
and the heathen worship was set
up in the cities of Judea, and
in Jerusalem; and the temple
itself was consecrated to
Jupiter Olympus, and his image
was erected upon the very
altar.” So evident it is that
the transgressors were come to
the full, and that it was in the
latter time of the Macedonian
empire, when what follows took
place. A king of fierce
countenance shall stand up —
This is a very just character of
Antiochus, according to
Diodorus, Polybius, and all the
historians. And such a character
may be presumed to belong to
antichrist, who would be
acquainted with all the depths
of Satan, Revelation 2:24. “I
must confess,” says Mr. Wintle,
“that this part of the
interpretation appears to me to
agree better with Antiochus than
with the Romans: when
interpreted of the latter, it is
understood to mean a warlike and
politic state.” Understanding
dark sentences — One practised
in craft and policy,
particularly in the arts of
seducing men from their
religion. In this Antiochus was
too successful with the Jews.
Michaelis renders the clause,
rex omnis doli peritus, a king
skilled in every kind of deceit.
Mr. Wintle reads, penetrating in
mysterious craft.
Verse 24
Daniel 8:24. And his power shall
be mighty — His power shall
increase more and more, namely,
in Judea; but not by his own
power — This shall not be owing
so much to himself, as to the
wickedness and factions among
the Jews. “Antiochus,” says Mr.
Wintle, “was certainly much
favoured in his designs by a
factious party of the Jews
themselves, by the treachery of
the Jewish people, according to
Josephus, and, according to
Appion, the perfidy of others.
Eumenes, king of Pergamus, and
his brother Attalus, being
jealous of the Romans, desired
to make the king of Syria their
friend, and supported Antiochus
in his kingdom. The divine
displeasure also against the
Jews operated to the furtherance
of his designs, who was herein
an agent of the vindictive
justice of God.” And he shall
destroy wonderfully — He shall
cause a very great and scarcely
credible desolation in Judea.
Wintle renders it, He shall make
astonishing havoc, and shall be
successful: which prediction was
accomplished when Jerusalem was
taken by Antiochus, 40,000 Jews
were slain, and as many were
sold into slavery. And shall
destroy the mighty and the holy
people — Or, the people of the
holy God, as עם קדשׂיםmay be
rendered, the noun plural being
sometimes applied to the Deity.
Or the expressions may mean,
that he should destroy many of
the principal and chief men, and
many of the common sort, termed
the holy people, as being good
men, and sincere worshippers of
God. With regard to the former,
Grotius observes, from Josephus,
that men of the greatest
reputation, and of the most
generous spirit, among the Jews,
paid no regard to Antiochus, and
therefore were harassed daily,
and died under the most bitter
torments. Antiochus, in his
first invasion of Judea, slew
and led captive 80,000 Jews; and
two years afterward sent
Apollonius, with an army of
22,000 men, to destroy those
that assembled in their
synagogues on the sabbath, 2
Maccabees 5:14; 2 Maccabees
5:24; and 1 Maccabees 1:29.
Verse 25
Daniel 8:25. Through his policy
also he shall cause craft to
prosper — His craft and cunning
shall succeed. And he shall
magnify himself in his heart —
Elated by his successes, he will
always be aiming at more and
more, and making further
attempts; and by peace shall
destroy many — Without making
war, and without being a
declared enemy, or receiving
injuries from them, he shall
destroy many. Under pretence of
peace and friendship, he invaded
and spoiled both Egypt and
Judea. The character which
Grotius gives of Antiochus may
serve to throw light on these
clauses of the verse. “He had no
regard to piety or integrity, to
any true or false God, but
measured all things by the rule
of his own convenience. He
certainly deceived many nations,
and by his flatteries and frauds
obtained, as well as enlarged
his dominion; and under the
colour of peace, or pretended
tranquillity, he oppressed the
unwary, and destroyed
multitudes:” see 1 Maccabees
1:30. He shall also stand up
against the Prince of princes —
He shall exalt himself against
the true God, the Lord of heaven
and earth, abolishing his
worship, and setting up idolatry
in its stead. But he shall be
broken without hand — By an
immediate judgment of God. God
struck him with a noisome
disease, attended with horrible
torments both of body and mind:
see 1 Maccabees 6:8-13; 2
Maccabees 9:5-29. It is
observable, that Polybius and
Josephus both confirm the
account which the authors of the
books of Maccabees give of his
death, in a state of madness,
from the apparitions and
reproaches of spectres and evil
spirits.
Verse 26
Daniel 8:26. And the vision of
the evening and the morning,
&c., is true — The vision of the
2300 evenings and mornings,
mentioned Daniel 8:13, is
certain. The angel here tells
him, that these calamities would
certainly last during the time
expressed by that number of
days, and then would have an
end. Wherefore shut thou up the
vision, for it shall be for many
days — Some consider these words
as expressing the same thing
that is meant by shutting up the
words, and sealing the book,
Daniel 12:4. The sense in both
places, they think, is, that the
full meaning of the prophecy
should be concealed from people
in general, till the
accomplishment of the events
foretold. Thus we find that
shutting and opening, sealing
and unfolding, are opposed in
the prophetical language, and
import the same as concealing
and revealing. Thus taken the
words imply, that prophecies are
never fully understood till they
are accomplished: and the nearer
the time approaches of their
accomplishment, the more light
shall diligent inquirers have
for the explaining them. But the
words may also imply a command
to Daniel to commit this vision
to writing, and then to take
such care of the copy as would
ensure its preservation, even
till the things spoken of in it
should be fulfilled; that so the
prophecies might be compared
with the events accomplishing
them, and it might be seen how
exactly they had been foretold.
And in order that Daniel might
take proper measures for
preserving the account of these
visions, and that posterity
might take the same care, the
angel concludes with observing,
that the vision should be for
many days; that is, that the
accomplishment of it would not
take place till after a long
space of time; it being a term
of near four hundred years from
the first intimation of the
vision, in the third of
Belshazzar, to the cleansing of
the sanctuary by Judas, in the
time of Antiochus. It is of
importance to observe here, that
in remembrance of this great
mercy which God had showed to
his people, in delivering them
from the tyranny and idolatry of
Antiochus, a solemn feast was
instituted, called εγκαινια, or
the feast of dedication, which
was annually observed, in
consequence of cleansing the
sanctuary, and the consecration
of the altar, by Judas
Maccabeus, for the space of
eight days, from the 25th day of
the month Casleu, 1 Maccabees
4:59. And to this St. John
alludes, John 10:22, where he
speaks of the feast of
dedication.
Verse 27
Daniel 8:27. And I Daniel
fainted — Rather, languished, or
pined, being overwhelmed with
grief at the calamities which I
learned by the vision were to
come upon my countrymen, and
also for the profanation of the
temple in those days. And I was
astonished at the vision, but
none understood it — The meaning
of this clause seems to be, that
though Daniel was greatly
troubled at this vision, even
after he rose and went about the
king’s business, yet he took
care to conceal it, so that none
might take notice of it.
In the explication of this
vision, the usurpations of
Antiochus have been referred to,
for the primary sense of the
ravages committed by the little
horn; yet, at the same time, it
has been hinted, that there are
some strong features in the
vision, which favour the opinion
of those who refer it to later
times, particularly to the rule
and dominion of antichrist. “I
am of opinion,” says Mr. Wintle,
“that, in the spirit of
prophecy, both applications were
meant to be comprehended; and I
see no reason for not extending
the prophetic visions, or
revelations, to events, to
which, by the rules of fair and
just interpretation, they shall
be found applicable. The only
sure way of knowing the meaning
of a prophecy is, by comparing
it with the accomplishment; and
if successions of events shall,
in more than one instance, be
found to agree, and square
exactly with a single series of
predicted circumstances, I
should be inclined to make the
improvement as extensive as may
be, consistently with truth and
justice; and to acknowledge the
wisdom and prescience of the
Divine Contriver, who is
acquainted with all his works
from the foundation of the
world, and who could adapt human
language, in one form, to such
an admirable variety of
purposes, thus making his own
strength perfect in weakness.” |