Daniel 2
Daniel explains Nebuchadnezzar’s odd dream
Sleepless in Babylon
1King Nebuchadnezzar started having dreams so disturbing that he couldn’t sleep. Those dreams started during his second year as king. [1] 2He called in his spirit guides to explain his dreams [2]—magicians, sorcerers, and sages. 3He told them, “I have had an upsetting dream. I want to know what’s going on.”4His spirit guides said in Aramaic, [3] “May you live forever as our king. Please tell us the dream. Then we’ll be able to explain what it means.”
Nebuchadnezzar threatens to kill all sages
5The king said, “Listen carefully, because this is a royal decree. You are going to tell me what I dreamed and then you’re going to explain it. Otherwise, I’m going to rip off your arms and legs and tear your homes to the dirt. 6On the plus side, if you tell me the dream and explain it, I’m going to honor you with gifts and privileges like you wouldn’t believe. So, go ahead and do or die.”7The spirit guides said, “Our king, please. Tell us the dream so we can explain what it means.”
8The king said, “This is what stalling looks like. You’re going to keep talking aren’t you, just to drag this out? And that’s because you know what’s coming. 9If you aren’t insightful enough to tell me the dream, say goodbye to your arms and legs. It looks to me like you’ve all agreed to mislead me, lie to me, and tell me anything. You want to keep me talking, hoping I’ll say something that gets you out of this mess. Enough. It’s time to tell me the dream. If you can do that, I can trust your interpretation of it.”
10The king’s spirit guides said. “No one on earth can do what the king is asking. In fact, no king on earth has ever asked such a thing from any of his people, including sorcerers and magicians. 11What the king is asking is impossible for a human. This answer will come from the gods. And they’re not here.”
The king flips out
12The king flipped his lid like a boiling pot on a stove. He ordered these advisors and all other sages and wise men in Babylon executed. 13The decree was official. People started looking for Daniel and his friends, to kill them.14Babylon’s chief executioner, a man named Arioch, came to Daniel. 15Daniel asked, “Why is the king this upset? What would make him issue an order as radical as this?” Arioch told Daniel what happened.
16Daniel asked the king to give him some time and he would tell the king what he dreamed and what it meant.
Time to pray or die
17Daniel went to see his friends, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah. 18He told them now is the time to start praying. He told them to ask God in heaven to show them some mercy so they can live and not die with all the other sages of Babylon.19That night, Daniel had a vivid dream—a vision in the night. That’s when he got answers to the king’s questions. When Daniel woke, he thanked the God of heaven.
Daniel’s Thank You song to God
20Thank GodFrom now to forever
For his wisdom and strength.
21He moves time from season to season.
He drops kings. He replaces kings.
If people have wisdom,
He taught them to think.
22He knows the secrets
And he’s talking.
He walks into the darkness
And he lights it up.
23You are the God of my grandpas,
And I’m so grateful.
I’m wise and strong because of you.
I know the answer to our question.
You told us what we need to know
To comply with the king’s order.
Daniel shows he knows what the king dreamed
24Daniel reported to Arioch, the chief executioner appointed to kill Babylon’s sages. Daniel told him, “Don’t kill Babylon’s wise men. Take me to the king. I’ll tell him about his dream.”25Arioch took Daniel straight to the king and said, “I found this man among the exiles from Judah. He can explain your dream to you, my king.” 26The king asked Daniel, whose Babylonian name was Belteshazzar, “First, can you tell me what I dreamed and then explain what it means?”
27Daniel answered, “No I can’t. No one here can do that. No sage or fortune-teller or sorcerer. No magician is going to pull that rabbit out of his sack. Humans can’t solve a mystery like yours. 28But there is a God above us who solves mysteries. While you lay in bed sleeping, that God used a dream to reveal the mystery of what will happen as you approach the end of your days.
29In your dreams, God showed you what will happen in the future. 30God revealed this mystery to me, as well. Not because I’m smarter than anyone else. But because he wants you to understand this dream buried deep in your mind.
31My king, you saw something terrifying. In your dream you saw a massive, magnificent statue, shimmering in brilliant light. 32A head of pure gold rested on silver shoulders, above a silver chest and arms. The stomach, lower sides, and lower back were bronze. 33All of that rested on legs of iron and on feet of hard clay pottery mixed with pieces of iron.
34As you watched this statue, you saw a rock break away without anyone touching it. The rock hit the statue’s feet. Then the statue came crashing down under all that weight at the top. 35The crush of it all turned everything into dust that blew away in the wind like chaff flakes from sifted grain. Wind took it all, every trace. But the stone that destroyed the statue grew into a mountain that covered the world.”
Daniel explains the dream
36Daniel said, “That’s the king’s dream. This is what it means. 37You are the king of many kings and kingdoms. God of heaven gave you that power and the honors that go with it. 38You control every living thing in the land—every person, every wild animal in the field, and every bird in the air. The gold head you saw in the dream—that’s you.39When your golden kingdom ends, another will come. [4] It won’t be as strong as yours. A third kingdom will follow—the bronze part of the statue you saw. It will rule this world. 40After that a fourth kingdom will emerge, the iron kingdom. It will hammer and crush everything that stands in its way.
41You saw the clay feet of that kingdom, reinforced with pieces of iron. The clay and iron represent division. [5] This is not a united kingdom. Yet the iron will give it strength. 42So, the kingdom will be partly strong and partly fragile.
43This kingdom will try to further strengthen itself through the marriage of iron and clay. But this attempt will fail. Iron and clay don’t bond to each other. 44While all this is going on, God will be preparing a kingdom that no one will ever defeat. Competing kingdoms won’t exist. They’ll be gone forever. [6]
45You saw the rock break away without any person touching it. This flying rock destroyed all the kingdoms: gold, silver, bronze, and iron. The God of people everywhere has let you see what is going to happen. This dream was about something real. Count on it. What I’ve told you is true.”
King Nebuchadnezzar promotes Daniel
46King Nebuchadnezzar dropped to his knees and bowed to Daniel. In an act of worship, the king offered a sacrifice of grain and incense, burned in Daniel’s honor. 47The king told Daniel, “I know now with absolute certainty that your God is everyone’s God. He is the God of gods, the Master of kings, and the Solution to mysteries. Clearly, he has solved this mystery.”48The king rewarded Daniel with valuable gifts. And he made Daniel governor over the empire’s lead province of Babylon and put him in charge of all the royal sages who advised the king. 49Nebuchadnezzar granted Daniel’s request to delegate the work of running the province to his colleagues Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego. [7] Daniel stayed near the king, at the royal court.
Footnotes
That would have been in about 603 BC. Nebuchadnezzar ruled Babylon from 605-562 BC. Babylon’s former king, Nabopolassar, died in 605 BC. Nebuchadnezzar was commander of the army at the time. He had just crushed the existence out of the Assyrian Empire in the Battle of Carchemish. In that battle, a coalition army of Babylonians and Medes (from what is now northern Iraq) destroyed the remnants of the Assyrian army, which had been on the run, to north of Lebanon. Egypt came to reinforce the Assyrians, but much of their army died in the battle. Survivors retreated to Egypt, which lost its swagger and commanding influence in the region.
Many people in ancient times—Jews, Egyptians, Babylonians, Persians, and others—seemed to believe that dreams were clues to the future. Many taught that God or gods often communicated to people in dreams. Prophets sometimes called vivid dreams “visions of the night.” Dream interpreters even wrote handbooks about how to interpret dreams. Parts of one Egyptian dream book from the 1200’s BC, roughly the time some scholars say Moses lived, showed up in the cemetery at Deir el-Medina. That’s at Thebes, a little more than 300 miles (480 km) upriver from Cairo, as the crow flies along the Nile. Written on papyrus, it lists bad dreams (written in red ink) and good dreams. Example of a bad dream: bed catches on fire. It means you’re driving your wife away. Good dream: burial of an old man. It means you’re coming into money. Or, perhaps, sheep—possibly from inheritance.
From this point until the end of chapter seven, the Book of Daniel is written in Aramaic, the international language of the region. It’s a Semitic language that looks and sounds a lot like Hebrew, language of the Jewish people. Both share the same alphabet. Jesus sometimes spoke Aramaic. It remained common among the Jews, as a remnant of their history of exile in Babylon.
Scholars present theories about which three kingdoms Daniel is talking about, represented by the silver, bronze, and iron. Bible writers never identify them. Who the kings are and when their kingdoms come don’t seem to be the point. Perhaps one point is that God is in charge. Kingdoms will come and go, until they don’t. When that happens, God’s kingdom will be the one and only. This isn’t just another replacement empire, under some world leader. It’s represented by rock not touched by human hands, which brought down the huge statue. To some, that suggests either a spiritual kingdom of the soul or perhaps a supernatural physical kingdom on earth. Whatever it is, Daniel says its coming and God will make it happen (verse 45).
Scholars can only guess what kingdoms Daniel is talking about. Daniel himself may not have known. But common guesses are the silver represented Medes from what is now northern Iran, bronze represented Persians from southern Iran, and iron represented Greece. Alexander the Great’s Greek empire swallowed up what are now parts of Europe, the Middle East, and northern Africa. When he died in 323 BC at age 32, four of his generals divided the kingdom. Some guesses weave the Roman Empire into the mix. About seven centuries after Alexander, in AD 395, Rome split into the Western and Eastern Roman Empires. The Western Roman Empire collapsed about a century later, in AD 476. The Eastern Roman Empire fell in 1453, to the Ottoman Empire, also known as the Turkish Empire.
From what is now Iraq, a 4,000-year-old prophecy—about 1,500 years before Daniel—talks about the rise and fall of several kings, and about a “forever kingdom.” Babylon’s last king, Nabonidus (ruled from 556-439 BC), prayed his kingdom would last forever; it lasted 17 years, until Cyrus the Great of Persia arrived. The prophecy is preserved on a busted clay tablet. It’s called the Uruk Prophecy because it was discovered among the ruins of a Sumerian magician in the southern Iraq town of Uruk, now Warka. That’s about 40 miles (65 km) north of Abraham’s hometown of Ur and about 110 miles (180 km) south of Babylon’s ruins.
These are the Hebrew names of Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah.
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