Introduction to Daniel
        That the book of Daniel was written by the person
        whose name it bears, there is no reason to doubt. Ezekiel, who was
        contemporary with Daniel, bears testimony, through the Spirit of
        prophecy, to his piety and uprightness, ranking him in this respect with
        Noah and Job: "If I send a pestilence into that land, and pour out
        My fury upon it in blood, to cut off from it man and beast; though Noah,
        Daniel, and Job were in it, as I live, saith the Lord God, they shall
        deliver neither son nor daughter; they shall but deliver their own souls
        by their righteousness." Ezekiel 14: 19, 20. His wisdom, also, even
        at that early day, had become proverbial, as appears from the same
        writer. To the prince of Tyrus he was directed by the Lord to say,
        "Behold, thou art wiser than Daniel; there is no secret that they
        can hide from thee." Ezekiel 28: 3. But above all, our Lord
        recognized him as a prophet of God, and bade His disciples understand
        the predictions given through him for the benefit of His church:
        "When ye therefore shall see the abomination of desolation, spoken
        of by Daniel the prophet, stand in the holy place (whoso readeth, let
        him understand), then let them which be in Judea flee into the
        mountains." Matthew 24: 15, 16.
        Though we have a more minute account of his early
        life than is recorded of that of any other prophet, yet his birth and
        lineage are left in complete obscurity, except that he was of the royal
        line, probably of the house of David, which had at this time become very
        numerous. He first appears as one of the noble captives of Judah, in the
        first year of Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, at the beginning of the
        seventy years' captivity, 606 B.C. Jeremiah and Habakkuk were yet
        uttering their prophecies. Ezekiel began soon after, and a little later,
        Obadiah; but all these finished their work years before the close of the
        long and brilliant career of Daniel. Three prophets only succeeded him,
        Haggai and Zechariah, who ex-
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        ercised the prophetic office for a brief period
        contemporaneously, 520-518 B.C., and Malachi, the last of the Old
        Testament prophets, who flourished a little season about 397 B.C.
        During the seventy years' captivity of the Jews,
        606-536 B.C., predicted by Jeremiah (Jeremiah 25: 11), Daniel resided at
        the court of Babylon, most of the time prime minister of that monarchy.
        His life affords a most impressive lesson of the importance and
        advantage of maintaining from earliest youth strict integrity toward
        God, and furnishes a notable instance of a man's maintaining eminent
        piety, and faithfully discharging all the duties that pertain to the
        service of God, while at the same time engaging in the most stirring
        activities, and bearing the weightiest cares and responsibilities that
        can devolve upon men in this earthly life.
        What a rebuke is his course to many at the present
        day, who, not having a hundredth part of the cares to absorb their time
        and engross their attention that he had, yet plead as an excuse for
        their almost utter neglect of Christian duties, that they have no time
        for them. what will the God of Daniel say to such, when He comes to
        reward His servants impartially, according to their improvement or
        neglect of the opportunities offered them?
        But it is not alone nor chiefly his connection with
        the Chaldean monarchy, the glory of kingdoms, that perpetuates the
        memory of Daniel, and covers his name with honor. From the height of its
        glory he saw that kingdom decline, and pass into other hands. Its period
        of greatest prosperity was embraced within the limits of the lifetime of
        one man. So brief was its supremacy, so transient its glory. But Daniel
        was intrusted with more enduring honors. While beloved and honored by
        the princes and potentates of Babylon, he enjoyed an infinitely higher
        exaltation in being beloved and honored by God and His holy angels, and
        admitted to a knowledge of the counsels of the Most High.
        His prophecy is, in many respects, the most
        remarkable of any in the sacred record. It is the most comprehensive. It
        was
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        the first prophecy giving a consecutive history of
        the world from that time to the end. It located the most of its
        predictions within well-defined prophetic periods, though reaching many
        centuries into the future. It gave the first definite chronological
        prophecy of the coming of the Messiah. It marked the time of this event
        so definitely that the Jews forbid any attempt to interpret its numbers,
        since that prophecy shows them to be without excuse in rejecting Christ;
        and so accurately had its minute and literal predictions been fulfilled
        down to the time of Porphyry, A.D. 250, that he declared (the only
        loophole he could devise for his hard-pressed skepticism) that the
        predictions were not written in the age of Babylon, but after the events
        themselves had occurred. This evasion, however, is not now available;
        for every succeeding century has borne additional evidence to the
        truthfulness of the prophecy, and we are just now, in our own day,
        approaching the climax of its fulfillment.
        The personal history of Daniel reaches to a date a
        few years subsequent to the subversion of the Babylonian kingdom by the
        Medes and Persians. He is supposed to have died at Shushan, or Susa, in
        Persia, about the 530 B.C., aged nearly ninety-four years; his age being
        the probable reason why he did not return to Judea with other Hebrew
        captives, under the proclamation of Cyrus (Ezra 1: 1), 536 B.C., which
        marked the close of the seventy years' captivity.
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