6. The Little Horn (Daniel 7)

Just as the four beasts correspond to the four empires of Nebuchadnezzar’s metallic image, so also the ten horns of the fourth beast repeat the idea of the ten toes of the image. And since good reason has been found for seeking a ten-toe fulfilment in the Last Days, so also with the ten horns. The evidence for such a conclusion becomes insuperable.

It is a matter of first-rate importance to observe that the details in Daniel 7 about the Little Horn are repeated in Revelation 13 about the Beast described there in v.1-13.

  1. a mouth speaking great things (v.25; 13:5)
  2. it continued “forty and two months”—”a time, times and dividing of time” (v.25; 13:5).
  3. made war with “the saints” (v.25; 13:7).
  4. destroyed “unto the end” (v.26; 17:14).
  5. with the characteristics of the four preceding oppressors of “the saints” (13:2).

Thus, if the principle of interpretation of Scripture by Scripture is worth anything at all, the conclusion follows that the Beast of Revelation is a kind of blown-up version of the Little Horn.

The old commentators saw this conclusion clearly, but in their admirable anti-papal campaign, and misled by the utterly unfounded year-for-a-day interpretation of time periods, they sought an artificial reference to a ‘continuous historic’ fulfilment spread over long centuries.

But there are too many difficulties against acceptance of this view:

  1. the three uprooted horns have to be equated with the three papal states and the pope’s temporal power.

    But this is a ‘fulfilment’ just too trivial, so unimportant, in fact, that most of the history books do not even mention it.

  2. “saints” has to be read as meaning ‘the true believers’, especially in the time of the Reformation. But this is against all Old Testament usage of “saints”, where in Psalms (many) and Daniel especially, the reference is to Israel, the holy people; e.g. Daniel 12:7 (s.w.); 8:24.

  3. this persecution lasts “until the Ancient of days comes” (the final divine intervention). But papal persecution of Protestants ceased two hundred years ago, and still no heavenly kingdom. (It is ironic that most of the persecution of true believers in Reformation times came from bigoted Protestants and not from the Catholic Church).

  4. “Until a time, times, and the dividing of time.” Traditionally this has been turned into 3½ x 360 days (years!), and applied to the long drawn-out period of papal “dominion”. All these 1260 year computations gave out a long time ago, yet still the “Ancient of days” is not manifest. What has gone wrong with the calculation?

It is high time to start again with a more convincing (Biblical) interpretation.

All the details in Daniel 7 and Revelation 13, 17 call for reference to the Last Days and to a political power oppressing Israel, “the saints”, God’s holy people, in the last 3½-years of their tribulation. Daniel 12:7 is surely decisive on this point: “It shall be for a time, times, and a half, when he shall have accomplished to scatter the power of the holy people, all these things shall be finished.”

This harmonizes with all the other details—ten toes in the Last Days destroyed by the Stone, three horns uprooted by one which arises after the others, the final oppression of Israel, ten kings giving their power and strength to the Beast to enable him to make war with the Lamb who overcomes as King of kings and Lord of lords.

All the 3½-year references in Daniel and Revelation fit neatly into this scenario. So also does the Elijah prophecy in Malachi 4; for twice the New Testament emphasizes that the significant part of the ministry of that prophet lasted for “three years and six months” (Lk. 4:25; Jas. 5:17), a feature to be repeated in the Last Days. More on this in connection with the ‘Seventy Weeks’ prophecy).

Then “the Beast is slain, and his body destroyed, and given to the burning flame” (7:11; Rev. 19:20).

3. The Writing on the Wall (Daniel 5)

Attention needs to be given to the disturbed historical order of some of the main chapters in Daniel. Their chronological order is, strictly, 7,8,5,9,6,10-12.

There is still a good deal of argument about the dramatis personae in ch. 5— Belshazzar, the queen, and Darius especially.

The sequence of Babylonian rulers is now fairly well settled:

Nebuchadnezzar’s long reign (44 years?) was followed by the brief rule of his son Evil-Merodach (2 years). Neriglissar, Nebuchadnezzar’s son-in-law, followed but not for long. Then a boy-king Laborosoarchod was a mere 9 year-old, who was speedily got rid of by Nabonidus, the high priest of the temple in Haran.

At the time that Daniel 5 begins, Nabonidus was with his army out in the country, either hoping to stop Persian invasion or else anxious not to get he shut up in an indefensible city. So his son Belshazzar was acting king in Babylon and inclined to enjoy the opportunities that were now his! Legal documents of the 12th and 13th years of Nabonidus mention Belshazzar as crown-prince.

It was probably the anniversary of the capture of Jerusalem in Zedekiah’s reign (so says the Talmud), which sparked off the idea of indulging in some good anti-Semitic gloating at a special celebration. All the glorious holy vessels, the seven branched candlestick included, were brought out, and the great concourse of lords and “ladies” settled down to a self-congratulatory orgy of hard drinking.

Would not the gods who had granted such success against the Jews be reminded of their obligation to grant a similar glorious victory over the Persians? Was this “praising of the gods of gold and silver” the origin of the futile modern practice of drinking toasts?

Alas, this “godliness” worked in reverse. Cyrus, knowing what was afoot, was content to wait outside Babylon’s defensive inefficiency.

That very banqueting hall has been disinterred from the rubble by the archeologists.

A B: the royal recess, the king’s table.

C D: was a wall of white gypsum, its quality still traceable. Probably much of it was covered with a record of past national exploits. And there were massive doors of cedar wood.

It was in this setting that a hand began to write on the wall. The experience turned Belshazzar to soberness and terror within a minute. His countenance (literally, “his brightness”, for he was ‘lit up’) changed as speedily as Herodias’s Herod. “His loins were loosed” (diarrhoea?)

There was a frantic call for the professional interpreters of portents. But these men knew better than to speak plainly what they suspected the meaning to be (they were probably in conspiracy with the Persians already). So they played for safety, and pleaded ignorance. Nebuchadnezzar would have seen through them.

“I must know”, Belshazzar insisted. And in the nick of time help came from Nitocris, the queen. Originally the wife of Nebuchadnezzar, she had been taken as consort (for diplomatic reasons) by Nabonidus. This queen-mother, not so fuddled as the rest, bethought her of Daniel, who at this time was probably in retirement (8:27). “He can shew hard sentences” — Daniel’s study of the Scriptures had been noted.

The prophet’s response to the king’s blandishments and promises was curt enough (v.22, 23; contrast 4:19). With a warning about Nebuchadnezzar’s experience, he proceeded to the meaning of the revelation. The Babylonians believed in the existence of Bel-Merodach’s “Book of Fate”, and were probably thinking about this now.

MENE: the days of your kingdom are numbered. For special emphasis this warning was repeated.

TEKEL (the word is related to the Hebrew Shekel): your person and your policies are weighed with unerring divine judgment; you are found wanting.

PERES (the word was deliberately used to suggest “Persians”; but it is closely associated with a familiar Hebrew word for “broken down” or “break in”, which is precisely what was to happen that night. But why the strange variant?

UPHARSIN? The prefix is simply the Aramaic conjunction for “and”; and the additional end syllable is the form of the plural—in this case an intensive plural; it will certainly happen, and the division of the kingdom will be ruinous.

It was!

1. Nebuchadnezzar’s Image (Daniel 2)

Because of its very familiarity, the main outline of this remarkable revelation will be treated in relatively brief fashion. Indeed, the only valid reason for spending time on it here is the often-unrecognised fact that certain features of the king’s dream seem traditionally to have been misconstrued.

“Thou art this head of gold” explains why king Nebuchadnezzar should have been so very insistent in his demands for an elucidation of the vision. Of course, before this, he had had many another dreams, which had been dismissed from serious attention (if not already gone from memory). But this one was stamped in his mind and was a worry to him because the image, which he had seen, had his own features: “Thou art this head of gold.”

The AV reading of the king’s words has misled many readers: “The thing is gone from me.” This is not equivalent to: ‘I have forgotten what the dream was about.’ Had it been so, there would have been none of this royal excitement.

More exactly, the king’s dictum was: “The word is gone forth from me”— with reference to the peremptory edict: ‘Either you tell me the dream and its interpretation, or I chop your heads off!’

The sheer unreasonableness of this demand (as the hot-round-the-collar magicians and Chaldeans saw it) was prompted by the shrewd monarch’s suspicion that “Ye have prepared lying and corrupt words to speak before me— until the time be changed.” This last phrase takes on a sinister meaning when it is noted that in that historical period “times” were measured from the accession year of each king (see ch. 2:1, and so throughout the book). Thus, “till the time be changed” implied a new king on the throne. These wily priests, faced with a demand contrary to all their trade union rules, were quite capable of resolving their dilemma with a spoonful of strychnine in their master’s morning cup of tea!

This Nebuchadnezzar was no fool!

As junior members of the professional guild, Daniel and his three friends were also under threat. It called for a very high degree of faith to believe that their God would respond to their need in this emergency.

Nebuchadnezzar must have been both amazed and amused by the cool assurance of this teen-ager before him that his outrageous demand would be fully met.

When Daniel appeared in the royal presence again next day, the cynical look on the king’s countenance may well be imagined. But it needed only one sentence from this young Hebrew, and the king was on the edge of his throne, staring in wide-eyed astonishment: “Thou, O king, sawest, and beheld a great image.” Here for sure, was no charlatan like the rest.

Within minutes confidence in the young prophet was consolidated by full details of the dream. And Nebuchadnezzar knew that he could also depend on the accuracy of the interpretation now to be unfolded.

Alas, the same can hardly be said about the interpretations so often unfolded in this twentieth century!

That the segments of that impressive image represent a chronological sequence of empires can hardly be doubted. And if there were nothing more in the vision than this main idea the interpretation would be impressive:

Babylon—Persia—Greece—Rome. The sequence and character of these empires has often been commented on. The aptness and accuracy of the successive parts are something to marvel at.

But all too easily a twofold difficulty has been constantly glossed over:

  • Why should world history suddenly become the quite new feature of Old Testament prophecy?
  • Why should this sequence of world empires be so blatantly incomplete?

This last point needs to be underlined. The truth is that since the days of the fourth (Roman) empire, the world has seen plenty of other empires as extensive and as long-lasting as the four, which preceded them:

Genghis Khan had an empire, which stretched right across Asia. Philip II of Spain ruled an empire covering a large part of Europe and the whole of Central and South America. Here was grandeur to make golden Babylon look ordinary. Napoleon’s genius defeated every army he came against. Even Alexander’s achievements look small at the side of his. And for two centuries the British Empire sprawled great splashes of red right round the globe. That empire was, in all respects, easily the greatest of them all.

Then if this revelation to Nebuchadnezzar was intended to be a conspectus of world history, why these amazing omissions? What the vision included was magnificently accurate. Put why so incomplete?

Careful attention to certain of the image details supplies a fully convincing explanation:

  • “After thee (Nebuchadnezzar) shall arise another kingdom inferior to thee” (v.39). And this is all that is revealed here about the Persian Empire. The reason is simple: Already, in the early days of Nebuchadnezzar, Medes and Persians were becoming troublesome. Within a lifetime their aggressive spirit was to prove overmastering. So it was hardly tactful to dwell at length on this silver part of the image. Also it needs to be recognised that “inferior to thee” is an altogether inaccurate description of the Persian Empire. It was stronger, better organized, and more long-lasting than Babylon. The words simply mean “lower down” (in the image). They indicate that Daniel was working his way systematically through the details of the vision.
  • “And another kingdom of brass which shall bear rule over all the earth.” But, for certain, the Greek empire did not bear rule over all the earth, not even over all the civilised world of that time. Here, once again, students have been at the mercy of King James’s translators with their failure to recognize that right through the Bible—Old Testament and New Testament—the words for “earth” and “land (of Israel)” are interchangeable. Only context can decide which reading is called for. Here the phrase clearly alludes to the instantaneous appropriation of the state of Judea by the advancing Alexander.
  • Most decisive of all are the details about the Iron kingdom of Rome. “as iron breaketh in pieces and subdueth all things…shall it break in pieces and bruise (crush)” (v.40). Yet in point of fact the Roman regime did not have this character. Wherever the legions went, there followed the blessings of law and order. The pax Romana provided the civilised world with its most wonderful era of peace and settled government. To that general rule there was one quite striking exception. The Jews in Palestine proved to be the most turbulent province of the empire, until at last in the war of A.D.67-70 (and again in 135) Roman patience gave out, and all the towns and cities were ruthlessly devastated. “Break in pieces and crush” became the most exact part of the prophecy regarding Israel!

In these details there is supplied a highly important clue concerning Nebuchadnezzar’s dream. It was not a revelation of world history. It was a revelation of the sequence of Gentile powers that would completely dominate the People of God in their own Land. It was made known to the king of Babylon because he was the first to incorporate the Holy Land in his empire (Sennacherib the Assyrian had tried and failed—hence the omission of Assyria from the sequence).

It is now possible to put a finger on another error in the traditional interpretation of Daniel 2. For generations it has been asserted that the ten toes, part iron, part clay, strong and weak, represent the subdivisions of the Roman Empire covering the period from (roughly) the 7th century to the 20th. Which ten? Here a. good deal of guesswork comes into play. In “Elpis Israel”, page 326f., two separate lists are submitted for approval. Today neither of these carries conviction. In the last thing he wrote, Dr. Thomas (“Exposition of Daniel” p.13) suggested that no accurate identification need be looked for until the Last Days. This was a wise assessment.

Let it be remembered that, according to the clue now brought to light, the vision is about the oppressors of Israel in the Holy Land. When at last they were scattered far and wide, this history — God’s history — was drastically interrupted; and this state of affairs continued until the Zionist movement in this century. Then, and only then, does the vision—God’s history regarding His Chosen People—resume its relevance. In other words, the ten toes, weak and strong, do not represent a long period of European history (that idea beloved of so many politically-biased expositors); it represents ten enemies of Israel who are to dominate the State of Israel in the Last Days immediately before the impact of the Stone, the Messiah.

That the Stone does symbolise the Messiah, coming in power and glory, can hardly be doubted. Daniel’s own explanation is clear enough: “In the days of these kings shall the God of heaven set up a kingdom which shall never be destroyed” (v.44). And Jesus identified the Stone with himself when he declared: “And upon whomsoever that Stone shall fall, it will grind him to powder” (v.35; Mt. 21:44).

A number of other details call for explanation.

For instance, why should the Stone be “cut out of the mountain without hands” (v.45)? The last phrase suggests divine, not human, origin. But ‘cut out of the mountain of humanity’ is a common expositor’s guess for which there seems to be little Biblical support.

More likely, this is intended to reinforce the idea of divine origin, for it is known that one of the chief gods in the Babylonian pantheon had the Great Mountain as a title. Nebuchadnezzar would readily understand it thus.

To some the idea of a discontinuity between legs and feet in the development of the historical fulfilment is a serious difficulty. But the reason for this has already been educed from the prophecy itself. Nor should it be forgotten that not a few outstanding Messianic prophecies exhibit exactly the same discontinuity: Luke 21:24,25; Micah 7:10,11; 5:2-5; Zechariah 9:9-11; Isaiah 61:2 (?)(See “Bible Studies”, HAW, p.98). What needs specially to be noted is that in other prophecies in Daniel (ch.8, 9 & 11—most commentators) the same kind of discontinuity is readily traceable.

Is it possible to identify the ten kings represented by the ten toes? First, since the Stone initially smashes the feet, these ten must be enemies of God’s Purpose in the Last Days. Revelation 17 reinforces this conclusion with its prophecy of ten kings who “make war with the Lamb, and the Lamb shall overcome them” (17:14). This was Dr. Thomas’s chief ground for insisting on identification with ten anti-Israel powers in the Last Days. What are probably the same ten can be traced in Daniel 7:7,8; Psalm 83; Isaiah 13-23 and, quite possibly, in Ezekiel 38.

Two hints are provided as to the identification of the ten: “as iron is not mixed with clay, they shall mingle themselves with the seed of men, but they shall not cleave one to another” (v.43). The verb twice used here is the word Arab. Accident? or design? The Arabs get their name from the fact that they are of such mixed descent —from Ishmael, Lot, and Esau. For copious evidence about Arab hostility to Israel in the Last Days, see “Lift up your heads” (Geo. Booker) and “Jews, Arabs, and Bible Prophecy” (HAW). “They shall mingle themselves with the seed of men, but they shall not cleave one to another” suggests a further possibility: Arabs mixed with Jews in their restored state of Israel, but showing no sign at all of blending with them. This detail of interpretation is possible but not certain.

But, it may be objected; does not the association “iron and clay” imply a continuing Roman element (cp. legs of iron)? Indeed, no! Daniel’s own explanation, surely not to be over-ridden, points in a different direction: “part of potter’s clay and part of iron, the kingdom shall be divided; but there shall be in it of the strength of the iron…” (v.41). In other words, the dominant idea about the iron is not that of Rome but of strength.

2. Nebuchadnezzar’s madness (Daniel 4)

The situation of Daniel 2 was repeating itself: The king eager to know the meaning of his dream, the magicians just as false, then Daniel unfolds a revelation of divine control over Babylon.

It is something of a surprise that, after the former exposure of soothsaying inadequacy, Nebuchadnezzar had not rid himself of these mountebanks. Perhaps the consolidated influence of the priesthood (the “Chaldeans”) had been too much for him. The professed inability of these learned men to interpret the dream about the felling of a luxurious tree was probably put on. It would be easy to see that only a dire meaning could attach to the dream, and they were unwilling to risk further unpopularity with the king by imparting a discouraging message.

So they left it to Daniel. Was he really “the master of the magicians”? Or is that phrase intended to mean that he was the pick of the lot? And why should he appear after all the rest? The record does not explain.

There was reluctance in Daniel also. Put, urged by the king, he told plainly what the dream portended. He added his own exhortation to repentance, and apparently this was heeded, for a while; for the fulfilment was deferred for a year. Perhaps the memory of the warning faded from the king’s mind, and his native pride of achievement took over once again.

It is said that Amytis, his queen, came from the mountains of Elam, and in the dead flat plain of Mesopotamia she sighed for her native land.

“You want mountains, my dear?” said Nebuchadnezzar, “you shall have them”—and he proceeded to fashion one of the wonders of the ancient world, the hanging gardens of Babylon.

It was in the midst of this wonderful creation that he boasted: “Is not this great Babylon that I have built for the honour of my majesty and the glory of my power? “

Then judgment fell. The king was overcome with a highly unusual disease— lycanthropy—that drove him to the instincts and habits of an animal. The archaeologists have commented on a remarkable gap of about seven years in the documents and history of Nebuchadnezzar’s reign (see Rendle Short: “Modern Discovery…” p.l46).

Then came recovery, and with it a thankful acknowledgement of the control of the Most High. The king’s confession of faith (v.1-3,37) stamps him as a man of high religious spirit; and various Nebuchadnezzar inscriptions express similar devoutness.

For the student of the Last Days, special interest attaches to that period of “seven times”. A popular interpretation has been on these lines:

7 times

= 7 years

= 7 x 360 days

= 7 x 360 years (!!)

= 2520 years.

This period, measured from a suitable year in Nebuchadnezzar’s reign, terminates at 1914 A.D.

Thus—so it is argued—there is here a prophecy of the madness of the nations.

In this remarkable sequence of “reasoning” every detail is debatable except one: the “seven times” does mean “seven literal years”. All the rest is cloud-cuckoo land, especially the idea that the madness of the nations would last until 1914, for never has the Gentile world been so mad as since 1914.

Do readers need further warnings against the foolishness of such interpretations as these?

Daniel ch. 4 Additional Notes

Nebuchadnezzar was very keen on felling cedars in Lebanon—he did it personally:

    “Under her shadow (Babylon) I gathered all even in peace.”

    “Mighty cedars with my own hands I cut down.”

    “Merodach … may my woodcutting prosper.”

        Bas-relief in Wadi Brissa: “image of my royal person” felling cedars.

10.

Based on Ez. 31 :3ff, 13.

14.

Fate same as Assyria, and for same reason.

16.

“For four years all public works ceased”.

17.

basest = lowest. Nabopolassar “son of a nobody—me—the magnificent .”

17.

Isaiah 10:5 provides an earlier illustration.

25,27

Predestination and contingency, here side by side.

30.

E.g. Nebuchadnezzar’s Euphrates bridge 134yds x 69ft wide.

7 yrs. It is a tribute to his character that his rule was not usurped.

Visions in Daniel

1. Nebuchadnezzar's Image (Daniel 2)

Because of its very familiarity, the main outline of this remarkable revelation will be treated in relatively brief fashion. Indeed, the only valid reason for spending time on it here is the often-unrecognised fact that certain features of the king’s dream seem traditionally to have been misconstrued.

“Thou art this head of gold” explains why king Nebuchadnezzar should have been so very insistent in his demands for an elucidation of the vision. Of course, before this, he had had many another dreams, which had been dismissed from serious attention (if not already gone from memory). But this one was stamped in his mind and was a worry to him because the image, which he had seen, had his own features: “Thou art this head of gold.”

The AV reading of the king’s words has misled many readers: “The thing is gone from me.” This is not equivalent to: ‘I have forgotten what the dream was about.’ Had it been so, there would have been none of this royal excitement.

More exactly, the king’s dictum was: “The word is gone forth from me”— with reference to the peremptory edict: ‘Either you tell me the dream and its interpretation, or I chop your heads off!’

The sheer unreasonableness of this demand (as the hot-round-the-collar magicians and Chaldeans saw it) was prompted by the shrewd monarch’s suspicion that “Ye have prepared lying and corrupt words to speak before me— until the time be changed.” This last phrase takes on a sinister meaning when it is noted that in that historical period “times” were measured from the accession year of each king (see ch. 2:1, and so throughout the book). Thus, “till the time be changed” implied a new king on the throne. These wily priests, faced with a demand contrary to all their trade union rules, were quite capable of resolving their dilemma with a spoonful of strychnine in their master’s morning cup of tea!

This Nebuchadnezzar was no fool!

As junior members of the professional guild, Daniel and his three friends were also under threat. It called for a very high degree of faith to believe that their God would respond to their need in this emergency.

Nebuchadnezzar must have been both amazed and amused by the cool assurance of this teen-ager before him that his outrageous demand would be fully met.

When Daniel appeared in the royal presence again next day, the cynical look on the king’s countenance may well be imagined. But it needed only one sentence from this young Hebrew, and the king was on the edge of his throne, staring in wide-eyed astonishment: “Thou, O king, sawest, and beheld a great image.” Here for sure, was no charlatan like the rest.

Within minutes confidence in the young prophet was consolidated by full details of the dream. And Nebuchadnezzar knew that he could also depend on the accuracy of the interpretation now to be unfolded.

Alas, the same can hardly be said about the interpretations so often unfolded in this twentieth century!

That the segments of that impressive image represent a chronological sequence of empires can hardly be doubted. And if there were nothing more in the vision than this main idea the interpretation would be impressive:

Babylon—Persia—Greece—Rome. The sequence and character of these empires has often been commented on. The aptness and accuracy of the successive parts are something to marvel at.

But all too easily a twofold difficulty has been constantly glossed over:

  • Why should world history suddenly become the quite new feature of Old Testament prophecy?
  • Why should this sequence of world empires be so blatantly incomplete?

This last point needs to be underlined. The truth is that since the days of the fourth (Roman) empire, the world has seen plenty of other empires as extensive and as long-lasting as the four, which preceded them:

Genghis Khan had an empire, which stretched right across Asia. Philip II of Spain ruled an empire covering a large part of Europe and the whole of Central and South America. Here was grandeur to make golden Babylon look ordinary. Napoleon’s genius defeated every army he came against. Even Alexander’s achievements look small at the side of his. And for two centuries the British Empire sprawled great splashes of red right round the globe. That empire was, in all respects, easily the greatest of them all.

Then if this revelation to Nebuchadnezzar was intended to be a conspectus of world history, why these amazing omissions? What the vision included was magnificently accurate. Put why so incomplete?

Careful attention to certain of the image details supplies a fully convincing explanation:

  • “After thee (Nebuchadnezzar) shall arise another kingdom inferior to thee” (v.39). And this is all that is revealed here about the Persian Empire. The reason is simple: Already, in the early days of Nebuchadnezzar, Medes and Persians were becoming troublesome. Within a lifetime their aggressive spirit was to prove overmastering. So it was hardly tactful to dwell at length on this silver part of the image. Also it needs to be recognised that “inferior to thee” is an altogether inaccurate description of the Persian Empire. It was stronger, better organized, and more long-lasting than Babylon. The words simply mean “lower down” (in the image). They indicate that Daniel was working his way systematically through the details of the vision.
  • “And another kingdom of brass which shall bear rule over all the earth.” But, for certain, the Greek empire did not bear rule over all the earth, not even over all the civilised world of that time. Here, once again, students have been at the mercy of King James’s translators with their failure to recognize that right through the Bible—Old Testament and New Testament—the words for “earth” and “land (of Israel)” are interchangeable. Only context can decide which reading is called for. Here the phrase clearly alludes to the instantaneous appropriation of the state of Judea by the advancing Alexander.
  • Most decisive of all are the details about the Iron kingdom of Rome. “as iron breaketh in pieces and subdueth all things…shall it break in pieces and bruise (crush)” (v.40). Yet in point of fact the Roman regime did not have this character. Wherever the legions went, there followed the blessings of law and order. The pax Romana provided the civilised world with its most wonderful era of peace and settled government. To that general rule there was one quite striking exception. The Jews in Palestine proved to be the most turbulent province of the empire, until at last in the war of A.D.67-70 (and again in 135) Roman patience gave out, and all the towns and cities were ruthlessly devastated. “Break in pieces and crush” became the most exact part of the prophecy regarding Israel!

In these details there is supplied a highly important clue concerning Nebuchadnezzar’s dream. It was not a revelation of world history. It was a revelation of the sequence of Gentile powers that would completely dominate the People of God in their own Land. It was made known to the king of Babylon because he was the first to incorporate the Holy Land in his empire (Sennacherib the Assyrian had tried and failed—hence the omission of Assyria from the sequence).

It is now possible to put a finger on another error in the traditional interpretation of Daniel 2. For generations it has been asserted that the ten toes, part iron, part clay, strong and weak, represent the subdivisions of the Roman Empire covering the period from (roughly) the 7th century to the 20th. Which ten? Here a. good deal of guesswork comes into play. In “Elpis Israel”, page 326f., two separate lists are submitted for approval. Today neither of these carries conviction. In the last thing he wrote, Dr. Thomas (“Exposition of Daniel” p.13) suggested that no accurate identification need be looked for until the Last Days. This was a wise assessment.

Let it be remembered that, according to the clue now brought to light, the vision is about the oppressors of Israel in the Holy Land. When at last they were scattered far and wide, this history — God’s history — was drastically interrupted; and this state of affairs continued until the Zionist movement in this century. Then, and only then, does the vision—God’s history regarding His Chosen People—resume its relevance. In other words, the ten toes, weak and strong, do not represent a long period of European history (that idea beloved of so many politically-biased expositors); it represents ten enemies of Israel who are to dominate the State of Israel in the Last Days immediately before the impact of the Stone, the Messiah.

That the Stone does symbolise the Messiah, coming in power and glory, can hardly be doubted. Daniel’s own explanation is clear enough: “In the days of these kings shall the God of heaven set up a kingdom which shall never be destroyed” (v.44). And Jesus identified the Stone with himself when he declared: “And upon whomsoever that Stone shall fall, it will grind him to powder” (v.35; Mt. 21:44).

A number of other details call for explanation.

For instance, why should the Stone be “cut out of the mountain without hands” (v.45)? The last phrase suggests divine, not human, origin. But ‘cut out of the mountain of humanity’ is a common expositor’s guess for which there seems to be little Biblical support.

More likely, this is intended to reinforce the idea of divine origin, for it is known that one of the chief gods in the Babylonian pantheon had the Great Mountain as a title. Nebuchadnezzar would readily understand it thus.

To some the idea of a discontinuity between legs and feet in the development of the historical fulfilment is a serious difficulty. But the reason for this has already been educed from the prophecy itself. Nor should it be forgotten that not a few outstanding Messianic prophecies exhibit exactly the same discontinuity: Luke 21:24,25; Micah 7:10,11; 5:2-5; Zechariah 9:9-11; Isaiah 61:2 (?)(See “Bible Studies”, HAW, p.98). What needs specially to be noted is that in other prophecies in Daniel (ch.8, 9 & 11—most commentators) the same kind of discontinuity is readily traceable.

Is it possible to identify the ten kings represented by the ten toes? First, since the Stone initially smashes the feet, these ten must be enemies of God’s Purpose in the Last Days. Revelation 17 reinforces this conclusion with its prophecy of ten kings who “make war with the Lamb, and the Lamb shall overcome them” (17:14). This was Dr. Thomas’s chief ground for insisting on identification with ten anti-Israel powers in the Last Days. What are probably the same ten can be traced in Daniel 7:7,8; Psalm 83; Isaiah 13-23 and, quite possibly, in Ezekiel 38.

Two hints are provided as to the identification of the ten: “as iron is not mixed with clay, they shall mingle themselves with the seed of men, but they shall not cleave one to another” (v.43). The verb twice used here is the word Arab. Accident? or design? The Arabs get their name from the fact that they are of such mixed descent —from Ishmael, Lot, and Esau. For copious evidence about Arab hostility to Israel in the Last Days, see “Lift up your heads” (Geo. Booker) and “Jews, Arabs, and Bible Prophecy” (HAW). “They shall mingle themselves with the seed of men, but they shall not cleave one to another” suggests a further possibility: Arabs mixed with Jews in their restored state of Israel, but showing no sign at all of blending with them. This detail of interpretation is possible but not certain.

But, it may be objected; does not the association “iron and clay” imply a continuing Roman element (cp. legs of iron)? Indeed, no! Daniel’s own explanation, surely not to be over-ridden, points in a different direction: “part of potter’s clay and part of iron, the kingdom shall be divided; but there shall be in it of the strength of the iron…” (v.41). In other words, the dominant idea about the iron is not that of Rome but of strength.

23) “With Dyed Garments From Bozrah”

Isaiah 63: 1-6

Traditionally few prophecies of the Last Days have been interpreted with more complete confidence than this one. When the Gog-Magog forces sweep into the Holy Land, they will simultaneously drive through to Egypt and also pursue the retreating defenders (the British army!) into Edom. At the crucial moment the Messiah and a mighty phalanx of warriors — the immortalized saints, now marching to the Land of Promise by the route followed by Moses and Israel — will come to the rescue and utterly destroy the invading army in a terrible carnage. This done, the march on Jerusalem is resumed, and the King of Glory enters his capital.

In the light of the current political situation and especially when the developments of modern warfare are considered, all this sounds rather odd. But quite apart from assessing this speculation in its relevance (sic!) to the twentieth century, it is surely time to take a fresh look at it and ask a few pointed questions about its Biblical basis.

Elsewhere (“The Last Days,” ch. 10) it has been shewn that the evidence for believing that the Judgement will take place at Sinai is hardly satisfactory and certainly not such as warrants confidence. The idea of a wilderness march by immortalized saints, who in any case would be able to transport themselves with the speed of angels has a further element of incongruity, and appears to be based almost entirely on a misreading of Micah 7: 15: “According to the days of thy coming out of Egypt will I shew unto him marvellous things.” This passage does not necessarily mean that precisely what happened at the time of the Exodus will happen again with Messiah in place of Moses. A11 that can be safely got out of it is that the marvels of Israel’s experience then will be matched by the manifestations of divine power through the Messiah. The entire scheme of prophetic interpretation often referred to as “the march of the Rainbowed Angel” has been built on one or two assumptions of this kind. A judicious re-appraisal of the solidity of its foundations has long been overdue.

A NEW DELIVERANCE

In many parts of Isaiah (e.g. chs. 29-33) there are copious allusions to Israel in Egypt and the wilderness, yet in interpreting these chapters with reference to the contemporary crisis — Sennacherib’s invasion of Judah — no one is misled into thinking that the prophet was foretelling a march of rescued Israel through the wilderness of Sinai. His message was, very simply and forcefully, that there was to be a divine intervention in his day on behalf of Israel such as would parallel in its breath-taking majesty and power the magnificent demonstration of divine glory experienced by Israel under Moses.[29] And this duly took place, not in the wilderness of Sinai, but underneath the walls of Jerusalem. It is true that after the destruction of Sennacherib’s army, many captives were released from bondage and returned with joy and thanksgiving to their homeland, but these came from Assyria, not from Egypt. If Isaiah’s language about Sinai and the Exodus is not to be taken literally, but rather as a parallel to events in his day, is not the same likely to be true of his contemporary Micah? Of course the prophecies of Isaiah and Micah can be expected to have further fulfilment in the Last Days, but since the first fulfilment was not literal, how can one be confident that the second will be?

RE-INTERPRETATION

Returning to Isaiah 63, it has to be noted that the prophecy is couched in the most general terms, with the exception of the mention of Edom and its capital, Bozrah, and also the idea (v. 5) of redemption and vengeance when all hope seems to have been abandoned. Yet even the references to Edom and Bozrah are far from certain, for with only the slightest change in the pointing of the Hebrew text, the opening challenge may be read thus: “Who is this that comes, more than man, raiment more crimsoned than the grape-gatherer?” If this reading be accepted, and it is just as possible as the more familiar translation,[30] then no geographical reference remains, and the prophecy is seen as a picture of divine intervention, truly, but not in any specific place.

Another approach to this problem accepts the AV reading but interprets it as an allusion to the Song of Deborah after the rout of enemies in northern Canaan: “Lord, when thou wentest out of Seir, when thou marchedst out of the field of Edom, the earth trembled, and the heavens dropped, the clouds also dropped water. The mountains melted from before the Lord, even that Sinai from before the Lord God of Israel” (Judges 5: 4, 5). This language is echoed in Isaiah 64:1: “O that thou wouldest rend the heavens, that thou wouldest come down, that the mountains might flow down at thy presence…”

Again it has to be emphasized that in the days of Deborah there was no recapitulation of Exodus deliverance or wilderness journey, but there was a deliverance comparable to those mighty happenings, and this is the point of the allusion.

Even if the traditional interpretation of Isaiah 63 were accepted, it should not be overlooked that the Lord coming first to Jerusalem, later seeking out certain enemies for special judgement in the territory of Edom and then returning to Jerusalem could fulfill it. There is nothing in the prophecy which rules out such an idea, and in Isaiah 25: 9, 10 there is an exact parallel regarding Moab. It is this view, which is favoured by the present writer, but only in a tentative fashion, because no arguments are known which definitely rule out the alternative modes of interpretation just mentioned.

HELP FROM JEREMIAH

It is not difficult to demonstrate that this “punitive expedition” in the direction of Edom is not against the forces of the great northern confederacy. Jeremiah 49: 7-22 is a prophecy with marked similarities to Isaiah 63, and a careful reading of its details makes very clear that this is a judgement on the Arab enemy of Israel. Verse 12 repeats the language of Jeremiah 25: 29, a prophecy which is concerned first of all with Israel’s hostile neighbours. Verse 19 also is important: “Behold, he shall come up like a lion from the swelling of Jordan against the strong habitation: for I will suddenly drive them away (RVm): and who is a chosen man that I may appoint over her? for who is like me? and who will appoint me the time? (or possibly: who will cause men to know me?), and who is that Shepherd that will stand before me?”

Who can this be but the Messiah? And he comes “from the swelling of Jordan,” not from mount Sinai, against the proud enemy “that dwells in the clefts of Sela” (v. 16).

DETAILS EXAMINED

Other details of Isaiah 63 can now be considered more specifically.

“Who is this that comes from Edom?… I that speak in righteousness, mighty to save.” This is the leader with blood-stained raiment, described in Revelation 19: 11-16 as “King of kings and Lord of lords” and also as “the Word of God.” In that prophecy he has a sharp sword going out of his mouth — “the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.” The idea is the same. He speaks in righteousness, and judgement ensues.

It is a mistake, commonly made, to picture this divine Man as being alone in the judgement described. The Hebrew word translated “trample them in my fury” necessarily describes the action of a multitude. And in the parallel in Revelation 19, the crowned warrior is followed by an army “clothed in fine linen, white and clean.” Since this is the description of the glorified saints (Revelation 19: 8), and since the leader is already crowned, the saints have already been made immortal in Jerusalem (“The Last Days” ch. 10) by one whose kingdom is already in existence.[31]

Then in what sense is he “alone”? The next phrase explains: “of the peoples there was none with me.” This word is commonly used with reference to the tribes of Israel. It is a redemption brought to Israel when at last they realize that their own efforts cannot save them. The rest of the chapter, so often neglected, emphasizes this theme. “The day of vengeance (vengeance for the oppression of Israel, not of the saints) is in mine heart, and the year of my redeemed is come.” The word “redeemed” implies a near kinsman. This is a greater Joseph saving his brethren, but only when they acknowledge the despite done to him long before (Genesis 42: 21).

The mention of “the day of vengeance” recalls Isaiah 34: 8, which prophesy also is directed against Edom (34: 6), in “the year of recompenses for the controversy of Zion.” “Red in thine apparel” is a play on the name Edom; and “I will stain all my raiment” plays with the (untranslatable) double meaning of a Hebrew word, which also signifies “redeemed.” Thus this dramatic divine act — the Arm of the Lord bringing salvation (v. 5) — looks both ways. It is on behalf of a people reconciled to Christ and recognized as His kinsfolk. And it is against callous unspiritual enemies who refuse to see Israel as the Chosen Seed of Abraham with full right to the Land by divine covenant.

[29] Compare also Isaiah 63:015, a passage, which makes the same point very clearly.

[30] See W. A. Wordsworth’s En Roeh, in loc.

[31] Another possible interpretation here identifies these who are with Christ as his angels of judgement (note Revelation 15: 6). This view would not seriously interfere with the main point being made in this paragraph.

22) The Little Apocalypse (III)

Isaiah 26, 27

At first sight there is little in Isaiah 26 to justify its inclusion in any apocalypse, yet it begins with the familiar phrase: “in that day,” which is such a favourite of both Isaiah and Zechariah when their inspiration ranges forward to the Day of the Lord. Here it recurs five times (25: 9; 26: 1; 27: 1, 2, 12, 13), as though to emphasize that these chapters are not to be separated from chapter 24, the most ominous of them all. Chapter 26: 13-21 is the section especially relevant to the present study.

“Lord, thy hand is lifted up (as when Moses lifted up the rod of God over Egypt and over the Red Sea), yet they see not: but they shall see thy zeal for the people (Israel), and be ashamed; yea, fire shall devour thine adversaries. Lord, thou wilt ordain (literally: judge) peace for us” (26: 11, 12) — it is a peace which can come only through judgement on ungodly nations — “for thou hast also wrought all our works for us.” There can be salvation for Israel from their enemies only when they come to this admission before God that they are unable to save themselves. All through their history and in every aspect of life they have believed in salvation through their own works. What a change of heart is pictured here!” “Lord, in trouble have they visited thee, they have poured out a prayer when thy chastening was upon them.” This is the repentance of Israel as they turn to the God of their fathers in a time when no other door of hope is open to them. “Like as a woman with child, that draweth near the time of her delivery, is in pain, and crieth out in her pangs; so have we been in thy sight” (LXX: for the Beloved — ‘David my servant who is to be their prince for ever’).

THE RESURRECTION

Because of this spiritual re-birth there comes a flood of blessing: “Thou hast increased the nation (the Hebrew text strongly tempts one to see here another Messianic allusion: Thou hast provided Joseph for the nation); thou art glorified: thou hast enlarged all the borders of the land” (v. 15).

The nation is increased yet further by another accession of strength — the resurrection to glorious immortality of all the finest and most saintly characters it has produced throughout its history: “Thy dead shall live; dead bodies shall arise.[27] Awake and sing, ye that dwell in the dust: for thy dew is as the dew of lights (does this intensive plural refer to the dawn of the Great Day of God?), and the earth shall cast forth the dead.”

As Paul insists in 1 Thessalonians 4:15 that “we which are alive and remain unto the coming of the Lord shall not precede them which are asleep,” so it is in Isaiah (perhaps this is the Scripture from which he learned it!): “Come, my people (it is an exhortation addressed to a community), “enter thou into thy chambers (the pronouns indicate individual response to this call), and shut thy doors about thee: hide thyself for a little moment until the indignation be overpast. For, behold, the Lord cometh out of his place to punish the inhabitants of the earth (or, perhaps, the dwellers in the Land?) for their iniquity.”

The historical background to this prophecy is impressive. Devout king Hezekiah had called the people of Israel from north and south to come and keep Passover in Jerusalem. As it turned out, by this act of faith those who responded provided for their own protection and safety, for then the land was ravaged from end to end by the merciless armies of Sennacherib, and only Jerusalem remained undevastated. There, as at the first Passover, twelve legions of angels hovered in protection over the faithful (Isaiah 31:5), as they had done over the homes of the twelve tribes in Egypt at the first of all Passovers. And, as the destroying angel had gone through the homes of all families not protected by the blood of the lamb, so also in Hezekiah’s day “the angel of the Lord went forth and smote in the camp of the Assyrians.” Thus in Isaiah’s own time, the faithful had their Passover refuge when divine judgement wrought deliverance.

SAFETY

This prophecy assures the true Israel of God in the twentieth century of a similar protection in the day of wrath. As it was in the days of Noah, when the Lord said: “Come thou and all thy house into the ark … and the Lord shut him in.”

How will protection be provided for the Lord’s people in that day, and where? The idea that the saints will be taken away to Sinai or some other remote deserted place has little support in Scripture. Noah found safety in the ark, which he had prepared “by faith.” And it was “by faith” that the people of Israel kept the Passover in their own homes, made safe there by the blood of the lamb. Here Isaiah’s pointed instruction is: “Enter thou into thy chambers, and shut thy doors about thee.” This echoes the action of Elisha, when “he went in, and shut the door upon them twain, and prayed unto the Lord” (2 Kings 4:33); and in turn Jesus quotes Isaiah in the familiar words: “But thou, when thou prayest, enter into thine inner chamber, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father” (Matthew 6: 6).

From these words it would seem that the saints’ place of safety in the last great crisis is the place of faith and prayer—which might be anywhere! Can any more specific conclusion, as to locality, be drawn from this Scripture? By reasoning from the parallel deliverance in Hezekiah’s day (to which this passage originally referred), it may be argued with fair confidence that the place of safety will be Jerusalem, to which those who respond immediately (Luke 12: 36) to the angelic summons (Matthew 24: 31 and 25: 6) will be taken; for, at the time of the resurrection and gathering of the saints, the Lord will already be established as king in Jerusalem (Matthew 25: 31)[28] when the days of its warfare are accomplished and it is become truly a city of peace.

THE ADVERSARIES

“In that day,” Isaiah 27 continues, “the Lord with his sore and great and strong sword (note the triple emphasis) shall punish

leviathan the swift serpent, and

leviathan the (crooked) winding serpent, and

he shall slay the dragon that is in the sea.”

Here, easily identifiable, are the great political adversaries of God’s people. In Isaiah’s day the identification of them would be simplicity itself. Nineveh of Assyria is pictured as a great beast in the waters of the swift-flowing Tigris. Babylon is a similar monster in the waters of the slow meandering Euphrates, whilst Egypt is a crocodile in the vast expanse of the Nile (the word “Sea” is used in this sense in Isaiah 19: 5 and Nahum 3: 8). Any Jew of Isaiah’s own day would readily recognize the allusions.

In the Last Days their counterparts may be sought in the implacable enemies of Israel who desolate the Holy Land for the last time. Or is it possible that these should be equated with the three great beasts of Revelation?

Yet another picture of this momentous time is the final gathering of Israel: “In that day the Lord shall beat off his fruit from the channel of the River (Euphrates) unto the stream of Egypt (now referred to as ‘brook,’ RV, because its power is dwindled away), and ye shall be gathered one by one, O ye children of Israel” (27: 12). If this reading correctly interprets the figure of speech, then the picture is that of the few isolated olives being knocked off their remote branches by blows from long sticks. If, however, the RV margin be accepted: “shall beat out his corn,” then the figure is that of threshing and winnowing, and should be equated with the vision in Revelation 14: 15 of the crowned Son of man reaping the harvest of the earth with his sharp sickle.

Either way, the emphasis is on the selectivity of this final re-gathering: “Ye shall be gathered one by one.” The word “channel” in this passage emphasizes the same truth, for it is the familiar word “shibboleth” (which also means “corn”) of Judges 12: 6. Just as, in that famous incident of Jephthah’s campaign, “shibboleth” divided infallibly between friend and foe, so now in prophecy it becomes a token of a separation between those who are Israel indeed and those who are only nominal members of the nation: “And I will take you one of a city, and two of a family, and I will bring you to Zion” (Jeremiah 3: 14. Compare also Amos 9: 8, 9).

“In that day a great trumpet shall be blown, and they shall come which were ready to perish in the land of Assyria, and they that were outcasts in the land of Egypt (compare here the exposition of Isaiah 19: 18-20 suggested in chapter 7), and shall worship the Lord in the holy mount of Jerusalem.” It is the trumpet of Jubilee, which is sounded, carrying the news of final release from bondage. It is the great trumpet because with the seventh and last (Revelation 11: 15), the Messiah takes to him his Great power and reigns; it is “the time of the dead that they should be judged, the time to give their reward to thy servants the prophets, and to the saints, and to them that fear thy name, small and great.”

[27] “together with my dead body shall they arise” springs from an attempt to make sense of the solecism in the Hebrew text. The reading given here calls for only the slightest emendation.

[28] “The Last Days” chapter 11.

21) The Little Apocalypse (II)

Isaiah 25

The chapter division here is artificial. The burst of thanksgiving in verse 1 celebrates the assertion of divine authority in Jerusalem with which chapter 24 concluded: “O Lord, thou art my God; I will exalt thee, I will praise thy name; for thou hast done a wonder of counsels: of old are (thy) faithfulness and truth.” The last phrase, which invariably alludes to the Covenants of Promise (compare 24: 23: “his ancients”) becomes in the Big Apocalypse the name of Jesus: “And I saw heaven opened, and behold a white horse; and he that sat upon him was called Faithful and True, and in righteousness he doth judge and make war” (Revelation 19: 11).

Similarly, “a wonder of counsels” echoes the title of Messiah in Isaiah 9: 5: “his name shall be called Wonderful Counsellor.” Thus this part of the prophecy declares itself a prophecy of Christ.

The picture of ruin and destruction of an altogether God-less civilization is continued: “Thou hast made of a city an heap; of a defenced city a ruin: a palace of strangers to be no city; it shall never be built.” The end of the works of men is a final end. Now, and for all time, the divine right of man is swept away, and honour given to the Unknown God: “Therefore shall the strong people glorify thee, the city of the terrible nations shall fear thee. For thou hast been a stronghold to the poor, a stronghold to the needy in his distress (here is the protection of the faithful remnant in the Last Days), a refuge from the storm, a shadow from the heat, when the blast of the terrible ones is as a storm against the wall.” It is the language of a nuclear age in fear from itself.

The next verse, puzzling enough in the Common Version, clamours for re-translation — perhaps thus: “With the sword of Zion thou shalt humble the noise of strangers, as when the heat burns under a Cloud (the Shekinah Glory?) a psalm shall bring down the terrible ones.”

INCOMPARABLE BEESSING

The contrasting picture of God’s blessing on His people is one of the most delightful to be found in all Isaiah’s 66 chapters.

When the Law was inaugurated at mount Sinai, Moses and the elders of Israel saw the glory of the God of Israel “and did eat and drink”—they shared a meal of fellowship in the Divine Presence. But now, when the Gospel of Christ comes to its consummation, “in this mountain (Zion; see ch. 24: 23) shall the Lord of Hosts make unto all people a feast of fat things … of fat things full of marrow, of wines on the lees well refined.” Under the Law the choice fat was God’s portion, to be offered on His altar (Leviticus 3: 3-5), but now this is shared with mortal men who are mortal no longer, for they share the divine nature. “Wines well refined is another phrase, which teaches the same truth. In this happiest of re-unions is fulfilled the implied promise of Jesus: “I will not drink henceforth of this fruit of the vine until that day when I drink it new with you in my Father’s kingdom.”

The covering over all nations (it clearly means “people out of all nations”— see chapter 17) marks their leprous uncleanness in the sight of God (Leviticus 13:45) is now taken away. Death is swallowed up in victory and forever (the Hebrew phrase has both meanings). It is not a conquest that will need to be renewed. Tears will be wiped from off all faces, and will never flow again. For this is the final and happy uniting of the Messiah with his redeemed people: “Lo, this is our God; we have waited for him (because His very name Jehovah enshrines a purpose and a promise), we will be glad and rejoice in his salvation (in his Jesus!).” This “waiting” is not a selfish waiting but springs out of an intense eagerness to see the honour of God vindicated in a world which thinks it can do without Him: “With my soul have I desired thee in the night; yea, with my spirit within me will I seek thee early: for when thy judgements are in the earth, the inhabitants of the world will learn righteousness. Let favour be shewed to the wicked, yet will he not learn righteousness; in the land of uprightness will he deal unjustly, and will not behold the majesty of the Lord” (Isaiah 26: 8, 9).

This vindication of the God of Israel will necessarily involve the assertion of His authority over the nations that have done despite to His people. So the prophecy continues with words which have often been read as out of place in this context: “For in this mountain (Zion, which was once a threshing floor!) shall the hand of the Lord rest,” and the threshing floor of Jehovah shall be where such drastic divine action is most called for: “and Moab shall be trodden down under him, even as straw is trodden down in the dunghill.” This Arab enemy, the last to vaunt himself against God’s nation, will have his pride brought down “together with the spoils (or, craft) of their hands.” And the Lord alone shall be exalted in that day.

20) The Little Apocalypse (I)

Isaiah 24

The three chapters, Isaiah 24, 25, 26, present so many resemblances to the language and ideas of the Olivet Prophecy and the book of Revelation that they are often alluded to as Isaiah’s Little Apocalypse. There is a good deal to be said for this equation, especially when chapter 24 is considered in detail.

Certain similarities of phraseology and idea are traceable between that part of the prophecy and the Olivet Prophecy of Jesus:

Isaiah 24
Olivet Prophecy
Luke
14 [24]LXX: The water of the sea shall be troubled

21:25 The sea and the waves roaring

19, 23 LXX: in perplexity

21 :25 with perplexity (Gk: aporia — same word)

20: stagger like a drunken man

21:34 surfeiting and drunkenness.

17: the snare

21 :35 lest that day come on you as a snare

Matthew
18: the windows from on high are open( = Genesis 7:11)

24:37 as it was in the days of Noah

23: Then the moon shall be confounded and the sun ashamed.

24:29 the sun shall be darkened and the moon shall not give her light

LXX: And the brick shall decay and the wall shall fall

24:2 not one stone left upon another

The similarities also extend to the general shape and pattern of the prophecy. In Matthew 24, after a preliminary summary, the Lord spoke in detail with special reference to the end of the Jewish era in A.D. 70. The second half of his prophecy (from 24:29 to the end of ch. 25) refers to the time of his coming. There is good reason for believing that the first half of the prophecy will also be recapitulated in the Last Days (see ch. 14).

ISRAEL IN THE LAST DAYS

The structure of Isaiah 24 is remarkably similar. But this fact can be obscured for some readers through failure to remember that in Hebrew the word eretz has to do duty for both “earth” and “land” (the land of Israel).[25] Many phrases in 24:1-12 seem to require special reference to Israel, and not to the whole wide world: “as with the people, so with the priest… The land is defiled under the inhabitants thereof; because they have transgressed the laws, changed the ordinance, broken the everlasting covenant. (What reference can these words have to Gentile nations?) Therefore hath the curse devoured the land (compare Malachi 4: 6: “Lest I come and smite the land with a curse”): therefore the inhabitants of the land are burned and few men left.”

These words, and the entire section they belong to, will — it is believed — be recapitulated in the time of Jacob’s trouble at the end of this age. In the short “bridge” passage (vv. 13-15), this probability is almost made into a certainty:

“When thus it shall be in the midst of the land among the people, there shall be as the shaking of an olive tree, and as the gleaning grapes when the vintage is done.” This (so reminiscent of the Last Day prophecy in Isaiah 17: 6) reads like a prophecy of a faithful remnant in Israel in their final tribulation. Here are the fruits of an Elijah-taught repentance. “These shall lift up their voice, they shall shout for the majesty of the Lord”—presumably when “they (the tribes of the land) see the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory.” It is “the glory of his majesty when he ariseth to shake terribly the earth” (Isaiah 2:19).

The mysterious phrase which comes next, “they cry aloud from the sea,” becomes in the LXX version: “The waters of the sea shall be troubled,” which inevitably takes the mind once again to the Olivet prophecy: “the sea and the waves roaring.”

There follows a call to “glorify the Lord in the lights”—which phrase would surely be taken to allude to the Shekinah Glory if it were not for the parallelism: “even the name of the Lord in the isles of the sea.” Then is this an allusion to the Dispersion being called, like those in the Land, to turn to the God of their fathers? This seems to be the first of several hints of a broadening of scope of the prophecy to include the whole world.

Alternatively this allusion to “glorifying the Lord” may refer to the call of the saints, for the prophecy continues: “From the uttermost part of the earth have we heard songs (LXX: wonders), even glory to the Righteous One (or, perhaps, hope for the righteous man).”

MISERY AND SUFFERING

In sharp contrast with this bright picture, there ensues a sustained description of unrelieved horror and destruction:

“But I (the prophet Isaiah, because of his concern regarding ‘Jacob’s trouble’) said, My leanness, my leanness (i.e. intense starvation), woe to me! the treacherous dealers have dealt treacherously.” The situations to which these words might have reference in the Last Days are legion, but the chief competitors are the broken promises of the politicians (in this respect the shameful record of Britain with the Jews through most of the twentieth century is hard to beat), and the “crafty counsel” (Psalm 83: 4) of the inveterate Arab enemy. It is noteworthy that the prophet Jeremiah quotes verbatim this chapter (48: 42-44=Isaiah 24: 17, 18) with reference to Moab in the Last Days. And Isaiah’s own “apocalypse” has a further reference to judgement on Moab which the present passage would more than amply justify: “For in this mountain (Zion) shall the Lord rest, and Moab shall be trodden down under him, even as straw is trodden down for the dunghill” (25: 10).

WORLD WAR

In the next few verses the language hardly allows of a limited application to Israel only. The sweep of the passage seems to be as universal as Jeremiah 25.

“Fear, and the pit, and the snare (‘scare, lair and snare’ is a translation suggested by the assonance of the Hebrew words) are upon thee, O inhabitant of the earth (or, if limited to Israel, ‘O dweller in the Land’).” These terrors are now described in greater detail: “And it shall come to pass that he who fleeth from the noise of the fear (as though it were a mighty explosion!) shall fall into the pit; and he that cometh up out of the midst of the pit shall be taken in the snare.” There is hardly a government in the world, which has not made elaborate preparations to go underground at the first threat of nuclear war. Yet those who come up out of such a “pit” will have to face the insidious imperceptible “snare” of the radioactive aftermath that is the legacy all these Satanic perversions of human cleverness inevitably entail. “For the windows from on high are opened (as though destruction comes down out of the sky), and”—terrifying result! — “the foundations of the earth do shake.” The Biblical associations of these phrases are impressive. At the time of the Deluge God “opened the windows of heaven” (Genesis 7: 11) and sent destruction on an evil world. And now once again a like retribution is inevitable, only this time by fire. Note the association of these two judgements in Peter’s impassioned warning in 2 Peter 3: 5-7. Also, in a powerful psalm of Messiah, the shaking of the earth is represented as an evident token of God’s anger: “Then the earth shook and trembled … because he was wroth” (Psalm 18: 7).

The horror of the picture intensifies: “The earth is utterly broken down, the earth is clean dissolved, the earth is moved exceedingly. The earth shall reel to and fro like a drunkard, and shall be removed like a cottage.” The language is marvellously apt to describe the utter destruction and chaos which nuclear war will inevitably bring. “Removed like a cottage” suggests to the mind the idea of a frail shack battered and wrecked by a hurricane. “And it shall fall, and not rise again.” This is to be the final end of all human vanity and self-assertion against God.

“And it shall come to pass that the Lord will punish the host of the high ones that are on high, and the kings of the earth upon the earth.” The words seem to imply the existence of two kinds of armies — those who make war in the sky, and those who fight on the ground.[26] No wonder the prophets studied their own writings to see what they were all about (1 Peter 1: 11)! “And they shall be gathered together, as prisoners are gathered in the pit, and shall be shut up in the prison, and after many days they shall be visited.” The precise meaning of this outcome of human rebellion is not dear, but the similarity with the symbolic picture of Satan’s imprisonment and ultimate destruction, as given in Revelation 20, is not to be missed (compare also Isaiah 14: 9-11, 15). These Scriptures are surely about the same thing.

THE K1NGDOM

The climax of this first section of the Little Apocalypse is a re-assuring picture of Christ’s kingdom established: “Then the moon shall be confounded, and the sun ashamed, when the Lord of hosts shall reign in mount Zion, and in Jerusalem, and before his ancients gloriously.” This last phrase is surely a reference to the fulfilment of the Covenant of Promise. Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, now raised to immortality, will experience the gladness of knowing in person their exalted Seed whose “day” they rejoiced to see (John 8: 56). But especially are these words true regarding David, for to him it was explicitly promised: “thy kingdom shall be established for ever before thee (that is, in thy presence).” Yet Isaac and Jacob knew the same wonderful truth. The blessing which the latter received from his father implies this: “And God Almighty give thee the blessing of Abraham, to thee and to thy seed with thee; that thou mayest inherit the land” (Genesis 28:4).

The shaming of sun and moon is susceptible of different interpretations. The view that here the sun stands for the ruling powers and the moon for the ecclesiastical powers is not so apt as the idea that the symbolism has reference to national Israel. In that case, here is another prophecy of the bitter remorse of Jewry when their Messiah is manifested: “They shall look on me whom they have pierced, and shall mourn for him as one mourneth for his only son.”

It is even possible that the words will have a literal basis. The Shekinah Glory associated with the risen Jesus when he appeared to Saul of Tarsus on the road to Damascus outshone the brightness of the midday sun (Acts 26: 13). The same phenomenon will be known again (Malachi 4: 2; Isaiah 60: 1, 3 and 4 5).

[24] Septuagint Version.

[25] The same is true also in the New Testament regarding the Greek word ‘ge’.

[26] Alternatively, if the phrase “the high ones on high” is interpreted as a symbol, the reference will be to Israel and their encircling enemies.

19) The Cup Of God’s Wrath

Jeremiah 25

Few prophecies of the Bible are so frightening in their comprehensive expectation of divine judgement as is Jeremiah 25.

The prophet is bidden take a cup of wine and insist that all the nations drink of it. This cup is a symbol of God’s anger against them (compare Psalm 75: 8; Isaiah 51: 17, 22, 23), expressed in the form of war one with another: “And they shall drink, and be moved, and be mad, because of the sword that I will send among them” (v. 16).

A long list of the nations and peoples involved is now added. It ends with (v. 26): “And all the kings of the north, far and near, one with another, and all the kingdoms of the world, which are upon the face of the earth: and the king of Sheshach shall drink after them.”

FEAR OF WAR

There is manifest reluctance to obey the prophet’s bidding: “And it shall be, if they refuse to take the cup at thine hand to drink, then shalt thou say unto them, Thus saith the Lord of hosts; Ye shall certainly drink” (v. 28). How accurately these words anticipate the temper of the nations today! They spend untold wealth and resources on a lunatic piling up of armaments, yet not one of them wants war. The frantic activities of the diplomats at each recurring crisis have made a dramatic series of panic-stricken refusals to drink the cup, which they are destined to share. “Ye shall certainly drink!”

The prophecy is associated with the enthronement of a divine king in Jerusalem: “The Lord shall … utter his voice from his holy habitation; he shall give a shout, as they that tread the grapes (see Revelation 14: 19, 20), against all the inhabitants of the earth … he will plead with all flesh; he will give them that are wicked to the sword” (vv. 30, 31).

The war by which God uses the nations to punish themselves is one without parallel in human history: “Behold, evil shall go forth from nation to nation (compare the abuse of international broadcasting in modern times; and consider also the three unclean spirits like frogs, in Revelation 16: 14), and a great whirlwind shall be raised up from the uttermost parts of the earth. And the slain of the Lord shall be at that day from one end of the earth to the other end of the earth: they shall not be lamented, neither gathered, nor buried; they shall be dung upon the ground” (vv. 32, 33).

WORLD WAR III

The twentieth century has seen two world wars which were not really world wars at all inasmuch as they left large areas and populations virtually untouched by their ravages and rigours. This next international conflagration will be comprehensive. Even if nuclear weapons are relatively local in their immediate effect, the insidious invisible radiation will carry round the world and bring slow death to millions. In the big centres of population the immediate onset of war will mean horrors of destruction such as few can adequately imagine. A year or two ago American civil defence was geared to an expectation of seventeen millions dead or seriously disabled in the first few hours of nuclear attack. It is only in the last twenty years that this grim Bible prophecy has come within sight of fulfilment.

JERUSALEM

One detail is specially valuable. The list of nations and peoples coming under judgement begins with Jerusalem (v. 18): “Lo, I begin to work evil at the city which is called by my name…” (v. 29).

So it is futile to look to any international crisis elsewhere to spark off this final devastating cataclysm. Cuba, Vietnam, Yemen, Aden, Central Africa, Cyprus, Nigeria, are all unimportant. Eyes must be kept on Jerusalem. When the flare-up is seen there, the end of the age is near.

It is also noteworthy that the second on the list is Egypt (v. 19), and that all the others mentioned by name are Arab peoples and their immediate Near East neighbours. To begin with, then, the war is between Jews and Arabs.

The last name mentioned is “the King of Sheshach.” This is probably a code form of the name Babel (by the device known to the rabbis as Athbash— the equivalent in Hebrew of putting Z for A, Y for B etc.).

Assuming the correctness of this, the identification of the king of “Babylon” is still no easy matter. Many would say with confidence: “the Papacy,” but the case is by no means proven. Yet what alternative is there available?