The Battleground Of Truth
An Examination Of The Book Of Daniel
Daniel Chapter 5: The Discernment Of This Daniel!
Kenneth Humphries
The Word of God reminds us
in Ezekiel Ch.18v20, “The soul that sinneth, it shall
die” surely Daniel Ch.5 is an amazing commentary on
that very truth. Many may ignore the voice of God crying out
through His Word down through the centuries, but we need to
grasp hold of this powerful truth, eternal judgement will
be the final result. The Babylonian kingdom had by degrees
degenerated into a low estate of debauchery and idolatry over
a thirty-year period after the death of Nebuchadnezzar. Successive
kings had gone from bad to worse culminating eventually, under
the sovereignty of Belshazzar at about 538 B.C. Now, this
mighty Babylon empire was going to meet its doom, effecting
its transition of the head of gold to the breast and arms
of silver, recorded in Daniel Ch.2. Prophetically the downfall
of the mighty empire of Babylon depicted for us the coming
judgement upon this world as a result of man’s absolute
and continued rejection of the Saviour whom God provided for
our Salvation. Civilization, like the mighty empire of Babylon,
will drift farther and farther away from God’s precious
truth until God’s cup of wrath is filled, and then judgement
will be the result. Paul writing to young Timothy reminds
him, “Evil men and seducers shall wax worse and worse,
deceiving, and being deceived” (2 Timothy Ch.3v13).
Although we can praise God, this will not continue forever,
for the Lord will return to rule and reign in righteousness.
It is of great importance to remind ourselves again and again,
in reading the chapters that form the first part of this book,
that while they are strictly historic they are also prophetic;
that while they describe characteristics of the thrones of
the Gentiles, to which God entrusted the sovereignty of the
earth after the destruction of Jerusalem, these characteristics
will reappear in the last days. There are three things, indeed,
which especially have this prophetic character: the acts of
these various monarchs; the judgments that followed as in
the last, and in the present chapter; and the deliverance
of God's people as seen "in Daniel Ch.3, and again in
the person of Daniel, in Daniel Ch.6. To these may be added
the acknowledgement of the true God by the Gentiles after
their having been judged, as portrayed in the case of Nebuchadnezzar,
and also in that of Darius (Daniel Ch.6), albeit his confession
is elicited rather by the display of God's power in succouring
His people, as represented by Daniel, when in the very jaws
of destruction.
Coming now, to our chapter,
a still worse moral feature of Gentile sovereignty is exhibited.
Idolatry and pride of power, had definitely been the mark
of Nebuchadnezzar; but Belshazzar is distinguished by the
public insolence of daring impiety, venting itself in open
wickedness and profanity. Look at the behaviour and
blasphemy of Belshazzar. The occasion for this outburst
of iniquity is described in the first verse: "Belshazzar
the king made a great feast to a thousand of his lords, and
drank wine before the thousand" (Daniel Ch.5v1). It was
a night of feasting; revelry, and unbridled licence, when
all the evil passions of man's corrupt heart were inflamed
and enticed to their gratification. For, mark, it was while
Belshazzar "tasted the wine," that he gave the commandment
"to bring the golden and silver vessels which his father
Nebuchadnezzar had taken out of the temple which was in Jerusalem;
that the king, and his princes, his wives, and his concubines,
might drink therein" (Daniel Ch.5v2). The chronology
of Nebuchadnezzar's successors cannot be accurately determined,
but it seems beyond question that Belshazzar could not have
been his son. It is possible that he might have been his grandson,
though this is not certain. The term "father," therefore,
as is often the case in Scripture, is used in the sense of
progenitor, or forefather. Whatever the exact relationship
he bore to Nebuchadnezzar, he could not have been very far
removed from that monarch, seeing that he was well acquainted
with the judgment that had fallen upon him (Daniel Ch.5v22).
Was he intoxicated? With the pride of wicked presumption certainly;
and this was inflamed by the wine which he drank. Indulgence
in wine, in the joy which earth affords, necessarily panders
to the heart's worst desires; and the company that surrounded
the king reveals that this instance was no exception to the
general rule. Had this been, however, but an ordinary revel
or debauch, whatever its accompanying licentiousness, no inspired
pen would have recorded it; but the crowning sin of it was
the direct insult which Belshazzar offered to the God of Israel,
the God of heaven. The holy vessels were holy still in God's
eyes, however polluted they had been by the sins of His kings
and priests, for they had been used in the house where He
had put His name for ever, and where His eyes and His heart
should be perpetually 1 Kings Ch.9v3. True He had in judgment
suffered them to share in the captivity of His people; but
He could not allow them, consistently with all that He was,
and with all that He purposed, to be defiled by the Gentile
monarch and his profligate associates. Nor was it only that
the king, and his princes, his wives, and his concubines,
drank in them; but "they drank wine, and praised the
gods of gold, and of silver, of brass, of iron, of wood, and
of stone" (Daniel Ch.5vv3-4). Gods of all degrees were
extolled and their superiority over the God of Israel insultingly
vaunted; and in so doing they challenged God publicly and
insolently. With such insensate folly and impiety did this
foolhardy king dare the interposition of the living and true
God.
The answer for it could not
be delayed, and indeed was at hand; almost before the sounds
of their idolatrous chants had died away we see the
writing and witness on the wall, "in the same
hour came forth fingers of a man's hand, and wrote over against
the candlestick upon the plaster of the wall of the king's
palace and the king saw the part of the hand that wrote (Daniel
Ch.5v5). Silently came these mysterious fingers in answer
to the king's challenge, silently they wrote their words of
doom amid the noise of revelry and of song, and yet, for an
unseen power directed his eyes, the king saw the part of the
hand that wrote. And what was the effect of the apparition?
Surely fortified by wine, and strong in confidence in the
omnipotence of his gods, the king will not be afraid? But
even he, wicked as he was, had a conscience, and he knew of
the power that had driven even Nebuchadnezzar from his throne,
and made him, for a season, like the beasts of the earth;
and conscience now, in spite of the king's surroundings, asserted
its office, and "the king's countenance was changed,
and his thoughts troubled him, so that the joints of his loins
were loosed, and his knees smote one against another”
(Daniel Ch.5v6). What a change! In the midst of his banquet
he had dared to insult the God of heaven, and now, at the
sight of this mysterious hand, fear and dread possessed his
soul, and he trembled from head to foot. He had girded himself
to challenge the omnipotent God; and the moment the challenge
was accepted, before the blow had been struck, his heart failed
him under the awful apprehension of coming judgment. Who can
help him at such a moment? Instead of humbling himself before
the one against whom he had so grievously sinned, he called
to his succour the astrologers, the Chaldeans, and the soothsayers,
and by the proffer of munificent rewards hoped they might
be able to solve the written words, and thus, as he vainly
thought, give him relief. But the wisdom of this world could
not unravel God's secrets nor interpret His writing; and these
men of pretended knowledge were as impotent as they had been
proved to be in the days of Nebuchadnezzar. "The things
of God knoweth no man, but the Spirit of God" (1 Corinthians
Ch.2v11b).
Belshazzar was still more troubled,
panic-stricken as he had been, and even his courtiers were
astonished. But God meant that the king should have the writing
explained, His own chosen vessel must do only it. The instrument
was at hand to bring Daniel to Belshazzar's notice. "The
queen by reason of the words of the king and his lords came
into the banquet house" (Daniel Ch5v10). She had not
taken part in the wild orgies of this eventful night; but
the rumour of the apparition that had startled the king and
his guests had gone out through the palace and reached her
ears. She was fully acquainted with what had taken place in
the reign of Nebuchadnezzar, as also with the service Daniel
had rendered, and with the place to which he had been consequently
appointed, and she hastened therefore to the king's help.
“O king,” she said, “live for ever: let
not thy thoughts trouble thee, nor let thy countenance be
changed: there is a man in thy kingdom, in whom is the spirit
of the holy gods;” and then, after describing what he
had proved himself to be in the days of Nebuchadnezzar, she
added, "Let Daniel be called, and he will show the interpretation"
(Daniel Ch.5vv10-12). This could scarcely have been Belshazzar's
wife Daniel Ch5v3; most probably therefore it was the queen
mother, or, as expressed in modern language, the queen-dowager.
Daniel was at once "brought in before the king. And the
king spake and said unto Daniel, Art thou that Daniel, which
art of the children of the captivity of Judah, whom the king
my father brought out of Jewry?" (Daniel Ch.5v13b). He
had known, as before remarked, of the services of Daniel,
but he had not cared to know him personally. The impious king
had no desire for acquaintance with the servant of God; and
had only now sent for him in his extremity for help in the
hour of his need. He then told Daniel, what he had heard of
him, and continued: "Now if thou canst read the writing,
and make known to me the interpretation thereof, thou shalt
be clothed with scarlet, and have a chain of gold about thy
neck, and shalt be the third ruler in the kingdom" (Daniel
Ch5vv14-16).
Daniel was standing before
the sovereign of all the kingdoms of the earth, before an
absolute monarch, and before one who held the power of life
and death over all his subjects Daniel Ch.5v19; but Daniel
was the servant of the God, who was the source of Belshazzar's
brief power; and he, therefore, conscious of his mission,
neither feared the king nor was tempted by his offered rewards.
In the calm confidence which, through grace, he possessed
in Him whose servant he was, notice the discernment
and daring of Daniel; he "answered and said
before the king, Let thy gifts be to thyself, and give thy
rewards to another; yet I will read the writing unto the king,
and make known to him the interpretation" (Daniel Ch.5v17).
It was a noble preface, befitting the messenger of God to
the wicked king; and the reader will not fail to remark the
different spirit in which Daniel addressed Belshazzar from
that in which he spoke to Nebuchadnezzar. The latter was idolatrous,
imperious, and had sought to compel his subjects to worship
the idol, which he had made; but he had not gone the length
of Belshazzar in his profanity. Daniel therefore made a distinction,
taught as he undoubtedly was by the Spirit of God, and knowing
that the cup of Belshazzar's iniquity was now filled up to
the brim. But he will deliver his message, though, first of
all, Belshazzar must be made to hear how God had dealt with
Nebuchadnezzar in the past, and how that, absolute monarch
as he was, and universal as was his dominion, "when his
heart was lifted up, and his mind hardened in pride, he was
deposed from his kingly throne, and they took his glory from
him" (Daniel Ch5v20). Daniel recounted, moreover, the
nature of the judgment that was inflicted upon him, and reminded
Belshazzar that all this was "till he knew that the most
high God ruled in the kingdom of men, and that He appointeth
over it whomsoever He will” (Daniel Ch.5v21c). Thereon
he proceeded to deal with the trembling monarch before him
in severe, but faithful words: "And thou his son, O Belshazzar,
hast not humbled thine heart, though thou knewest all this;
but hast lifted up thyself against the Lord of heaven; and
they have brought the vessels of His house before thee, and
thou, and thy lords, thy wives, and thy concubines, have drunk
wine in them; and thou hast praised the gods of silver, and
gold, of brass, iron, wood, and stone, which see not, nor
hear, nor know: and the God in whose hand thy breath is, and
whose are all thy ways, hast thou not glorified" (Daniel
Ch.5vv22-23).
If God was about to smite,
He will have the grounds of His action explained. This
is the ending and end of the kingdom. It is indeed
a striking feature in His ways, especially as recorded in
the Old Testament, that before He acts in judgment, He is
careful to state the reasons of it, that He may be clear when
He speaks, and justified when He judges for example, 2 Chronicles
Ch.36vv11-21. So here Daniel presented the indictment against
the king, showed him that he had slighted all the warnings
of the past, had sinned against light and knowledge, and that
he had finally lifted up himself against the Lord of heaven,
and had polluted the holy vessels of His house. This shows
plainly the meaning of the king's action in commanding these
vessels to be brought; that it was no mere wild freak, while
under the heat of wine, but a deliberate and studied insult
against God. Hence it was that Daniel would have the king
to understand, that "the part of the hand" was sent
from God to write on the wall in connection with this very
act Daniel Ch.5v24. In such a solemn moment there must be
no mistake, and thus he arraigned the king before the tribunal
of God before he expounded the writing. As the writing was
in the Chaldaic language, it was not that the king's wise
men did not understand the words. It was the connection, application,
and interpretation that they could not unfold. So many separate
words would appear to them, being without the clue, as disjointed
and meaningless. The words were four: MENE, MENE, TEKEL, UPHARSIN,
and we have next Daniel's authoritative interpretation.
Before entering upon it, attention
may be drawn to the fact that Daniel does not merely translate
the words, which had been written, but he reveals the mind
of God, which must be conveyed. This could not have been done
unless he himself had received a direct communication from
God. The words themselves, if rendered according to their
meaning, are "numbered," "weighed," and
"divided"; but no human ingenuity could have discovered
their divine significance, and it is this which Daniel explains.
The first word was repeated. The reason for this may be doubtless
found in Joseph's words to Pharaoh: "And for that the
dream was doubled unto Pharaoh twice; it is because the thing
is established by God, and God will shortly bring it to pass"
(Genesis Ch.41v32). "This," says Daniel, "is
the interpretation of the thing: MENE; God hath numbered thy
kingdom, and finished it" (Daniel Ch.5v26). In expounding
Nebuchadnezzar's vision of the great image, Daniel had said
to him, "Thou art this head of gold," and, inasmuch
as Babylon was to be succeeded by the Medo-Persian kingdom,
it is evident, as previously remarked, that Nebuchadnezzar's
dynasty was included in this term, Belshazzar being its last
member. God Himself had committed the sovereignty of the earth
to Nebuchadnezzar in responsibility, and He alone determined
the duration of his kingdom. When therefore Daniel said to
Belshazzar. "God hath numbered thy kingdom, and finished
it," he meant that, according to the divine appointment,
the termination of Babylon's sovereignty had arrived; that
its days were numbered, and were now ended. The ground of
this annunciation is found in the next verse: "TEKEL;
Thou art weighed in the balances, and art found wanting"
(Daniel Ch5v27). If God had committed the government of the
earth to Nebuchadnezzar and his successors, for the accomplishment
of His purposes in His ways with His people, He held them
responsible for the way in which they fulfilled their trust.
The verdict is now pronounced upon Belshazzar. Nebuchadnezzar
had also failed, if not to the same extent; but, under chastisement
from God, he had humbled himself, owned Him as the source
of his authority, as the omnipotent Ruler in heaven and on
earth, and had extolled and honoured Him as the King of heaven.
Belshazzar, blind to all the teachings of the past, had more
grievously sinned by magnifying his idols above the God in
whose hand his breath was, and had thus lifted up himself
against the Lord of heaven. His probation was now ended, and
Daniel declared to him the result that, as shown by the mysterious
word "Tekel," weighed in God's unerring balances,
he was found wanting.
Judgment is contained in the
next word, PERES, the public judgment consequent upon Belshazzar's
failure in the use of the power entrusted to him in the government
of the earth: "Thy kingdom is divided, and given to the
Medes and Persians." The long suffering of God towards
the "head of gold" was ended; and hence there is
no exhortation to repentance, nothing but the announcement
of the result of God's verdict, together with the accompanying
judgment. Altogether "this narrative," gives us
the last character of the iniquity of the sovereign power
of the Gentiles, in opposition to the God of Israel, and the
judgment, which falls in consequence upon the monarchy of
which Babylon was the head, and to which Babylon had given
its own character. Peres, is simply another form of the word
Upharsin. The former is the participle passive, and the latter
the participle active of the verb P'ras, to divide. Nothing
is said as to the effect of this awful interpretation. With
the judgment pronounced God had, save the execution of the
sentence, done with the man who had arrogantly defied His
power. One thing, however, is added, and that is Belshazzar's
last act of royalty. He could not, whatever the attitude of
Daniel; allow his public promise of reward to the interpreter
to fall to the ground. Men who are false to God are often
true to one another in their very selfishness. Belshazzar
therefore commanded, "and they clothed Daniel with scarlet,
and put a chain of gold about his neck, and made a proclamation
concerning him, that he should be the third ruler in the kingdom"
(Daniel Ch.5v29). If he believed the interpretation, it is
evident that he had no conception of the rapidly approaching
execution of the sentence he had heard; but "in that
night was Belshazzar the king of the Chaldeans slain.
And Darius the Median took the kingdom, being about three
score and two years old" (Daniel Ch.5vv30-31).
God thus judged the first of
the kingdoms of the Gentiles, and this was the monarchy of
Babylon. The event was of the highest importance historically,
and of no less moment prophetically, for the moral features,
which marked Belshazzar's sovereignty, will appear in the
future Babylon spoken of in Revelation.
There it is seen under two
aspects, that of a woman, and that of a city. The moral character
of the former is given in these words: “Mystery,
Babylon the great, the mother of harlots and abominations
of the earth” (Revelation Ch17v5). And we read
of the ruler whose throne was derived from Satan, "he
opened his mouth in blasphemy against God, to blaspheme His
name and His tabernacle, and them that dwell in heaven"
(Revelation Ch.13v6). Moreover, as to the judgment of Babylon
it is said, "Her plagues shall come in one day, death,
and mourning, and famine"; and so it will happen, for
those who bewail her destruction are represented as saying,
"Alas, alas, that great city Babylon, that mighty city!
For in one hour is thy judgment come" (Revelation Ch.18v10).
This will suffice to show the exactness of the correspondence,
and the prophetic nature of these historical narratives. (Please
also compare Jeremiah Ch.50vv35-46 + Jeremiah Ch.51vv24-64.)
For an explanation of these two aspects see The Visions
of John in Patmos. A few words should perhaps be said
upon the question of the historical event alluded to when
Belshazzar was thus surprised and slain in his capital. Isaiah
is thought to refer to the capture of Babylon by Cyrus in
Isaiah Ch.45vv1-2 and in Isaiah Ch.47vv11-15; he speaks expressly
of her sudden destruction also Isaiah Ch.21vv1-9. Jeremiah
also prophesies with more detail of the surprise and taking
of Babylon, and that in connection with the Medes Jeremiah
Ch.51vv28-32; and this of the two prophecies would rather
point to the event recorded in our chapter. There are those
who, in the hopeless confusion of the pretended histories
of the past, seek to establish the identity of Darius with
Cyrus; but the Scripture narrative is clear that Darius took
the kingdom, and that Cyrus is subsequently found in its possession.
And let it not be forgotten that the importance of the narrative
lies in its moral and prophetic instruction; and happy are
they who, with unquestioning confidence in the word of God,
have their hearts prepared and opened to receive its teaching.
The May 1984 National
Geographic showed through colour photos and drawings the swift
and terrible destruction that wiped out the Roman Cities of
Pompeii and Herculaneum in A.D. 79. The explosion of Mount
Vesuvius was so sudden, the residents were killed while in
their routine: men and women were at the market, the rich
in their luxurious baths, and slaves at toil. They died amid
volcanic ash and superheated gasses. Even family pets suffered
the same quick and final fate. It takes little imagination
to picture the panic of that terrible day. The saddest part
is that these people did not have to die. Scientists confirm
what ancient Roman writers record--weeks of rumblings and
shakings preceded the actual explosion. Even an ominous plume
of smoke was clearly visible from the mountain days before
the eruption. If only they had been able to read and respond
to Vesuvius's warning! There are similar "rumblings"
in our world: warfare, earthquakes, the nuclear threat, economic
woes, breakdown of the family and moral standards. While not
exactly new, these things do point to a coming day of Judgment
(Matthew Ch. 24). People need not be caught unprepared. God
warns and provides an escape to those who will heed the rumblings.
Michael Bogart, Lemoore, California.
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