The Battleground Of Truth
An Examination Of The Book Of Daniel
Daniel Chapter 6: The Decree Of This Darius!
Kenneth Humphries
Under Darius, the second great
world empire was established about 538 B.C. the Medo-Persian
Empire, as it was known, had already been prophesied in Nebuchadnezzar’s
great image in the arms and chest of silver. Silver of course
being inferior to gold suggests the degeneration of this empire
as compared with Babylon.
In this series of historical
pictures that are presented, it will be remembered, the moral
features, which will distinguish, in the last days, the last
form of Gentile sovereignty. If Belshazzar, therefore, typified
the impiety that dared to lift itself up against the Lord
of heaven, Darius sets forth the exaltation of man, and indeed,
the substitution of man for God, as an object of worship.
This is by no means altered by the fact that he was betrayed
into taking this position, or that he himself was a man of
an amiable character; for it is still true that he signed
the decree, that whosoever should ask a petition of any god
or man for thirty days, save of himself, should be cast into
the den of lions (Daniel Ch.6v7). It is not what he was in
himself, but what he did, that contains the prophetic instruction;
and it is quite possible that he, who in a future day will
oppose and exalt himself above all that is called God, or
that is worshipped, and who will sit in the temple of God,
and show himself that he is God. 2 Thessalonians Ch.2v4 will
possess many features, which will extol the admiration and
homage of men. When the Lord was upon the earth there was
no beauty in Him that men should desire Him; there was nothing
in Him to commend Him to the natural man; but, on the other
hand, when Antichrist appears on the scene he will be marked
by the features which will attract the hearts of men as men
of the world. The world will love its own, whereas Christ,
who was not of the world, was hated by it. It is just because
Darius was naturally a man of an admirable character that
he was fitted to shadow out in this respect this future ruler
in his self-exaltation and deification.
The first three verses of this
chapter furnish the groundwork of what follows, the occasion
of the actions that issued in the casting of Daniel into the
lions' den. On taking possession of the throne of Babylon,
Darius reorganized the affairs of the kingdom; and he "set
over the kingdom an hundred and twenty princes . . . and over
these, three presidents, of whom Daniel was first. Then this
Daniel was preferred above the presidents and princes, because
an excellent spirit was in him; and the king thought to set
him over the whole realm" (Daniel Ch.6vv1-3). Surely
Daniel is enjoying the prosperity of obedience. Belshazzar
had, on the eve of the capture of his city, proclaimed Daniel
as the third ruler in the kingdom; Darius promoted him to
the first place under himself, being God's instrument in doing
so for the accomplishment of His purposes. Daniel was no unknown
man; and he was hated both as a Jew and as a true worshipper
of the God of heaven. His exaltation in the government still
further provoked the envy and jealousy of the nobles, the
princes, and the presidents over whom he had been placed.
Men of corrupt and covetous hearts could not love a man of
incorruptible fidelity, and seeking only to commend himself
to God. They therefore determined in some way or other to
compass his deposition or destruction; and first of all they
sought to find occasion against him concerning the kingdom,
concerning his administration of the government. Watch
the conspiracy of the presidents. There are none
so eagle-eyed as malicious men; so that nothing, whether in
matters of finance or other branches of the affairs of this
vast empire would escape their notice; "but they could
find none occasion nor fault; forasmuch as he was faithful,
neither was there any error or fault found in him" (Daniel
Ch.6v4). They searched Daniel’s public life,
they examined Daniel’s private life, and they remembered
Daniel’s prayer life. What a testimony to the
integrity and uprightness of this servant of God; and it is
all the greater because, as we read in the next verse, it
was a testimony borne by his enemies, They knew not that Daniel
laboured under the eye of Him who beholds the secrets of the
heart, and that it was the joy of his life to walk in the
favour and blessing of his God.
Foiled in this direction, with
the inventiveness, which ever characterizes the evil heart;
they chose another ground of attack. They said, "these
men" (a term seemingly chosen to express their iniquity)
"we shall not find any occasion against this Daniel,
except we find it against him concerning the law of his God"
(Daniel Ch.6v5). Idolaters as they all were, and having a
sovereign who was also an idolater, it was easy, they thought,
to entangle Daniel in their net on such a ground. But Darius
could scarcely have been ignorant of what had transpired between
Daniel and Belshazzar, or of the fact that he was a godly
Jew; and this will account for the method adopted by these
princes and presidents. They did not proceed to charge Daniel
with worshipping his God; in greater subtlety they determined,
first, to flatter the king by offering to him the place of
absolute supremacy, supremacy over heaven as well as earth,
and then to bring Daniel into conflict with, as well as disobedience
to, the king.
As inspired of Satan, their
project was cleverly devised, and they sought immediately
to put it into execution. What subtlety there is in
this plan! Accordingly they "assembled together
to the king, and said thus unto him, King Darius, live for
ever"; and they then informed his majesty that, after
due consultation, they had agreed "to establish a royal
statute, and to make a firm decree, that whosoever shall ask
a petition of any god or man for thirty days, save of thee,
O king, he shall be cast into the den of lions" (Daniel
Ch.6v 7). The only thing wanting to ensure the validity of
the decree was the king's signature, and then it could not
be changed, "according to the law of the Medes and Persians,
which altereth not" (Daniel Ch.6v8). The king, flattered
probably by the homage and subjection of his nobles in his
new dominions, fell at once into the snare they had woven
about his feet, and not pausing to consider the awful place,
which he was accepting, a place belonging to God alone, "signed
the writing and the decree" (Daniel Ch.6v9).
Nebuchadnezzar had made an
image, and had commanded his nobles to be present at its dedication,
and to unite in rendering it homage; but Darius himself now
took the place of God, and forbade any of his subjects for
the space of a whole month, whether in private or in public,
to fall down before any "god" but himself. It was
the deification of man, which will, as we have pointed out,
have its counterpart in the last days, and towards which men
are even now preceding with such rapid steps. The displacement
of God by man is seen even in Christendom; what wonder then
if, after the church is gone, when the energy of Satan will
be unlimited and unhindered, man publicly and avowedly assumes
the place of God, even with approbation. Such a consummation
is only gradually reached. The steps toward it are silently
and unwittingly trodden; for the minds of men are so prepared
through teachings which in their fruit must bring in this
conclusion, that they will scarcely be astonished when a man
who has won their homage by his earthly wisdom and power,
declares that he is God, but what of Daniel in the presence
of such a decree? Will he yield obedience to it? Or will he,
like his three companions of the captivity, disregard the
king's commandment? Who could doubt what his course would,
be? Look at the fidelity of the servant!
Seeing how faithfully he had spoken both to Nebuchadnezzar
and to Belshazzar? The fact, moreover, that, within the circle
of his responsibility and allegiance to his monarch, he had
served so well that even his enemies could not find matter
of accusation, affords a guarantee that he, a servant of the
God of heaven, will be no less conscientious in that other
sphere where God is supreme. Darius, however had been entrapped
and had stepped outside of the circle of his authority, and
had, in signing this decree, intruded into God's circle, where
man has neither right nor place. If Daniel, therefore, would
maintain a good conscience towards God, he had no alternative
but to refuse subjection to the decree that had been issued.
When therefore he "knew that the writing was signed,
he went into his house; and his windows being open in his
chamber toward Jerusalem, he kneeled upon his knees three
times a day, and prayed, and gave thanks before his God, as
he did aforetime" (Daniel Ch.6v10). What a spectacle!
A man of another race, an object of the envy of the Chaldeans,
and enjoying his exaltation simply by the king's favour, dares,
at all cost, the power of the whole realm, because he would
not be unfaithful to his God! And observe that there was no
ostentation in the course he pursued. He continued in his
usual course; it was "as he did aforetime." He might
have closed his windows and escaped observation, but to do
this under the circumstances, would have been all one as if
he were respecting the king's decree. His windows had ever
been open towards Jerusalem, and they must still be kept so.
Daniel, thus morning, noon, and evening, cried to the Lord
"as he did aforetime," regardless, by the grace
of God, of the consequences of his act, Daniel was
found in his usual place of prayer, in his usual position
of prayer and in his usual plan of prayer.
There was a reason for his
windows being opened towards Jerusalem. At the dedication
of the temple Solomon had prayed thus concerning the people,
should they be carried away into captivity in the enemy's
land, far or near: “If thy people go out to battle against
their enemy, whithersoever thou shalt send them, and shall
pray unto the LORD toward the city which thou hast chosen,
and toward the house that I have built for thy name: Then
hear thou in heaven their prayer and their supplication, and
maintain their cause. If they sin against thee, (for there
is no man that sinneth not,) and thou be angry with them,
and deliver them to the enemy, so that they carry them away
captives unto the land of the enemy, far or near; Yet if they
shall bethink themselves in the land whither they were carried
captives, and repent, and make supplication unto thee in the
land of them that carried them captives, saying, We have sinned,
and have done perversely, we have committed wickedness; And
so return unto thee with all their heart, and with all their
soul, in the land of their enemies, which led them away captive,
and pray unto thee toward their land, which thou gavest unto
their fathers, the city which thou hast chosen, and the house
which I have built for thy name: Then hear thou their prayer
and their supplication in heaven thy dwelling place, and maintain
their cause” (1 Kings Ch.8vv44-49). Daniel was consequently
resting on the sure word of God in thus praying, for the Lord
had said to Solomon, "I have heard thy prayer and thy
supplication, that thou hast made before me" (1 Kings
Ch.9v3).
Daniel was no "secret
disciple"; his habits of prayer were known, and accordingly
his enemies understood how to discover whether he was, or
was not, obedient to the decree. "Then these men assembled,
and found Daniel praying and making supplication before his
God" (Daniel Ch.6v11). The term "these men,"
as in verse 5, is again employed see also vv. 15, 24, doubtless
to express the divine estimate of their wicked conduct. But
they had gained their point; their wicked device had so far
prospered; and, exulting over their success, "they came
near, and spake before the king concerning the king's decree"
v.12. Had not his majesty, they enquired, signed the decree?
The king replied, "The thing is true, according to the
law of the Medes and Persians, which altereth not." Alas!
The king was in the hands of these unscrupulous men. He had
accepted their flattery, and now he had become their helpless
slave. He himself had unsuspectingly riveted his own chains.
Having thus secured the monarch in their vice like grip, they
proceeded to unveil the purpose of their malicious hearts;
and the very words they used did but betray the depth of their
iniquity. They said before the king, "That Daniel, which
is of the children of the captivity of Judah, regarded not
thee, O king, nor the decree that thou hast signed, but makes
his petition three times a day" (Daniel Ch.6v13). Their
personal enmity to Daniel and to his race, together with their
envy because of his position, are plainly revealed, as well
as the fact that they had but used the king, in their professed
desire for his absolute supremacy, as their tool for the accomplishment
of Daniel's destruction. The king was in this way brought
face to face with the fruit of his own doings, and could no
longer conceal from himself the real object of the writing
he had signed. How often it is that we are blinded to the
nature of our actions until we encounter their irrevocable
consequences! So was it with Darius and when he heard the
accusation against Daniel, he was sore displeased with himself,
“and set his heart on Daniel to deliver him and he laboured
till the going down of the sun to deliver him" (Daniel
Ch.6v14). Learn from the sincerity of the king.
His efforts were a testimony to his appreciation of Daniel,
and also to the kindness of his own heart; but he was no longer
his own master. He himself had declared the immutable character
of the laws of the Medes and Persians; and Daniel's enemies
were not slow to take advantage of this admission; for they
again "assembled unto the king, and said unto the king,
Know, O king, that the law of the Medes and Persians is, That
no decree nor statute which the king establisheth may be changed"
(Daniel Ch.6v15). They asserted their power; and their language,
"Know, O king," betrayed their purpose to maintain
it at all costs; so that Darius did not dare to trifle any
longer with the most influential nobles of his realm, for
they, through his own folly, had the law on their side. He
therefore "commanded, and they brought Daniel, and cast
him into the den of lions" (Daniel Ch.6v16). There
is without doubt a reality about the den of lions.
The deed was consummated, and these men triumphed over both
Daniel and Darius. But there was another on Daniel's side
on whom his enemies had not counted; and, as will be seen
in the following narrative, their short-lived victory was
but the prelude to their own defeat and destruction. If God
is for His people none can be successful against them, whatever
the appearances for the moment. Even Darius had, in some way
or other, the conviction that Daniel would not be allowed
to perish. "Thy God," he said, "whom thou servest
continually, He will deliver thee" (Daniel Ch.6v16b).
And yet he was still in the power of his servants, and was
compelled to carry out his decree to its bitter end; for after
the stone had been "brought, and laid upon the mouth
of the den; the king sealed it with his own signet, and with
the signet of his lords; that the purpose might not be changed
concerning Daniel" (Daniel Ch.6v17). Before passing on,
a remark may be permitted upon the similarity between the
action of Darius and his lords and that of the chief priests
and Pharisees, as recorded in Matthew's gospel. These had
been allowed of God to compass the crucifixion of the Lord
Jesus, and after His death He was buried in the sepulchre.
Not content with the attainment of their object, they obtained
leave of Pilate to make "the sepulchre sure, sealing
the stone, and setting a watch" (Matthew Ch.27v66). In
both cases man thought to secure his end by making intervention
and rescue impossible, but God was not in all his thoughts;
and what can man do when he ventures to fight against God?
The heart of Darius was not
in what was done has been plainly seen; and now that the deed
had been accomplished, notwithstanding his expressed assurance
that God would deliver Daniel, he was filled with remorse.
He passed the succeeding night fasting, dispensed with his
usual music, his sleep went from him, and, rising early in
the morning, he went in haste unto the den of lions. All his
thoughts were for the time centred on Daniel. "And when
he came to the den, he cried with a lamentable voice unto
Daniel. And the king spake and said to Daniel, O Daniel, servant
of the living God, is thy God, whom thou servest continually,
able to deliver thee from the lions?" (Daniel Ch.6vv18-20).
God had not forgotten His servant; and though Daniel had been
exposed to the full display of Satan's power, he was not,
and could not be, injured, for he was under the omnipotent
protection of the living God. He was therefore able to reply
to the king's question, after the customary loyal address,
"My God hath sent His angel, and hath shut the lions'
mouths, that they have not hurt me, forasmuch as before Him
innocence was found in me; and also before thee, O king, have
I done no hurt" (Daniel Ch.6v22). It was, of course,
an actual den of lions into which Daniel had been thrown;
but we see no reason for departing from the usual typical
significance of the lion in Scripture. It was thus still true
that “the angel of the Lord encampeth round about them
that fear Him, and delivereth them” (Psalm Ch.34v7).
It should be noticed, however, Daniel claimed that "innocence"
was found in him before God. The lesson is, that we could
not be consciously under God's protection, nor could we claim,
or rather expect, His succour, if we had not a good conscience
in His sight. Before the king Daniel was as clear as before
God; like the apostle, he had a conscience void of offence
both towards God and towards men; and God, later on, stepped
in and, vindicating His servant, delivered him, like Paul
(2 Timothy Ch.4v17), from the mouth of the lion.
The decree having been executed,
for the penalty of its infraction as that the offender should
be cast into the lions' den, not that he should be killed
by the lions, the king was freed from the strangle hold of
his lords. The law had been vindicated, and Daniel had suffered
its punishment. Darius could therefore, no one forbidding
on the ground of the unchangeable laws of the Medes and Persians,
exercise his prerogative, and command that Daniel should be
taken up out of the den; and being taken up, "no manner
of hurt was found upon him, because he believed in his God"
(Daniel Ch.6v23). The whole secret of his protection and deliverance
is here revealed. Faith, divinely produced in his soul, brought
in God, who shielded His servant from the malice of his enemies
by subduing and restraining the natural and ravenous instincts
of the lions. The apostle, with Daniel in mind, speaking of
the prophets, says, "Who through faith . . . stopped
the mouths of lions" (Hebrews Ch.11v33). It was one of
the victories of faith that should encourage the people of
God to trust in, and to count upon, Him at all times, remembering
that while all things are possible with God, all things are
also possible to him that believeth; and it is of this wondrous
truth that Daniel is here the exemplification.
The king's work was not completed
with the deliverance of Daniel. Made fully aware, by what
had taken place, of the enormity of the iniquity of his presidents
and princes, he, in righteous indignation, "commanded,
and they brought those men which had, accused Daniel, and
they cast them into the den of lions, them, their children,
and their wives; and the lions had the mastery of them, and
brake all their bones in pieces or ever they came at the bottom
of the den" (Daniel Ch.6v24). "These men" thus
fell into the pit, which their own hands had opened, and into
the snare, which they had laid for Daniel, were their own
feet taken. In this way God testified to His servant, and
executed judgment upon His enemies.
A profound impression was made
upon Darius by the events he had witnessed; and he sent a
proclamation throughout the whole of his realm, to the different
nations "that dwell in all the earth; Peace be multiplied
unto you. I make a decree, that in every dominion of my kingdom
men tremble and fear before the God of Daniel: for He is the
living God, and steadfast forever, and His kingdom that which
shall not be destroyed, and His dominion shall be even unto
the end" (Daniel Ch.6vv25-26). How far he entered into
the truth of the words he caused to be written; is not revealed.
However this might have been, it was no mean testimony he
rendered to God and to His sovereignty. He went much farther
than Nebuchadnezzar in Daniel Ch.3. This monarch contented
himself with forbidding his subjects, under extreme penalties,
to speak anything against the God of Shadrach, Meshach, and
Abednego. Darius commanded that in all his dominions men should
tremble and fear before the God of Daniel, because He was
the living God, and His kingdom was everlasting. In such a
marvellous way did God make the wrath of man to praise Him,
and the attempt to quench forever the light of His testimony
in Babylon was made the means of kindling it throughout the
whole earth.
At the commencement of this
chapter we saw that Darius, in accepting the place, which
his counsellors offered him, was a type of the future head
of the last form of Gentile sovereignty who will accept divine
honours, and have his deification enforced upon his subjects
Revelation Ch.13vv8-12. The deliverance of Daniel is also
typical. He prefigures the remnant, God's faithful remnant,
which will be found in Jerusalem and in the land during the
days of Antichrist's fearful sway. Through the machinations
of their enemies they will be cast, as it were, into the lions'
den, surrounded on all sides by the various displays of Satan's
power, and their destruction will appear to human eyes to
be imminent and certain. But God will Himself protect them,
and interposing for their release by the appearing of Christ,
will bring upon their enemies the very judgment, which they
had designed, for His people. This situation of the remnant,
previous to the appearing of Christ in glory, is often depicted
both in the prophets and in the Psalms. A citation from the
latter will make this clear: "My soul," says the
Psalmist, speaking as the mouthpiece of the Spirit of Christ
in this remnant, "My soul is among lions: and I lie even
among them that are set on fire, even the sons of men, whose
teeth are spears and arrows, and their tongue a sharp sword"
(Psalm Ch.57v4). Then turning upward, he cries, "Be Thou
exalted, O God, above the heavens let Thy glory be above all
the earth," (Psalm Ch.57v5). Knowing that when the glory
of God is thus displayed at the appearing of Christ, the time
of the remnant's deliverance will have arrived. As indeed
he says in a previous verse, "He shall send from
heaven, and save me from the reproach of him that would
swallow me up. God shall send forth His mercy and His truth"
(Psalm Ch.57v3). Yet again, in correspondence with the prophetic
character of Daniel's deliverance, he says, "They have
prepared a net for my steps; my soul is bowed down: they
have digged a pit before me, into the midst whereof they are
fallen themselves" (Psalm Ch.57v6). This psalm was
written at least five hundred years before the time of Daniel;
and yet its resemblance to his experience is so striking as
to arrest the attention of any devout reader of the Scriptures.
The explanation is, that the circumstances of David, which
furnished the occasion for the psalm, as well as those of
Daniel, were both very prophetic of those of the remnant in
the last days. And it may be remarked again for the help of
the younger students of Scripture, that very few of the narratives
of the Bible are simply historical. As histories they are
full of interest and afford moral lessons of great value;
but they are also often typical and prophetic. For example,
David is a historical personage, and much instruction can
be gleaned from his life and conduct, instruction that yields
both encouragement and warning. But we have also, in all his
rejection and persecution before ascending the throne, to
view him as a type of Christ when He came to His own and His
own received Him not. So afterwards in the kingdom he presents
to us Christ as the King of righteousness, while Solomon,
his son, shadows forth the Messiah as King of peace. David,
moreover, as we know on the authority of the apostle Peter
Acts Ch.2v30, was a prophet, and hence it is, as in the Psalm
above referred to, that many of his writings are descriptive
of the future, whether of the position and state of the remnant
or of the blessings and glory of Messiah's reign and kingdom.
It greatly enhances our interest in the Scriptures to remember
this, and it enables us at the same time to understand their
profound character and God's purpose in the special events
recorded. It only remains to point out that Darius's confession
of Daniel's God as the living God is also typical, inasmuch
as it prefigures the conversion of the Gentiles, consequent
upon the interposition of Jehovah for the rescue of His people,
and for judgment upon their enemies. In Psalm 18 we thus read,
after a description of Messiah's victory over His foes, "Thou
hast delivered me from the strivings of the people; and thou
hast made me the head of the heathen [nations]: a people whom
I have not known shall serve me. As soon as they hear of me,
they shall obey me: the strangers shall submit themselves
unto me." And again, "He delivereth me from mine
enemies: yea, Thou liftest me up above those that rise up
against me: Thou hast delivered me from the violent man. Therefore
will I give thanks unto Thee, O Lord, among the heathen, the
nations', and sing praises unto Thy name" (Psalm Ch.18vv43-44
+vv 48-49). We learn, therefore, as from all the prophetic
writings, that the Lord will deliver His people through unsparing
judgments, and that, after He has visited His wrath upon their
oppressors, He will establish His throne, and that then all
kings will fall down before Him, and all nations will serve
Him.
Born on a Kansas farm
and educated in a one-room school, he lived a tough and difficult
existence as a boy. Glenn and his brother kept the school's
fire going, and one morning when the boys poured kerosene
on live coals, the stove blew sky high. Glenn would have escaped,
but his brother had been left behind. Rushing back to help,
he suffered terrible burns, as did his brother. His brother
died, and Glenn's legs sustained severe damage. The story
does not end here, however. Glenn had long dreamed of making
a track record. Through a period of discouragement, disappointment,
and threatened meaninglessness, he somehow kept going. More,
he made up his mind that he would walk again--and he did!
That he would run--and he did! That he would discipline himself--and
he did! That he would master the mile--and he did! That he
would break the international record--and he did! Glenn Cunningham
purposed in his heart. The purpose in a person's heart captures
the soul and has power to transform the ugliest circumstances
into the richest blessings. James S. Hewett, Illustrations
Unlimited (Wheaton: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc, 1988) p.
274.
To date, the example we have
in these six chapters is to set our face as a flint to serve
the Lord with all of our heart and give Him our all and not
just a part. It is evident that Daniel and indeed his three
friends are enjoying living in the power of the Lord, proving
once again that God’s conquering power is available
to all surrendered to Him completely. In the ages past, God
has put down the attempts of man to overthrow righteousness
and holiness. And He will continue to do so, as we read in
the second Psalm: “The kings of the earth set themselves,
and the rulers take counsel together, against the Lord, and
against His anointed, saying, Let us break their bands asunder,
and cast away their cords from us. He that sitteth in the
heavens shall laugh: the Lord shall have them in derision.
Then shall he speak unto them in his wrath, and vex them with
his sore displeasure” (Psalm Ch.2vv2-5). For centuries
now God has been speaking to rebellious hearts and vexing
them in His sore displeasure, but the day will come when Christ
will return and all the enemies of the Lord shall be destroyed.
It most certainly will be as God prophecies in Psalm 2v9,
“Thou shalt break them with a rod of iron; thou shalt
dash them in pieces like a potters vessel.” Brothers
and sisters, will it then be with us as it was with Daniel,
we will stand up for our God?
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