THE LORD RULES (Devotions from Daniel 1)


THE LORD WHO RULES (DANIEL 1)
The foundation of courageous faith is the sovereign faithfulness of the Lord God.

Trouble in this world? Here's a promise of Jesus to everyone who follows him "In this world you will have trouble." (Jn. 16.33)

Here's a promise of the apostle Paul to everyone who follows Jesus “In fact, everyone who wants to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted,” (2 Timothy 3:12)

Brothers and sisters, these are not encouraging promises at all are they? But they are very important promises. And I feel quite foolish bringing them to you, my brothers and sisters here in India for you know the reality of these things far more than we do in Australia. The Lord keeps you in our hearts and our prayers. The reality of the trouble we have in this world as followers of Jesus, The reality of the persecution that everyone must face who wants to live a godly life in Christ Jesus is certain regardless of anywhere in the world you live in.

That reality is what makes the book of Daniel so precious and powerful to us. Because Daniel is a book that explores powerfully & creatively how the people of God live under opposition. It’s a very realistic book it doesn't cover over the difficulties of living in the midst of hostility but it’s a book of hope, real & genuine hope because it reminds us of the reality of the Lord's rule in this present age, indeed in every age and his ultimate victory in the age to come. In the book of Daniel we learn that to survive as Christians we need courageous faith. We meet models of such courageous faith that we can imitate. We meet fantastic examples of godly faith and godly conduct in the face of ungodly opposition and evil.

More importantly what is revealed is the foundation of such courageous faith which is the Lord himself. In the book of Daniel, It's not the human characters that are the stars or it’s not the human characters who are the ultimate heroes but it’s the Lord himself. It's good to remember that in reading the Bible we must focus our attention on the Lord God, his words, his actions and his character. To focus too much on the human character can lead to error and bad biblical interpretation and almost inevitably to moralism and salvation through good deeds. To avoid such terrible error we must focus on the Lord God and ask ourselves what do we learn of him and so respond to him in worship and thanksgiving. And so as we look at Daniel chapter 1, we are going to be reminded that the Lord we serve is the Lord who is sovereign, he is the Lord who rules.

1. THE LORD RULES IN JUDGEMENT (VV1-2)

The Lord's people

1:1 In the third year of the reign of Jehoiakim king of Judah, Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon came to Jerusalem and besieged it. Whenever we turn to a passage in the Bible, in particular the Old Testament, It's always important to remind ourselves where this passage fits in the overall timeline of the Bible.

Where does this passage fit in the story of God redeeming the world to Himself? In Daniel we find in a dark time in the history of God's people. Its 605 BC, It’s some 400 years since the nation of Israel was at its most glorious under King David & Solomon and since then it’s been largely a story of disappointment and decline. Under King Rehoboam, the kingdom divided, Israel in the north, Judah in the south. There's been a succession of kings in both the north & the south but all of them except a couple evil in the eyes of the Lord. And then in 722BC, little over a 100 years before our passage, before the time of Daniel the northern kingdom of Israel was conquered & dispersed under the Assyrian empire. Leaving Judah small & isolated at the mercy of whoever the current superpower. Firstly Assyria to the north but then Egypt to the south until then the mighty Babylonian Empire under King Nebuchadnezzar emerged. Here's a map of the Babylonian Empire at around the time we find ourselves in. [MAP] in 605BC on his way back from a huge victory over the Egyptians.

1:1 In the third year of the reign of Jehoiakim king of Judah, Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon came to Jerusalem and besieged it.

Nebuchadnezzar and his fierce, successful and powerful armies surrounded the small city of Jerusalem cutting off supplies, Cutting off all chance of help and sealing its doom. As a result of this siege, King Jehoiakim gave his allegiance to Nebuchadnezzar. Judah became a possession of Babylon and to make sure everyone knew who the boss was. Nebuchadnezzar took hostages from among the Jewish noble families including [v.6] Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah. And not only did he take people [v.2] he took “... some of the articles from the temple of God. These he carried off to the temple of his god in Babylonia and put in the treasure house of his god.”

These are disastrous times for the Lord's people Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael & Azariah, and eventually thousands of other Jews find themselves in a foreign country under a hostile authority where their beliefs are misunderstood & mocked. The reason Nebuchadnezzar took the articles from the temple of God was not so much because he liked the look of them. It wasn't because they were financially valuable, rather he was demonstrating that the Babylonians gods whom he served were more powerful than the God of the Jews and that's why he put this temple articles in the treasure house of his god. In Nebuchadnezzar's eyes the beliefs & practices of the Jews were misguided and foolish, the gods of Babylon were far wiser far more powerful than the God of Abraham, Isaac & Jacob.

Terrible times for the Lord's people and the challenge for them was how to live now in this new situation. How do you live as the people of the Lord when the authorities, the government, the people in charge do not believe in the Lord God? Mock the Lord God! Hate the Lord God? That of course has been the question that the people of God asked for hundreds and hundreds of years.

·         That is the question of every Jesus’ follower in India?
·         That is the question of every Jesus follower in Australia?

How do you live as the people of the Lord God when the people in charge hate him? That's the question the book of Daniel helps answer. For the people of Daniel's day they were wondering whether they should continue to serve the Lord. They were wondering if Babylonian gods were more powerful than him. They were wondering if the Lord was as powerless as their circumstances made it appear.

The Lord:  That's why it’s worth reading once more the opening 2 verses of the book of Daniel. Particularly the first few words of v2, Can you see them?

1:2 And the Lord delivered Jehoiakim king of Judah into his hand, along with some of the articles from the temple of God.

Very important words those are easy to miss out. And the Lord delivered Jehoiakim king of Judah into his hand. Right from the very beginning, we are to understand that something bigger is happening than merely a military victory & defeat. Nebuchadnezzar was certainly a mighty warrior with a powerful army and successful empire. But the only reason he defeated Jehoiakim, the only reason he carried off articles from the temple, the only reason he was able to take hostages was because the Lord delivered them into his hands. That's a remarkable truth. It’s one that is going to be reinforced in this chapter and throughout this book.

The Lord rules in the big & the small. Nothing takes God by surprise. Nothing happens that is outside his will and purpose. The Lord rules! It wasn't an accident that Nebuchadnezzar stumbled into Jerusalem. He came as the servant of the Lord, He just didn't know it! Nebuchadnezzar and the Babylonian gods hadn't defeated the Lord. He was an instrument of the Lord's judgement on his people for their unfaithfulness to him. The Lord is utterly sovereign. Even in the midst of invasion, destruction and exile. The Lord rules! He rules even in judgement. To know that to know the Lord in all of his sovereignty is the foundation of courageous faith. And we can see such courageous faith in what we read next as we are taken into the royal court in Babylon.

2. THE LORD RULES IN EXILE (VV3-20)

The Lord's people

1:3 Then the king ordered Ashpenaz, chief of his court officials, to bring into the king’s service some of the Israelites from the royal family and the nobility 4 young men without any physical defect, handsome, showing aptitude for every kind of learning, well informed, quick to understand, and qualified to serve in the king’s palace.

It must have been a scary time for these young men. Babylon would have been an impressive city, Massive and prosperous it really was the centre of the known world. And these men were to serve the King who seemingly ruled that world. [v. 5] we discover that they were to undergo 3 years training! And the training was a sort of indoctrination, assimilation into the Babylonian culture. Firstly [v. 4] they were to learn the language and the literature of the Babylonians. This would have included philosophy and astrology, Babylonia was renowned for its magic, omens and incantations along with mathematics and medicine. Lots to learn there, that's why they had to be quick to understand! The second part of their assimilation was to tempt them with luxury.

1:5 The king assigned them a daily amount of food and wine from the king’s table.

The best food and drink available in the whole world would be theirs. They were to be privileged and pampered. The third part of their assimilation was especially shrewd.

1:6 Among those who were chosen were some from Judah: Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah. 7 The chief official gave them new names: to Daniel, the name Belteshazzar; to Hananiah, Shadrach; to Mishael, Meshach; and to Azariah, Abednego.

Names matter especially in the ancient world. My name is Paul, which means small and insignificant! I think my mum and dad got it pretty right?? For the men from Judah their names reminded them of their identity as the Lord's people.

·         Daniel means “God is my judge.”
·         Hananiah means “The LORD is gracious.”
·         Mishael means "Who is what God is?"
·         Azariah means "The LORD is a helper".

But the new names they were given Belteshazzar, Shadrach, Meshach & Abednego[i] all those new names include the names of Babylonian gods. See the point! This was just another part of Nebuchadnezzar's plan to impress on these men and to declare to everyone that the Babylonian gods were superior to the Lord God. And so their names were changed. We're only 7 verses in and we've got vessels from the temple in the house of the Babylonian god and we've got the key men of Judah bearing names of the Babylonian gods. Nebuchadnezzar's goal of assimilation is advancing nicely. But here is where things get interesting.

1:8 But Daniel resolved not to defile himself with the royal food and wine, and he asked the chief official for permission not to defile himself this way.

Daniel draws a line in the sand. He learns the language & the literature of the Babylonians, he gets the new name but he won't eat the King's food. It was a courageous and risky decision. He was standing up to the King of the world! In v.10 the official is anxious that Daniel's decision might lead to his own execution. He might have suggested, “You don't go against Nebuchadnezzar lightly!” It’s a significant decision that Daniel is making. [v.8] Daniel resolved not to defile himself with the royal food and wine. It’s a strong word describing a weighty decision (The word “Resolved” often used for committee / General Body meetings to say a strong decision by a group of people that has huge weight in it). But you may be wondering why he has to draw the line at food & wine?

  • Some people suggest that it may have been offered to idols but that's not stated anywhere and usually wine wasn't offered like that in any culture, and he ends up eating vegetables which may be offered to idols as well.
  • Others suggest the food was unclean according to the OT food laws. But again wine wasn't unclean in the Law.
  • It seem most likely to me that eating the King's food & drinking the King's wine was seen as committing yourself to being dependent on Nebuchadnezzar. To eat the King’s food and to drink the King’s wine was to bind yourself to the King.

It was throwing your lot in with Nebuchadnezzar. There's no such thing as a free lunch. In fact later in Ch 11 (v.26) people who eat the King's food are seen as loyal to the King. But Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael & Azariah their loyalty is to the Lord. They may be in another country far from home surrounded by pagan customs, but their loyalty is to the Lord. It may appear that the Lord has been defeated and it may be far easier to just to completely blend in. But they resolve to set themselves apart from everyone else.  While everyone else is happily munching on rich foods, fancy deserts and expensive wine, they ask for vegetables & water for 10 days. Its courageous faith! Daniel is humble about it [v.8] he asks permission and suggests the 10 days as a test.

In America and Australia some people suggest that everyone should follow Daniel's example and eat just vegetables and water. It's called the Daniel diet! People suggest that big course we see it here in Daniel chapter 1 great blessing will come to you (including a smaller waistline) If you follow Daniel's example. I am not against eating vegetables and drinking water. Although I must tell you that I love eating meat! But that is a terrible way to read the Bible. You can eat vegetables & drink water if you want but that's not the point of these verses at all! This is not about resisting rich food; it’s about resisting a foreign king. This is not about physical health, but spiritual health! It’s about making sure that your loyalty above all to the Lord God. And these 4 young men are a great example to us in that! They are teenage refugees and they're making a stand of faithfulness to the Lord God that has echoed down through the ages.

There are many ways in which we'll be offered the royal food and fine wine of our age. And the question is, will we have the courageous faith to draw the line & say "My loyalty is with the Lord, in spite of anything go wrong in my life"? In Australia one of the important areas that we need to draw the line in at the moment is in the areas of sexuality and gender and marriage. In Australia traditional marriage between a man and a woman is no longer very honoured. Same sex marriage has been legalised and homosexuality is not just accepted as normal but as right & honourable. Influential people are even undermining the truth that there are just two genders Male and female. The school teachers are being forced to teach about sexuality & gender in a way that is contrary to the Bible. Health care workers are given what is called diversity training to educate them out of old fashioned ideas that there are only 2 genders. As time goes on Christians are being more pressured to give up being faithful to the Lord's teaching on such things. It’s becoming harder and costly to draw the line and resolve to serve the Lord faithfully.

Here in India of course you have even greater and more dangerous struggles and challenges. Like Daniel and three friends, we find ourselves in exile facing tough and costly decisions. Decisions with consequences, the question is, will we have the courageous faith to draw the line and say "My loyalty is with the Lord, come what may"? That sounds hard which is why we need to keep remembering the main lesson of this chapter.

The Lord: The 4 young men are definitely great examples but again the focus of our passage is not so much on their faith but on the rule of the Lord. And we can see the firstly in v9, Now God had caused the official to show favour and compassion to Daniel”

The men may be alone in Babylon exiled, in the royal court, at the mercy of Nebuchadnezzar but the Lord rules in exile. And his rule is both big & small, Not only does he bring invading armies, but also he works in the heart of Babylonian officials. Isn't that encouraging? The Lord exercises his complete rule in both the big and the small in the hearts of government officials, and neighbours. Whenever we feel alone and outnumbered, whenever we feel powerless and afraid. We do well to remember that the Lord who ruled in Babylon and worked in the heart of a Babylonian official, he rules now here and everywhere you go.

And you know that he can work in the hearts of everyone you talk with? So stand firm. Don't compromise. Don't be afraid to be loyal to the Lord. For he rules; he rules India; he rules the school your children go to; he rules over your neighbourhood; he rules over your churches; he rules over your families and his rule is powerful! The Lord's sovereignty is the foundation of courageous faith. Of course it may well take some wisdom for you to know where to draw the line in each circumstance. We'll need to pray about and keep learning the word of God in the Bible; we'll need to help each other figure it out. Sometimes it won't be straight forward; we’ll need to decide whether we can go along with what's happening like Daniel & the others seemingly accepting the name change, but at some point we'll need to take a stand like they did with the food. And it will be risky we'll need wisdom and courage. And the fuel for such courage is to be convinced that the Lord rules in our situation. That's the encouragement of what happens next in this chapter.

1:15 At the end of the ten days they looked healthier and better nourished than any of the young men who ate the royal food. 16 So the guard took away their choice food and the wine they were to drink and gave them vegetables instead.

Isn't that terrific! I figure it must have been the Lord because there's no way that vegetables alone could have that effect? I can't believe that! But the Lord rules in exile! And the Lord didn't just look after their health.

1:17 To these four young men God gave knowledge and understanding of all kinds of literature and learning. And Daniel could understand visions and dreams of all kinds.

That's going to be really important in the rest of the book, but notice again “God gave”. If you'd been there in the royal court you would have assumed that the boys were just really good learners but unseen, it’s the Lord at work. The Lord who makes everything works out according to his plan. And then after 3 years, the moment arrives; the boys come before the King.

20 In every matter of wisdom and understanding about which the king questioned them, he found them ten times better than all the magicians and enchanters in his whole kingdom.

The Lord rules! In fact notice that it’s the defeated Israelites who were ten times (10x) better than all the Babylonian magicians & enchanters. The Lord rules and He rules in power. It’s a simple lesson that is repeated throughout this chapter (in fact throughout this whole book). But it’s the fundamental lesson that we need to learn in order to live wisely in this hostile world. But of course our chapter doesn't end in v20. There's one more verse left. And we can easily skip it or think that it doesn't matter very much, but actually this last remaining verse has one final very important lesson for us concerning the Lord's rule.

3. THE LORD RULES IN FAITHFULNESS (V21)

21 And Daniel remained there until the first year of King Cyrus.

It seems like quite an incidental thing at first. Just another historical detail in the chapter, but in fact that short seemingly ordinary sentence proclaims the Lord's sovereign faithfulness! For King Cyrus was the Persian King who defeated the Babylonian Empire in 539BC. Babylon which seemed so strong and invincible ended just like every other human empire. And wonderfully in the same way Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon was the Lord's instrument of judgement on his disobedient people.

King Cyrus of Persia was the Lord's chosen instrument of rescue. Under Cyrus, the exiles returned to Judah and the temple was rebuilt. Long before it happened, the Lord had promised it all. Hear the Lord's promise through the prophet Isaiah preaching some 100 years before the exile “I will raise up Cyrus in my righteousness: I will make all his ways straight. He will rebuild my city and set my exiles free, but not for a price or reward, says the Lord Almighty.” (Isaiah 45:13)

Friends, the Lord is not just sovereign, he is faithful to his promises. The Lord is not just all-powerful, he is good, he is trustworthy. And so after the 70 years of exile promised through Jeremiah, the Lord brought down the Babylon Empire through his instrument Cyrus. The Persian Empire and Daniel lived through it all, He begins a teenager and he is an elderly man now as he watches Babylon fall. Daniel is the symbol of the truth that the Lord rules in faithfulness. And the Lord's sovereign grace is the foundation of the courageous faith that is required to live for the Lord in the midst of hostile authority. That was the courageous faith of Daniel. It must be courageous faith too, which perhaps sounds quite daunting. Perhaps you have difficulty imagining yourself courageously taking a stand like Daniel did before Nebuchadnezzar.

Well let me give you one final breath taking encouragement. The very same sovereign faithfulness of the Lord that used Cyrus to achieve his purposes for his people led Jesus, the Son of God, to leave heaven and to come to earth and experience the very hostility of this world towards the Lord and His people. Jesus was handed over to die because of our sins, and he was raised to life to make us right with God. If you want to be convinced that the Lord is powerful and good; Sovereign & gracious look ultimately to the cross & resurrection of Jesus. And Jesus is our ultimate model of courageous faith.

Hear these words from 1Peter 2:23 When they hurled their insults at him, he did not retaliate; when he suffered, he made no threats. Instead, he entrusted himself to him who judges justly.” Friends, the same courageous faith we see in Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael & Azariah we see perfectly in Jesus. And Jesus in his death & resurrection defeated the evil one who stands behind every expression of opposition to the Lord and his kingdom on his people. The Lord Jesus is risen and reigns, He is the King of kings and Lord of Lords! That promise of Jesus that I began with from John 16 I left off the end of the promise “... In this world you will have trouble." (Jn 16.33)

Do you know what Jesus says next? “...But take heart! I have overcome the world.” (John 16:33) And through faith in Jesus we are connected to that courageous faith, his Spirit dwells in us growing within us such courageous faith so that like him we too might entrust ourselves to the sovereign Lord who judges justly. The Lord is sovereign, the Lord is good, trust him, give him your loyalty, and take your stand. May God Bless You!


[i] Daniel's absence from the tale of Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego suggests that it may originally have been an independent story. The Hebrew names of Daniel's friends were Hananiah (חֲנַנְיָה ănanyāh), "Yah is gracious", Mishael (מִישָׁאֵל Mîšā’êl), "Who is what El is?" and Azariah (עֲזַרְיָה Ǎzaryāh), "Yah has helped", but by the king’s decree they were assigned Chaldean names, so that Daniel became Beltheshazzar (בֵּ֣לְטְשַׁאצַּ֗ר Belteshazzar), Hananiah became Shadrach (שַׁדְרַך Šara), Mishael became Meshach (מֵישַׁ֖ךְ Mêša) and Azariah became Abednego (עֲבֵ֣דנְג֑וֹ Ǎḇê-Nəḡō). Shadrach's name is possibly derived from Shudur Aku "Command of Aku (the moon god)", Meshach is probably a variation of Mi-sha-aku, meaning "Who is as Aku is?", and Abednego is either "Slave of the god Nebo/Nabu" or a variation of Abednergal, "Slave of the god Nergal." The Chaldean names are related to the Hebrew names, but the name of a heathen god has replaced that of Yahweh. The word "Dura" (where the statue is erected) means simply "plain" or "fortress" and is not any specific place; the Greek historian Herodotus mentions a golden image of the god Bel in Babylon, but the gigantic size of this statue might suggest that its origins lie in folklore. The statue's dimensions (6×60 cubits) are linked intertextually with those of Ezra–Nehemiah's Second Temple (60×60 cubits), suggesting that the king's image is contrasted with the post-exilic place of worship for faithful Jews like Daniel.
 

Credit: The Devotion was delivered by Rev. Paul Sheely @ PTC Trainers’ Training in Carmel Conference Centre, Salem on June 21, 2019.


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