Chapter 2:
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| Gill
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| Matthew Henry
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Ezekiel Hosea
Daniel 2
The
position of Nebuchadnezzar and Daniel
On the other hand, we see
in the second chapter the mighty king of the Gentiles
made the depositary of the history of the Gentiles, and
of God's entire plan, as the recipient of these divine
communications; yet in such a manner as to exhibit
Daniel, the captive child of Israel, the faithful one who
kept himself separate in Babylon as the one whom the Lord
acknowledged, and who enjoyed His favour. But the details
of this chapter, as a general picture of Gentile power,
beginning with the dominion bestowed on Nebuchadnezzar,
must be considered more attentively.
The great image
We may first observe that
the Gentile kingdoms are seen as a whole. It is neither
historical succession nor moral features with respect to
God and man, but the kingdoms all together forming, as it
were, a personage before God, the man of the earth in the
eye of Godglorious and terrible in his public
splendour in the eyes of men. Four imperial powers were
to succeed each other, as the great head of which God had
set up Nebuchadnezzar himself. There should be in certain
respects a progressive deterioration; and at length the
God of heaven would raise up another power that would
execute judgment on that which still existed, and cause
the image to disappear from off the earth, setting up in
its place a kingdom that should never be overthrown. In
the progressive decline in principle and character of
imperial power there would be no diminution of material
strength. Iron, that breaks in pieces and crushes all
things, characterises the fourth power. The peculiar
excellency of the head of gold appears to me to consist
in its having received authority immediately from God
Himself. In fact the absolute authority of the first
power was founded on the gift of the God of heaven; the
others succeeded by providential principles. But God,
known as supreme, bestowing authority on the head,
replacing His own authority on the earth by that of the
head of the Gentiles, was not the immediate source of
authority to the others. Babylon was the authority
established of God. And therefore we found in Ezekiel
(and the same thing is seen elsewhere) that the judgment
of Babylon is connected with the restoration of Israel
and of the throne of God.
God's sovereignty
as God of heaven
Observe, nevertheless,
that God does not here present Himself as God of earth,
but of heaven. In Israel He was God of the earth. He will
be so again at the restitution of all things. Here He
acts in sovereignty as God of heaven, setting up man, in
a certain sense, in His place on the earth (see v. 37,
38). Although more limited, it is a dominion
characterised by the same features as that of Adam. It
differs in that men are placed under his power; it is
more limited, for the sea is not included in his
sovereignty, but it reaches to every place where the
beasts of the field and the fowls of the heaven exist.
Human strength is found at the end of its history; but
the subsisting power is much more remote from the ancient
relationship of God with the world.
The mixture of
iron and potter's clay; God's indestructible kingdom
The mixture of iron and of
potter's clay is a change wrought in the primitive
character of the imperial Roman poweranother
element is introduced into it; the character remains in
part, but another element is added. The energetic will of
man is not there in an absolute manner. It is the
introduction into the imperial Roman power of an element
distinct from that which constituted its imperial
strength, namely, the will of man devoid of
consciencemilitary and popular power concentrated
in one individual without conscience. There are two
causes here of weaknessdivision and the want of
coherence between the elements. The kingdom (v. 41) shall
be divided, and (v. 42) it shall be partly strong and
partly brittle. The "seed of men" is, I think,
something outside of that which characterises the proper
strength of the kingdom. But these two elements will
never combine. It appears to me that the Barbaric or
Teutonic element is probably here pointed out as added to
that which originally constituted the Roman empire. The
fact of a subdivision is seen in verse 43. It is then
announced that, in the days of these last kings, He who
rules from heaven will set up a kingdom that cannot be
shaken, and that shall never pass into other hands. This
is properly the only kingdom that, on God's part, takes
the place of the kingdom of Babylon. The God of heaven
had established Nebuchadnezzar in his kingdom, and had
given him power, and strength, and glory, making all men
subject to him. Doubtless the three others had followed,
according to the will of Him who orders all things. But
it is only with respect to the kingdom of verse 44, that
it is once more said, "the God of heaven shall set
up a kingdom." The character, and some leading
features in the history, of the last four of the kingdoms
are given. Nothing but the existence of the two preceding
ones is stated, except the inferiority of the latter of
the two to the first. So that the Spirit of God gives us
the divine establishment of the first, the character of
the fourth, and the divine establishment of the fifth or
final kingdom.
The kingdom of
Christ destroying the last form of power and filling the
whole earth
We will now observe the
manner in which this last kingdom is established; and we
see that it is accomplished by means of a judicial and
destructive act which reduces the image to powder,
bringing about its complete dissolution, so that no
traces of it are left (v. 34, 35). The instrument of this
destruction was not formed by the wisdom or the schemes
of man. It is "cut out without hands." It does
not act by a moral influence that changes the character
of the object on which it acts. It destroys that object
by force. It is God who establishes it and gives it that
force. The stone does not gradually increase in size to
displace the image. Before it extends itself, it destroys
the image. When it has become greatit is not merely
a right given by God over men, it fills the whole
earthit is the exalted seat of a universal
authority. It is on the last form of power, exhibited in
the image, that the stone falls with destructive
forcewhen the empire is divided and is partly
strong and partly weak on account of the elements of
which its members are composed. We may observe, that it
is not God destroying the image in another way to
establish the kingdom. The kingdom which He is
establishing smites the feet of the image as its first
act. It is the outward and general history of that which,
by God's appointment, took the place of His throne and
His government in Jerusalem, and which had gradually
degenerated in its public character with respect to God,
and which at length comes to its end by the judgment
executed by the kingdom established of God without human
agency. The kingdom of Christ, which falls on the last
form of the monarchy formerly established by God,
destroys the whole form of its existence, and itself
fills the world.
The four
monarchies named
I have nothing particular
to say on the four monarchies. We find Babylon, Persia,
and Greece named in the book, as being already known to
the Jews, and the Romans introduced by the name which
their territory bore, the coasts of Chittim; so that I
receive, without further question, the four great empires
ordinarily recognised by every one as pointed out in this
prophecy. It does not appear to me that these prophecies
leave room for any doubt on the subject.
The effect of
God's communications on Nebuchadnezzar
The effect of the
communication, which proves that God is with the remnant
who alone understand His mind, is that the haughty
Gentile acknowledges the God of Israel as supreme in
heaven and on earth. That which characterises the remnant
here is that God reveals to them His mind.
Chapter 2:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Ezekiel Hosea
This version of Darby's Synopsis of the Old Testament is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1995 by L. Hodgett. Used by permission. The files of the Synopsis found on this site may not be reproduced without permission from L. J. L. Hodgett, Stem Publishing. A special thanks to L. J. L. Hodgett and Stem Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Darby's Synopsis of the Old Testament.
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