Click for more

Saturday, 26 March 2016

"The Coming of the Son of Man"

Rev. Carl Haak




What is your hope for the future?
I did not ask, What should be your hope? What is your hope? What is it that you have set your eye upon? What is it that your heart desires above everything else? And toward what are you preparing and directing your life today? Is it in terms of the good life, a good-paying joy, the ability to afford all that you ever wanted? Or is it in terms of personal goals: success, advancement in a certain field, honor, renown? Or, perhaps, it is in term of family: children, marriage, seeing your children and grandchildren doing well, happy, successful?
What is it that is your hope for the future?
The Bible says that when you take the Word of God as a knife and open up the heart of a child of God, you will find that in that heart there beats one great hope. That hope is the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ - the one, visible, final coming of Jesus Christ at the end of the world. That is the hope of the child of God.
David already had that hope in the Old Testament. In II Samuel 23:5 he says, "for this is all my salvation, and all my desire." He is referring there to the day that Christ would come, a morning without clouds, the day in which the Bible says God shall be all and in all.
We also read in the book of Revelation, as the Bible comes to its close, that the prayer of the church is this: "Come, Lord Jesus, come quickly."
The hope of the child of God is the coming of Jesus Christ. Christ comes once more. He comes not to establish any type of earthly kingdom on this earth. He comes in judgment. He comes at the end of time. He comes to judge the wicked world. He comes to raise the bodies of all men. He comes to bring His church home and to build for it the final kingdom, the new heavens and the new earth.
Is that your hope?
Jesus spoke of that hope and He spoke of His coming. He spoke of it especially in Matthew 24 and in Mark 13, passages that have been called the Lord's sermon on the end of the world, or the signs of His second coming. In Mark 13 He is speaking of the end of the world and of His coming again. His main object in the sermon is to establish His children in good hope. He tells us in that chapter of many hard and extremely difficult days of deception and persecution which lie ahead for the church. He says that His true believers will be hated of all men. They will be persecuted, and false prophets will constantly be trying to seduce them and draw them from the faith. The Lord says, It will appear as if my church and my gospel are all but defeated. My people shall appear to be scattered. On every side the false gospel and the evil world apparently will have the upper hand. But, He says, your courage must not fail. Even when you see the church scattered and the elect as if they are going to be swept off the earth and false doctrines being embraced, I am coming and My elect shall all be gathered to me in eternal glory. He says to us in that chapter, turn your eyes and set your hope and fix your heart upon My coming.
I would like to speak to you for a few moments on this glorious truth of the coming of the Son of man as Jesus speaks of it in Mark 13:24. "But in those days, after that tribulation, the sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and the stars of heaven shall fall, and the powers that are in heaven shall be shaken. And then shall they see the Son of man coming in the clouds with great power and glory. And then shall he send his angels, and shall gather together his elect from the four winds, from the uttermost part of the earth to the uttermost part of heaven." The Lord tells us that He is going to return immediately after the great tribulation of His church. We read, "But in those days, after that tribulation…." And when we compare it to Matthew 24, we read this: immediately after the tribulation of those days, that is, following close on the heels of that tribulation.
There is in the mind and will of Jesus Christ the need for His church to undergo great testing and trial on the earth. He will come immediately after that tribulation, but not until that tribulation has taken place. We read in Revelation 6:11 that the glorified saints who have been martyred for the cause of Christ are under the altar crying out, "How long, O Lord, holy and true. Dost thou not avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth?" And the answer is this: "White robes were given unto every one of them; and it was said unto them, that they should rest yet for a little season, until their fellow-servants also and their brethren, that should be killed as they were, should be fulfilled."
The Bible teaches us that the measure of suffering appointed of God for His church must be fulfilled. The sufferings of Christ in us must be filled up. According to God's inscrutable wisdom, individually in your own life as a child of God, but also for the church as a body, there is a certain amount of sufferings which is necessary. We read in I Peter 5:10, "But the God of all grace, who hath called us unto his eternal glory by Christ Jesus, after that ye have suffered a while, make you perfect, stablish, strengthen, settle you."
The Bible says that the wicked are also filling up a cup, a cup of iniquity. "To fill up their sins alway: for the wrath is come upon them to the uttermost" (I Thess. 2:16). And from that cup they shall drink to all eternity. That iniquity of the world is measured in its depths, not by the outward, vile deeds that men commit, but especially in terms of a rejection of the Christ of God. "This is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light" (John 3:19). The persecution of the church is motivated by the hatred of Jesus Christ. So when the suffering of the church is fulfilled, the cup of sin of the wicked reaches its brim.
We do not know when all of this will happen, that is, when that measure is attained. Scripture gives to us very clear ideas of the signs of the times, of the signs of the return of the Lord. There shall be the increase in wickedness. There shall not be a kingdom of Christ on this earth. No, there shall be an increase in wickedness. But we know this, that when it appears as if the true church of God is all but driven off the earth and man has turned his vengeance upon that church, and when the days, as Jesus says in this chapter of Mark, must be shortened for the elect's sake or there would be no flesh saved alive, it is then, immediately, that Christ shall come.
Because the coming of Christ is the great event toward which everything is directed by God right now, because it is the goal of God's eternal purposes in Christ, that coming of Christ will, therefore, be accompanied by the shaking of the creation. We read that Jesus said, "The sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light. And the stars of heaven shall fall, and the powers that are in heaven shall be shaken." The powers of the heaven refer to God's hand upholding the stars right now and the heavens in a regular way. The power which staggers man's mind, the power which keeps all things in existence, that power, that orderly power of God, shall be disrupted. And God, by His mighty hand, shall cast it all down. There shall be darkness. The sun and the moon shall be darkened, we read. There shall be the disruption of the universe. Stars shall fall and leave their courses. There shall be the great disruption of the creation by the hand of God because God will come in judgment. When Jesus comes, the world as it is now shall be destroyed.
The most frightening for a man without God is to see the world destroyed about him. Everything which he could use to turn from God is taken away. Everything that he bases his courage upon is taken away. And he must stand before God.
When Jesus comes, there shall be the great shaking of the created world. God shall shake it up and burn it in fire. And Christ shall create the new heavens and the new earth wherein righteousness shall dwell. Hear God's Word.
In our Lord's first coming, in the womb of the virgin Mary, when He took up His residence among us, He came meek and lowly. He came to perform the obedience to the divine law of God for us. That obedience took Him to the cross, where He suffered and died for our sins. He came the first time doing the will of the Father and, so to speak, there was not even a little twitch in the world. Apart from the heavenly angels over the fields of Bethlehem, and a handful of shepherds, no one took notice. The bustling crowds did not pause. Rome and Caesar considered it to be simply another day as usual. People ate, drank, washed, went to bed. The very Son of God, by whom all things were created and who holds all things in His hands, came into our flesh. There was only the mooing of cattle and the sighs and the groans of the virgin Mary in childbirth. And the world went on its way.
But when our Master comes again, heaven will be shaken, stars shall fall. The sun shall not give her light, earth shall be broken on her foundations and mountains cast into the sea. For He shall appear as the Lord of glory. And you shall know Him, the One who suffered and died and rose again and to whom you belong now by His grace. His eyes, though brilliant and bright, will smile upon you. You will rush out, amid all the terrors around you, into His arms. But, and hear the warning today, those who do not know Him as Savior and Lord and do not His will, they shall flee from Him whose eyes are as fire. And they shall cry, "Hide us from the wrath of the Lamb."
When Jesus comes it will be glorious. It is the moment for which you are being prepared. It is the moment for which we have been saved. We shall go out to meet Him and cry, "All hail! Glory, laud, and honor to Thee, Redeemer, King."
Jesus shall come personally and bodily. We read, "And then shall they see the Son of man coming in the clouds with great power and glory." Jesus speaks there of Himself as the Son of man, referring to nothing less than His own person, as the Savior. Remember the Christian doctrine. As the Son of man, He is the second person of the Trinity in our flesh. He is Jesus of Nazareth, the Son of man, who was sent of the Father to die and rise again the third day, the very one who offered Himself for us on the cross. He is the risen and ascended Lord in His glorified human nature. He shall come. In His glorified human body the Lord Himself shall descend from heaven (I Thess. 4:16). He is not coming in the last day in His Spirit as He came on the day of Pentecost. He is not coming on the last day through His messengers as He comes right now through the ministers of the gospel who announce His glad tidings. But (Acts 1:11), this same Jesus who was taken up from us into heaven, shall so come as they had seen Him go. The One who walked on the earth, who touched lepers, who wrestled in prayer, who was made like unto us in all things except sin, the One who was crucified, is risen, and is glorified and now at God's right hand - ruling over all! He is coming!
Are you ready?
It will be a public coming. Visible. Notice that up to this point in the 13th chapter of Mark, Jesus has always said, "You." "You shall be hated." "Take ye heed." "Pray ye that your flight be not in the winter." But now He says, "And then shall they see the Son of man coming…." Why does He say that? He does not just say, "Ye shall see Him." But "They shall see Him." Because all shall see Him. The church, waiting for Him, yes. But all shall see Him. "Then shall all the tribes of the earth mourn, and they shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory" (Matt. 24:30). "Behold, he cometh with the clouds; and every eye shall see him, and they also which pierced him: and all kindreds of the earth shall wail because of him" (Rev. 1:7).
There shall be the resurrection of the dead, both good and evil. All nations shall be gathered before Him. Mankind in its entirety shall be assembled. All shall see Him!
When He came the first time in Bethlehem, who saw Him? A few shepherds. God, so to speak, slipped His Son into the world unseen. But in the second coming who will see Him? All! Do you understand that? Does the Word of God say that when He comes only believers will see Him in the rapture? No. There is no such teaching in the Bible. That is the imagination of man. God will not take His church out of the world in secret, but as a great and glorious and conquering host in the presence of the foe. Assembled on the great day, Jesus shall take His church victorious. And He it is that shall tread down our enemies. He comes personally. He comes publicly. And He comes in great power. For all shall see the Son of man, said Jesus, coming in the clouds with power and great glory. What majesty shall be His! He shall come upon the clouds. The clouds in Scripture are often a symbol of the presence and majesty of God. You remember that God led Israel by a pillar of cloud by day and fire by night which He put between Israel and Egypt to protect Israel. It was the cloud which was a figure of His own glory as He descended upon the tabernacle.
Christ's coming will be majestic. Against the darkness of the sky - for the sun shall not shine - and amid the rubble of the universe, the Son of man in all of His beauty and power shall appear. That is why every eye shall see Him. They shall see Him in power, the very opposite of weakness. They shall see Him in glory, the outshining of all of His perfections.
No wonder Paul could say in Titus 2:13 that we look "for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ." No wonder he could say in II Thessalonians 1 that when Christ comes He shall be admired of all the saints. What is our hope? Our hope is not that we are going to be snatched away in some rapture when things get too hot. But our hope is this: I shall see Him for myself. Whether I am yet alive or need to be raised from the dead, I shall see Him face to face. The mighty and the terrible One, the risen Lord, the avenger of the elect, the Shepherd of His sheep.
So Jesus could say in Mark 14:62 to Caiaphas, that He was indeed the Son of God and "ye shall see the Son of man sitting on the right hand of power, and coming in the clouds of heaven." Think of it! All the toil and all the struggles that we have gone through will be recompensed and rewarded. The cross of afflictions and trials that we bear will be lifted by the Savior's own hands. He will wipe away all tears from our eyes. He shall brush the dirt of the battle from our clothes. And He will say, "Come with Me, My beloved."
Why does He come? He comes to gather the elect. Then shall He send His angels, we read. And they shall gather together His elect from the four winds, from the uttermost parts of the earth, even to the uttermost part of heaven. The elect, they are those whom God has chosen to their salvation. Yet they are scattered over all the earth. No matter where they are on the earth, God shall find them. He shall send His angels to take them to Himself. The focal point of salvation of the elect is when Christ comes and we shall be with Him. That shall be the day of final division. For the angels shall gather the elect. But they shall condemn all unbelievers to eternal hell. Every sinner marked out in his unbelief shall be destroyed. Every proud and indifferent sinner, every smug sinner, every "it doesn't make any difference - I've got tomorrow" sinner shall be destroyed. But every sinner, chosen of His grace, redeemed in His blood, brought to faith and repentance, loved of God shall be gathered to Himself. He is coming.
Today many people have opinions about Jesus Christ. Some say He is a good man. Some say, a noble leader. Others say, a myth. In that day when He comes, there will be just one opinion: He is the mighty Son of God, Lord of all. Today many ridicule His claims. They say, Prince of Peace, Savior? Look at the world with its wars and crime and unrest. He is a failure. But who ever said that He came to bring peace, earthly peace, on the earth? No, this is why He came: "And he shall save his people from their sins" (Matt. 1:21). He did not come to make this world a utopia. He came to be glorified in the elect and chosen, repentant believers. He will come to save His sheep. He shall establish the new heavens and the new earth in righteousness, where righteousness shall dwell. And in that day that He comes for us, He will make us perfectly spotless, raised with new bodies, without one blemish. And in those bodies, reunited with our souls, we shall serve Him day and night in His temple.
Is that your hope? Are you living in such a way that you are ready now? Then hear His word. Christ says, "I come. I come to be glorified in you. I will never forget you. I have chosen to dwell with you to all eternity. And soon, now, very soon, I come." Do you hear Him? I can't wait!

Let us pray.
Come, Lord Jesus. Yea, come quickly. Amen.

Daniel in the Lions’ Den Is NOT Just a Story for Children Daniel, Chapter 6

Lorraine Day, M.D.

9-2-06

31  And Darius the Mede received the kingdom, being about sixty-two years old.
6: 1  It pleased Darius to set over the kingdom a hundred and twenty satraps that should be over the whole kingdom.
2   And over these three chancellors, Daniel being one of them.  These satraps shall be reporting on their decrees to the three of them, so no damage will be done to the king’s administration.
If we look back at Chapter 3, the account of the three young Israelites who refused to bow down to King Nebuchadnezzar’s statue of gold, we remember that history tells us that before that time there apparently had been some dissension in the kingdom.  Nebuchadnezzar had called together ALL of his administrators throughout the known world, all of which was under the control of Babylon.
They were called together to give complete allegiance to the king under the penalty of death in the fiery furnace.
Now, in Chapter 6, we are told that these 120 satraps, or administrators, were to be not only governing their various districts in the kingdom, but they were also to report to the three top men in the kingdom, one of which was Daniel, what was going on in their district, so “no damage will be done to the king’s administration.”  This was the king’s way of gaining knowledge of any insubordination or uprising in his kingdom.
3   Then this Daniel is set permanently over the chancellors and satraps, forasmuch as an excellent spirit is in him; and the king thought to set him over the whole realm.
“Only one of the three chancellors, because of his excellent spirit, finds great favor with Darius and he soon is placed at their head.  We would probably call him the “prime minister,” even though this was his permanent position. . . It was natural for Daniel to take the lead at first because of his knowledge and experience.  The spirit in which he conducted himself in his office appealed so strongly to the king that his temporary position was made permanent.”  Concordant Studies in the Book of Daniel, p 148,149
It is not difficult to understand how the other chancellors would become jealous of Daniel.  Daniel was not only a holdover from the previous administration – Babylon – the enemy that the Medes had just conquered, Daniel was not even a Babylonian, he was an Israelite, a former prisoner taken in the conquest of Palestine.  Why should he get the TOP job in Medo-Persia?  Especially with 120 satraps drooling for advancement to the top echelon!
As is the nature of mankind, both then and now, the chancellors and satraps begin a CONSPIRACY to destroy Daniel.  Mankind has NOT changed.
4  Then the chancellors and satraps sought to find a pretext against Daniel in regard to the administration of the kingdom.  Yet no pretext or corruption at all could they find, forasmuch as he was faithful and no carelessness or corruption at all is found in him.
For those in this day, who are so ignorant, or so naïve, or so unrealistic to believe that “Conspiracies” do not exist in government today, I can only pray for them.  Conspiracies in government have been occurring since Nimrod and the tower of Babel.  Certainly, as we see above, king Nebuchadnezzar had found dissension (a conspiracy) in his kingdom.  That’s why he called all his administrators together to bow down and give allegiance to him and his statue.
Now we see that the administrators of the kingdom of Medo-Persia have entered into a Conspiracy against Daniel.
EVERY nation and kingdom that has ever existed on the face of the earth has been rife with conspiracies.  Our history books tell us of ruling kings, and even heirs to thrones, who had all his brothers murdered, so he could be – or remain – king.
For anyone to suggest that there are NO Conspiracies in government now, that things “just happen” because of the ineptitude of government, is naïve indeed!
5  Then these masters are saying, “We will not find any pretext against this Daniel, except we find it against him concerning the law of his God.”
Not only do we have a Conspiracy in the making, but one that involves religious persecution.  The State will try to exert its authority over the conscience of the individual.  This is exactly what is on the verge of happening in America.
6  Then these chancellors and satraps gather together and go to the king, and say unto him, “King Darius, live forever (for the eons.)”
7 All the chancellors of the kingdom, the prefects and satraps, the retinue and the viceroys have consulted together 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, except from you, O king, he shall be cast into the den of lions.
8  Now, O King, establish the decree and sign the writing, so that it cannot be changed, according to the law of the Medes and Persians, which cannot be altered.
9  Wherefore king Darius signed the written decree.

“The elevation of Daniel and his high place in the king’s esteem created jealousy and hatred among the other officials of the court.  They resented being placed under a foreigner, a mere Israelite.  No doubt some of them wanted the highest place themselves. . . It is usually rather easy to find some dereliction of duty or corrupt practice connected with the administration of public office such as Daniel’s, with its many temptations.  But they could not even make the charge of carelessness.  Daniel had been an exemplary official.
“When they could find no occasion against him they plotted to make one.  If they could not do it politically they would do it religiously.  Evidently they knew of Daniel’s faithfulness to God as well as his faithfulness to the king.  To bring these two into collision was the purpose of their plot.  It really was a clever conspiracy, and, humanly speaking, a success.  The king was led into the trap and Daniel was let into the vault of the lions.
“The statute was so flattering to the king that he was blinded to its implications and to the absence of his favorite minister, who should have been present.  It is astonishing how even a little adulation will affect the judgment.  Darius was really being deified for a time, for he accepted a place that God alone can fill.  This is the besetting sin of universal monarchs, and is seen in every one of them.  Nebuchadnezzar, Darius, Alexander, the man of lawlessness—all usurp the functions of the Deity and lead men away from God, in contrast to Christ, Who leads men to Him.”  Ibid, p 150,151
10  Now when Daniel knew that the writing was signed, he went into his house; and his windows being open in his chamber toward Jerusalem.  Thus at stated times, three times in the day, he knelt on his knees and prayed and acclaimed before his God just as he formerly had done.
Nothing can stop a believer from going to God.  A decree against him will only make him fly from it to Him for refuge.  Daniel had been accustomed to retire to his chamber three times a day, at set times, in order to worship and pray to God.
This decree would not stop him.
There are “Christian” groups now that believe that had Daniel lived today, he would have comported himself differently.  “Now we worship in spirit in the presence of the Father at all times and places,” say these theologians, “but in our outward acts we must be subject to the superior authorities.”  They quote Romans 13:1,5 as their reference and say that the government’s laws are God’s mandates.  They claim that Daniel “is no pattern for us in our attitude toward the political authorities.”
They believe that God wants us to obey the political leaders, and if God finds something wrong with the political leaders, He will remove them.
But THEY are WRONG!
God still requires the same faithfulness to Him that Daniel exhibited.  We are NEVER to obey the laws of the land if they cause us to disobey God.  God is certainly sovereign, but He allows despots and evil rulers to be in authority in part to test our commitment to Him. 
These “Christians” need to read and understand the entire Bible.  We are never to obey governmental authority if it causes us to compromise our spiritual principles.
11  Then these men assembled, and found Daniel praying and making supplication before his God.
12  Then they came near, and spoke before the king concerning the king’s decree; “Did you not sign a decree that every man who is petitioning from anyone – whether a god or man – within thirty days, except of you, O king, shall be cast into the den of lions?  The king answered and said, “The thing is true, according to the law of the Medes and Persians, that cannot be changed.
13  Then they answered and said before the king, “That Daniel, who is of the sons of the captivity of Judah, knows no regard for you, O king, nor for the decree that you have signed, but makes his petition three times a day before his God.”

“Now the enemies of Daniel make sure that he does not escape out of their trap.  First they go to Daniel himself, at the proper time, and find that they had not overrated his faithfulness. . . Once more Daniel’s foes make absolutely certain that their plot will not fail.  They fear to accuse Daniel until they have the king’s assurance that the decree prohibiting the making of any petition has his unqualified confirmation.  The king is blind to their machinations, and innocently puts all the stress possible on the certainty and irrevocability of the decree.  ‘Certain is the matter as a decree of the Medes and Persians that cannot be changed.’
“Now that they have the trap set, they spring it.  Daniel is accused not only of disobeying, but of opposing the decree by failing to promulgate it.  Daniel, it seems, did not promulgate this decree, as he should have done, seeing that it came from the king.  Daniel probably saw in it much damage for the king, not only in its disastrous effect upon his subjects, especially his compatriots, the Israelites, but on the king himself, whose vanity and pride and arrogance were being flattered by corrupt politicians, so that he was in danger of usurping the place of the Deity,” that monstrous sin that will be the ultimate downfall of the leaders of the One World Government – the present-day “Babylon” – the New World Order that is totally controlled by the Zionist Jews.
14  Then the king, when he heard the matter, was greatly displeased with himself (literally “in bad odor” to himself.  The Syriac uses the word stink here, which, in Hebrew, is used of the Nile, in the plagues of Egypt, when the fish died (Ex 7:18).  In other words, the king thought the plan that had deceived him “stunk!”), and set his heart on Daniel to deliver him: and he strived till the going down of the sun to deliver him (Daniel).
15  Then these men assembled together and came unto the king, and said to the king, “You know, O king, that the law of the Medes and Persians is, that no decree nor statute that the king establishes may be changed.

“What a contrast there is between the power of the Medo-Persian king and that of the Babylonian kings!  Nebuchadnezzar obeyed no law but his own will (Daniel 5:19).  No official in his kingdom, nor all of them combined, would dare to cross his desires.  That is the way God rules, hence it is figured by the head of gold.  In the hand of the perfect Ruler, it is the ideal form of government.  In Medo-Persia, the power of the monarch was limited by laws that even he dared not break.
“Had Darius been Nebuchadnezzar he would not have been bound by the trick played on him by his corrupt and jealous officials, but would have sent them to the lions instead of Daniel.  What a spectacle to see the great king baffled in his efforts to save a just and deserving official and friend from a cruel and iniquitous conspiracy!  (This brings to mind the weak and compromising Pilate in his treatment of Jesus.)  If the most powerful man in the kingdom cannot get justice, what of the poor and humble?”  Ibid. p 156
This incident gives us an insight into the impotence of governments to do the right thing.
16 Then the king commanded and they brought Daniel, and cast him into the den of lions.  Now the king spoke and said to Daniel, “Your God, Whom you serve continually, He will deliver you.
17  And a stone was brought, and laid on the mouth of the den; and the king sealed it with his own signet ring, and with the signet ring of his lords; that the purpose might not be changed concerning Daniel.
“After the king had exerted himself to the utmost to deliver Daniel and had failed, the bloodthirsty officials pressed their crafty claim.  The king dared not alter his decree, for that would be contrary to the well-known edict.  Finally he gives in.  In his own impotence he turns to Daniel’s God, and utters one of the most remarkable confessions of faith that ever came from the mouth of a heathen monarch.  Even for Daniel, it would have taken great faith to declare his confidence that God would deliver him.  Darius’ failure to find a way seems to have impressed him mightily with his own helplessness.  And this is the best preparation for trust in God. 
“So he says to Daniel, ‘Your God, Whom you serve continually, He will deliver you.”
18  Then the king went to the palace, and spent the night fasting: neither were musicians brought before him, and he could not sleep.
19 Then the king arose very early in the morning, and went in haste unto the den of lions.
20  And when he came to the den, he cried in a staunch voice unto Daniel, O Daniel, servant of the living God, is your God, Whom you serve continually, able to deliver you from the lions?
21  Then said Daniel, O king, live forever.
22  My God has sent His angel and has shut the lions’ mouths, that they have not hurt me; forasmuch as before Him, innocence was found in me,; and also before you, O king, have I done no wrong.
23  Then the king felt enormously relieved, and as to Daniel he says to hoist him up from the vault.  When Daniel is hoisted from the vault, no harm at all is found in him, because he believed in his God.

“When Daniel comes forth he is entirely unharmed because of his faith in God.  He then became one of that vast cloud of witnesses spoken of in Hebrews, Chapter 11, and 12, verse 1, whose deeds are recorded in the noble annals of faith.  No doubt he was in the mind of the author of Hebrews when he tells us of a prophet who, through faith, bars the mouths of lions (Heb 11:33).”  Ibid, p 158
24  Then the king commanded, and they brought those men who had accused Daniel, and they cast them into the den of lions, them, their children and their wives; and the lions overpowered them, and broke all their bones in pieces before they ever came to the bottom of the den.
Those who chose not to believe the story of Daniel in the Lion’s Den might bring up many an explanation why the lions had not devoured Daniel, such as, the were not hungry.  But such attempts to destroy the miracle of his preservation are prevented by the fate that befell his accusers.  They did not even reach the floor of the den before the lions ravenously and powerfully destroyed them.
25  Then Darius the king wrote unto all people, nations, and languages that dwell in all the earth; Peace be multiplied unto you.
26  I make a decree, that in every dominion of my kingdom men must 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.
27  He delivers and rescues, and He works signs and wonders in heaven and in earth, Who has delivered Daniel from the power of the lions.
28  So this Daniel prospered in the reign of Darius, and in the reign of Cyrus the Persian.
“God turned the evil into great good.  The jealousy of the ministers and satraps led them to seek the death of Daniel.  Who would have thought that it would lead to the glorification of God throughout the world?  Such are the wondrous ways of the God of Daniel, Who is also our God!  From the most sordid motives, the most despicable crime, He makes a background to display His wisdom and power to the peoples of the earth. 
“Not only was the aged prophet prospered instead of being destroyed, but God’s name and fame was spread abroad throughout the earth.”  Ibid 159,161

Lessons From This Story For Adults Today

1.    Conspiracies are ALWAYS present in governments, and have been since the beginning of nations.  To suggest that they don’t exist in our government today is just plain silliness.  The Bible is not only a book of history, but it is a compendium of one conspiracy after another.  The story of some individual or some group plotting to steal from, to maim, or to kill, someone else is told repeatedly throughout the Bible, throughout the 4,000 years it chronicles.
The same holds true today.  If one just opens his eyes and seeks for truth, God will lead him into ALL truth, which includes the numerous evil conspiracies occurring in governments all over the world, including the present government of the United States.
The Oklahoma Bombing, 9/11, Waco, Ruby Ridge, are ALL conspiracies by OUR OWN government (and itsMaster – Israel) against us – the citizens of America.  If you don’t believe it, just check out my website atwww.goodnewsaboutgod.com and many other websites on the internet.
2.    Daniel made no attempt to deliver HIMSELF from his fate.  He did not take up arms to try to stop the guards from taking him to his almost certain death.  He did NOT believe in “Self-Defense.”  He left his deliverance to God – as every true Christian should.  If Daniel had tried to take his defense into his own hands, he would have taken himself out from under God’s protection, and most certainly would have been killed by his enemies or devoured by the lions.  If Daniel had taken his defense into his own hands, he would also have eliminated the possibility of God’s miraculous deliverance of Daniel.
3.    If Daniel had heard about the scheme of the conspirators BEFORE they had gone to the king, and had decided to make a PRE-EMPTIVE strike on his enemies, (as the U.S. is doing in Iraq – with the SUPPORT of virtually EVERY “Christian” denomination in America), Daniel would have taken himself out from under God’s protection and would have been under the control of Satan.  He again would have reaped what he had sown.  “God will NOT be mocked.”
4.    If Daniel had chosen to obey the king’s (the government’s) order by hiding his faith by ceasing his prayer to God three times a day, Daniel would have become a hypocrite, denying God, and would again have taken himself out from under God’s protection.  We do not know exactly what would have become of Daniel, but the Bible tells us, “Whatsoever a man sows, that shall he also reap.”
5.    Daniel gave ALL the glory to God!  He took none for himself.
   
© Lorraine Day, M.D. 2006. All Rights Reserved.
This document cannot be reproduced in any form
except for downloading for personal use.