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The Writing on the Wall

Bradley Boydston  65 Bradley Boydston sermons

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Scripture: Daniel 5:1-5:30
Date Added: September 2002
Audience: General Young Adults (19 - 30)
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You’ve heard the expression "Deja vu all over again."

Well, that’s what our text in Daniel 5 reminds me of.

Doesn’t this episode seem to be a lot like the stories we’ve already read in Daniel? I don’t mean the details – obviously this isn’t the same king as before chapters – but the pattern is the same through out the first five chapters.

Chapter 3 is a little bit of an exception but in some ways it fits in, too.

The king has some kind of supernatural encounter – a revelation. He can’t understand it so he calls on his pagan advisors. They, too, are clueless. But then Daniel comes on the scene.

God gives him the interpretation. The puzzle is solved and the king praises the God of the Jews, declaring that he is the sovereign God.

Except in chapter 5 it doesn’t turn out that way. More about that in a minute.

The King in chapter 5 is named Belshazzar.

From other sources we know that Nebuchadnezzar died in 562 B.C., succeeded by his son Amel-Marduk, a.k.a. "Evil-merodach" in 2 Kings 25. Except he wasn’t evil. That was just his name.

He is noted in 2 Kings 25 for his kindness to the Jewish King in exile.

Amel-Marduk ruled for only about 2 years. He was executed by his successor Neriglissar, who ruled for about six years.

Neriglissar was succeeded by his son, Labashi-Marduk, who reigned only a few months before he was killed in a coup d’etat.

The king who came into power at that point was Nabonidus, known as the last king of the Babylonians.

However, near the end of his reign, Nabonidus lived away from the capital at his country estate. His son served as a co-regent – holding down the fort in Babylon. And that son was named Belshazzar.

Now, I mention all of this, and tie my tongue up over all their names, to highlight the fact that this was
not a very stable period. Kings were coming and going -- not always peacefully.

Also, Daniel was no longer a young man at this point. The scholars who have plotted out all of the regimes suggest that Daniel was around the age of 80 at the time of the story in chapter 5.

In this story Belshazzar is throwing a party.

He had to have been aware of the fact that the Medes were closing in on the city. But he throws a party for his buddies and his wives and concubines.

He calls for the holy goblets that his forefather Nebuchadnezzar had taken from the temple in Jerusalem years and years earlier.

And they begin to party, drinking wine from the sacred goblets, as they were getting loaded.

Suddenly, verse 5 says, “they saw the fingers of a human writing on the plaster wall of the king’s palace, near the lamp stand. The king himself saw the hand as it wrote, and his face turned pale with fear. Such terror gripped him that his knees knocked together and his legs gave way beneath him.”

This appears to be a euphemistic expression meaning that he wet his pants and more. He was freaken out!

The mysterious finger wrote four words on the wall.

vs. 7 – "The king shouted for the enchanters, astrologers, and fortune-tellers to be brought before him. He said to these wise men of Babylon, ’Whoever can read this writing and tell me what it means will be dressed in purple robes of royal honor and will wear a gold chain around his neck. He will become the third ... next page »

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