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The Beasts and The Kingdom

Topic: #39 of 737 for Sermons on Kingdom of God
Scripture: Daniel 7:1-7:28
Denomination: *Other
Date Added: February 2005
Audience: General Adults (31 - 49)
Keywords: none (Suggest a Keyword)
Singing the Songs of The Lord In a Strange Land February 20, 2005
Daniel 7
The Beasts and the Kingdom

You think you’ve had some bad dreams! Daniel’s dream is weird and wonderful to us, and terrifying to him!

You can imagine seeing these things before the days of monster movies and the like. It is likely an understatement when he writes that he was deeply troubled in his thoughts and his face turned pale. The Message - "And there it ended. I, Daniel, was in shock. I was like a man who had seen a ghost. But I kept it all to myself.”

You might not be as disturbed as Daniel, but at least wondering what this all means, why its in the Bible and how it applies today.

As we take a look at the big picture of this chapter I think we’ll get a great look at the big picture of history and the future and how we are to live in light of that big picture.

The Dream

Up to this point, Daniel has interpreted other people’s dreams, but now, God gives him his own disturbing dream. It is just after Nebuchadnezzar has died and Babylon is ruled by Belshazzar. Nebuchadnezzar reigned powerfully, and by the end he had begun to serve God. Belshazzar is a weak ruler by comparison and has no interest in God.

In his dream Daniel sees the sea whipped up into a frenzy by the four winds. While we often think of the sea as a peaceful spot where we go for a vacation, the people of Daniel’s day saw it as a place of chaos and destruction. If you could imagine how those who have survived the tsunami regard the sea, you might come close to how ancient people regarded the physical/spiritual power of the sea. In Revelation 21 we find this verse describing paradise “Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and there was no longer any sea.” (“But I like the sea!” You might say) It is a metaphorical image that says there is an end to chaos and destruction.

Daniel’s dream of the sea is even more chaotic in that the four winds are whipping the sea into a frenzy. Out of this frenzy come four grotesque beasts. Daniel tries to describe them the best he can – the fact that they are described as mixtures of creatures is even more grotesque to the original readers – Jewish people who wouldn’t even plant different varieties of seed in the same field, nor would they yoke an ox with a donkey. To get to the emotions that Daniel felt seeing these beasts, you might think of the latest monster movie Alien vs. Predator. I haven’t seen this one, but both those guys gave me the willies in the first movies. And just as those monsters seemed undefeatable in the movies, the beasts in Daniel’s dream seem all powerful.

The first beast is probably the least worrisome – As the Angel said, the beasts relate to earthly kingdoms, This beast likely relates to Babylon, specifically under Nebuchadnezzar’s rule. He starts as a lion with wings, and ends as a humanoid with a human heart. Nebuchadnezzar ends his rule as a Gentile king who serves God.

The next beast is a ravenous bear, lurching from side to side

The third beast is a four-headed panther with four wings, given authority to rule

The fourth is the worst – we are given more description, and less, all the same. We don’t know the shape of the beast, except that it has huge iron teeth, It devoured its victims or trampled them. It had ten horns,
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