The tenth chapter of Daniel introduces the final vision received from one with the โappearance of a man.โ The vision is described in detail in chapter 11, and it includes verbal links to the bookโs preceding visions. It begins by expanding on the vision of the โGoatโ with a โprominent hornโ that overthrew the โRamโ and the division of the Greek empire into four โlesser kingdoms.โ
Continue reading “Final Vision – Introduction”Tag: Daniel
The Missing 70 Weeks
The book of Revelation never refers to the โseventy weeksโ prophecy in Daniel, directly or indirectly, a passage in the Hebrew Bible that is foundational to the chronologies and expectations of many interpretations of Revelation, a rather striking omission.
Yet several passages in Revelation are connected to the โseventy weeksโ in popular interpretations, and often, it is the basis for last days chronologies and event sequences. For example:
Continue reading “The Missing 70 Weeks”The Final Week – Abomination
The period of โseventy weeksโ concludes with several unanswered questions, but the prophecy is not the end of the matter. Clear verbal links connect it to the visions of chapters 7 and 8, and to the subsequent vision in chapter 11. It is one part of a larger whole. The complete picture becomes clear only when all the visions of Daniel are considered.
Continue reading “The Final Week – Abomination”After Sixty-Two Weeks
The final โweekโ culminates in the desecration of the Temple and the cessation of the daily burnt offerings. In Daniel, the focus is on the sanctuary and its ritual pollution. The described events occurred in Jerusalem, most pivotally, the โabomination that desolates.โ The latter was installed by the figure who โcorruptsโ many of the โpeople.โ
Continue reading “After Sixty-Two Weeks”The First Sixty-Nine Weeks
Next, the angel briefly describes the first sixty-nine โweeksโ of the prophecy. As he declared, โseventy weeks are divided upon your people and upon your holy city.โ After presenting the redemption that will be realized by the end of the period, he explains its three subdivisions of โseven weeks,โ โsixty-two weeks,โ and finally, โone week.โ
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