WHY THE CRITICS ASSAIL THE BOOK OF
DANIEL
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Daniel 1:17
11-10-96
That brings back a thousand memories to
me. You know, looking back over my life, I can hardly believe the
providences of God. My first church had 18 members and my salary was $20
a month. And I lived on $20 a month.
And then in those years that followed,
when I was in school for ten years, I lived on about $75 a month. And I
hear these churches calling these pastors and giving them astronomical
salaries. When I came here to this church, my salary was $7,500 a
year.
That was the salary they paid me when I
came to the First Baptist Church in Dallas. Then they raised it to $10,000.
And finally, they raised it to $22,000 a year. And the only reason they
raised it to $22,000 was they were paying the minister of music more than they
were paying me.
But, this, in my life, is a wonderful
illustration of how, if you will love the Lord, don’t think about these other
things. And I never did.
No matter what my salary was, I never
reviewed it. God has been good to Mrs. C and to me beyond any way you can
describe it. And I think the Lord just looked down and said: “You have
trusted Me and worked for Me for the love of God. And I’m going to take
care of you.”
So, we just look to Heaven for all our
necessities. And if we will trust Him, He will not forget us. So,
thank you. God bless you.
Now, we turn to the book of Daniel—the
book of Daniel. And our lecture this morning concerns the gift of
prophecy. The title of the sermon is: Why the Critics Assail the Book
of Daniel.
The subject, as I say, is the wonderful
gift of prophecy. And as we look at the subject, you’re going to learn, I
pray, some wonderful things about our dear Lord.
As a background text, look at Daniel
1:17. Daniel 1:17: “As for these four children, God gave them knowledge
and skill in all learning and wisdom.”
Then turn to chapter two, verse 27:
Daniel answered the king and said, The
secret which the king hath commanded, this secret is from God. . . . For there
is a God in heaven that revealeth secrets, and maketh known to the king what
shall be in the latter days.
All of this is in keeping with what God
does and knows, and He alone. And we’re going to see that this precious
moment.
All right. To start: there is not
a liberal theologian in the world who accepts the authenticity and integrity of
the Book of Daniel. He doesn’t exist. He hasn’t and he’s not going
to be. All deny the authenticity of the Book of Daniel. All declare
it—all of these liberals—declare it a blatant patent forgery. Its
contents are made up of pure fiction. It is a pattern of denial for the
years and the years and the years.
Why this unceasing and vicious attack
against the Book of Daniel? Because of the attempt on the part of modern
rationalism to destroy the supernatural and the prophetic in the Bible.
They have given themselves to make the Bible a human book like any other
book. Consequently, there is no prophecy in it.
They start here with the Book of Daniel
because Daniel, to them, is most vulnerable. Again, whatever else they
may achieve in their destructive criticism, if Daniel is left intact, they have
failed. There are no theses against the supernatural in the Bible that
could stand as long as the Book of Daniel stands. Daniel is a revelation
of the years and the centuries that followed after, which is something that
only God could do.
So, we’re going to speak of prophecy in
the Bible. In the Bible, prophecy is everywhere—throughout the
Bible. It is not incidental. The predictive element, like a
Gulfstream, makes its way from shore to shore through the sacred Word—all of
it.
One writer avows that two-thirds of the
Scriptures are prophetic, symbolic. More than one-half of them are yet to
be fulfilled.
If you have any interest in the future
at all, read the Bible. It will reveal it to you.
Now, look at this. Prophecy is
unique in the Bible. Nowhere else in all literature or in all other
religions is there such a thing as prophecy. All other religious books
contain no predictions as to the future.
And there’s no exception to that.
And you look at this for just a moment.
This
week, I went through books on the Hindu religion, the Bhagavad Gita and the
Upanishads are the sacred books of the Hindus. But, in all of those
books, there is not one reference to the possibility of a prophecy, of what
could happen in the future.
Jainism, with its Angas book and its
Sutra-keit-anga book, has no reference to anything of the future.
All right. Buddhism with its two
sacred books, the Vinaya Pitaka and the Abidhamma Pitaka—there’s nothing in any
of those books about the future.
Sikhism, with its sacred book Grantha—no
syllable of anything about the future.
Confucianism, with its Analects and its
Mencius: their sacred books—not a syllable of anything about the future.
Taoism, with its Tao te King—not a
syllable about the future.
Shinto, the religion universal in
Japan—their two sacred books: Ko-ji-ki and Nihon-gi—no syllable about anything
of the future.
Zoroastrianism, with its sacred book
Avesta—not a syllable prophetic, not anything about the future.
And the Mohammedan religion, Islam, with
its sacred book, the Koran. There’s not a syllable in the Koran about anything
of the future.
The reason for that is very
apparent. All of these sacred books—if their human authors had attempted to
foretell the future, their errors and mistakes and mis-guesses and
un-fulfillment would long ago have discredited their writings.
Only the Bible has prophecy.
There’s none other book existent—certainly, not in the world of religion.
There is no other book that has prophecy. In no small part, the Bible
bases its authority and authenticity and inspiration on prophecy.
You don’t believe it. Then look at
what it says of the future and the fulfillment of those predictions. Take
the word of Jesus. In John 14:29, He says: “I have told you before it
come to pass, that when it comes to pass, you may believe.”
One of the authenticity avowals of the
Word of God is: Just look at it. That’s what Jesus says. If it
comes to pass, God alone could know it.
That’s what Moses says in Deuteronomy,
chapter 18, 21 and 22: If it comes to pass, it’s from God, because men don’t
know the future.
You have the story of Micaiah and
Zedekiah in 1 Kings 22 and in 2 Chronicles 18 and Jeremiah 29. Micaiah
the prophet said: “You’re going into captivity in Babylon.”
And Zedekiah the false prophet said: “It
is idiocy and foolishness what this prophet Micaiah is saying.”
Then, in the story follows the shame
that came to Zedekiah.
Jeremiah, you remember, you can read
this in 28—Jeremiah 28. Jeremiah went around Jerusalem wearing a
yoke. And the reason he was wearing the yoke was because of his prophecy
that Judah was going into captivity in Babylon.
And Hananiah, a false prophet, Hananiah
broke the yoke from off of the neck of Jeremiah saying: “There’s no such thing
as that we are going into captivity into Babylon.” And Hananiah broke the
yoke from off the neck of Jeremiah.
And Jeremiah, in verses 16 and 15,
Jeremiah says: “Not only is Judah going into captivity into Babylon, but
because of what you have done, this year you shall die.” And in two
months, Hananiah was dead.
The whole Bible is like that.
Prophecy is history written in advance. And only God could possess such
knowledge.
In Daniel 2:45, God has made known what
shall come to pass. Prophecy is two-fold. One: it is exhortative,
declarative; and second: it is predictive. The prophets were both
forth-tellers and fore-tellers. They possessed both insight and
foresight.
Their utterances were not the deductions
of reason but were inspired and imparted to them by the Holy Spirit. For
example, in 2 Peter 1:21: “For the prophecies came not from the will of man,
but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Spirit.”
Prophecy is like a great river, making
its way through the Bible. It widens and deepens into veritable oceans
and seas and, finally, is consummated in two apocalyptic books, namely, Daniel
and the Revelation. So, by these infidels and secularists, both of them
are violently attacked, but particularly and especially Daniel.
Well, how do they attack plain
prophecy? It’s right here before you. Just read it and look at it
in history.
What do they say? Well, these
liberals and these modernists and these infidels, they can say of Israel
crossing the Red Sea—and I’ve heard them—“it’s a mistranslation: ‘Red
Sea.’ It’s really the Reed Sea and they just waded through it. It
was only about six inches deep.”
When I read the thing like that, I think:
“Well, how is it that the Egyptian army drowned in a sea of six inches?”
They say of the manna that it was the
common sap oozing from a desert plant. They say of Elijah, and the fire
on Mount Carmel, that it was a chance bolt of lightning. They say of
Jesus’ resurrection: it was a hallucination in the heads of the
disciples. And they say of Paul’s Damascus Road conversion, that it was a
result of an epileptic fit.
That’s what they can say. But,
prophecy that is predictive of the future—that is fulfilled, what can you say
about that?
Well, there was, and I mentioned him
before—there was a brilliant student of Plotinus. They lived about 200
some-odd A.D. And Plotinus headed neo-Platonism. That’s the last
development of Greek philosophy. And he became greatly concerned that the
Christian faith was supplanting Greek philosophy, particularly Platonism.
So, he assigned to the most brilliant
student, I guess, any professor ever had, named Porphyry—he assigned to
Porphyry the task of discrediting the Christian faith. And the way
Porphyry did it was to discredit the Bible. And he gave himself to
showing how the Bible is full of mistakes and errors, and its prophecies were
just imaginative and never true.
In that attempt to destroy the
Christianity that was spreading throughout the Roman Empire, he brought his
assault especially against Daniel. He said it was not prophecy at
all—that it was not written by Daniel. It was not written in B.C. 535,
during the Exile, but was written by some unknown Jew in B.C. 165, during the
time of the Maccabees, after the events had already come to pass.
It was a spurious forgery, Porphyry
says, written 400 years after it says was written. Of course, that was an
insult of the Christian faith. His works were finally destroyed by
Emperor Theodotius.
And these early church fathers, like
Eusebius and Thodius, they just stood up and took what this Porphyry had said
and showed how illogical and unbelievable it was. So, the thing died
out. The attack of Porphyry against Daniel and prophecy in the Bible
abated. For all those years and years thereafter it was largely
overlooked.
Then—and that’s in your lifetime—then,
the modern rationalist, liberal movement that had its birth in higher criticism
of Germany, in their efforts to destroy the Bible as the Word of God—to reduce
it to a common human denominator, they turned to Porphyry after hundreds and
hundreds of years and repeated his vicious attack against the Book of Daniel:
that it is a forgery, that its author lived 400 years after he was supposed to
have lived. And that is universally accepted among liberal minded
theologians today.
I just have the hardest time getting in
my head—realizing such things can come to pass. But, there is not a
liberal theologian in this world that accepts prophecy and accepts the Book of
Daniel.
Well, why would that be a concern to
us? Here’s one reason: Jesus, in Matthew 24:15, Jesus called Daniel “a
prophet.” Jesus did not refer to him as a forger, as deceptive, but Jesus
said: “the prophet Daniel.”
Now, why would the Lord say that?
Why would the Lord describe Daniel as a prophet? Because Daniel is the
indispensable introduction to the New Testament and, especially, to New
Testament prophecy, and, most especially, to the Revelation. Woven into
the warmth and youth of the New Testament is these prophetic revelations.
I wrote down here a quote from Sir Isaac
Newton, who was born in 1642. He wrote: “Observations Upon the Prophecies
of Daniel and the Apocalypse of Saint John”: “Whoever rejects the prophecies of
Daniel does as much as if he undermined the Christian religion itself, which,
so to speak, is founded on Daniel’s prophecies of Christ.”
Now, that’s what Sir Isaac Newton
wrote. These things are vital to us who accept the Word of God and who
believe in their prophetic prognostications about the Lord Jesus.
The Book of Daniel is a classic of the
very highest character. Reading it, again and again, the inspirations of
God’s presence and voice are moving in those pages. This attack upon it
is founded upon the exigencies and necessities of modern infidelity.
The visions of Daniel afford an
unanswerable testimony to the reality of inspiration and the reality of the
supernatural. This voice must be stilled, if these modernist and higher
critics are going to have any acceptance among anybody. These words of prophecy
have to be done away with.
Wherever there is a miracle in the
Bible, they find a natural cause. I just can’t believe this. The
fifty-third chapter of Isaiah is a prophecy of the coming of Christ: He will
bear our burdens. He will save us from our sins. All of the
wonderful things of God are found in this coming Messiah: the death for our
sins, the blood atonement.
All of it is there in the fifty-third chapter
of Isaiah in our Bible: He was wounded for our transgressions. He was
bruised for our iniquities. The chastisement of our peace is upon Him and
with His stripes we are healed.
Well, what do I read about that from
these infidels? They say that doesn’t refer to the Messiah. That
doesn’t refer to Jesus. That doesn’t refer to the Lord at all. That
refers to the Jews. I just have the hardest time even thinking in terms
of what these infidels say about prophecy in the Bible.
Well, we must come to a
conclusion. Now, if the visions of Daniel were truly and verily seen in
the fifth century B.C., in the 600’s and 500’s, skepticism becomes
impossible. You would feel like an idiot—like a fool—to read the prophecy
here and, then, 500 years later it comes to pass.
What do you say about that?
Therefore, the farrago of the attack against the book. It has to be
discredited. The propaganda to degrade the Bible to a level of a human
book found it’s essential to prove that Daniel was written after the events it
possesses to predict.
The attempt is to destroy
prophecy. And if you destroy prophecy, you destroy the Christian
faith. You don’t have it.
Christianity is a revealed religion or
it is nothing at all. For example, Job 11 says man, by searching, cannot
find God. You can just be as smart as you can and go into every
experiment known to the possibility of the human hand, but you won’t God.
God has to reveal Himself. And if
He doesn’t, we don’t know Him, nor can know Him.
The Bible is the record of the
self-disclosure of God. And as I have said, the fact of prophecy
predicting things hundreds of years and, sometimes, thousands of years ahead,
is a substantiation of the inspiration and the truth of the prophetic Word of
God in the Bible. To take that supernatural self-disclosure out of the
Bible is to destroy the Christian religion itself.
The attempt to make the faith nothing
but man’s search for God is to lower it to the level of any other philosophical
or religious system of which the world has too many. But, Christianity is
alone. It is separate. It is unique. It is apart. It is
exalted. It is holy. And this uniqueness can be seen in its
prophetic nature.
Dear me, for example—and I close here—2
Peter 1—and I can’t believe this. In 2 Peter 1, he describes the truth of
Christ Jesus in the fact that they saw it with their eyes. They looked
upon it.
Then, he says again the second time: “We
have an authentication of Christ in the great transfiguration. There are
Peter upon there—who’s the other one on the Mount of Transfiguration?
Peter and Elijah—you have those two on the mount of transfiguration: a glorious
avowal of the beautiful Lord Jesus.
But, Peter says, in chapter 1 of 2
Peter, that, though we have the eyewitnesses of the disciples and the apostles,
and though we have the tributes of Moses and Elijah, yet we have a more sure
word of prophecy. Even the men who looked at Him and saw His miracles,
and talked with Him after the resurrection after the dead—even their testimony
is not equal to that of the prophets who lived back yonder, hundreds of years
before the Lord.
Do you remember Luke 14, when the Lord
Jesus speaks to those to whom He is revealing Himself as raised from the
dead. It says in Luke 24:27: “Beginning at the prophets—beginning at the
prophets—he spoke of the things concerning himself.”
So in Acts 26, before Herod Agrippa, he
avowed the deity and the Saviorhood of Jesus by the prophets. And in Acts
10:13, Peter, in the house of Cornelius says to him: “Give all the prophets
witness.”
I have to close. There’s not
anything in all creation like this Book. And there’s not anything in the
mind or history of mankind like the prophecies that are in this book.
And sweet people, there’s only about a
half of them are fulfilled. More than half of them are ahead of us.
And when we read God’s Book, we read the pages of tomorrow.
I love you.
.