THE ANCIENT OF DAYS
Daniel 7:9-14
1-23-72 10:50 a.m.
On the
radio and on television, you are worshiping with us in the First Baptist Church
in Dallas. This is the pastor bringing the message entitled, “The Ancient
of Days,” or “The Worship of Christ.”
In our preaching through the book
of Daniel, we have come to the middle part of the seventh chapter. And in the
chapter, there are two visions in the middle part.
“I beheld till the thrones were
cast down, and the Ancient of days did sit, whose garment was white as snow,
and the hair of his head like the pure wool: the throne that was beneath him
was like a sapphire, a burning fiery flame, and the wheels were as burning
fire.” In the ancient day, a throne oft times was on wheels so it could be moved
from place to place. And the wheels themselves were like furious flames. “A
fiery stream issued and came forth from before him: thousand thousands
ministered unto him, and ten thousand thousand stood before him: the judgment
was set, and the books were opened."
And then the second vision:
"I saw in the night visions, and, behold, one like the Son of man came
with the clouds of heaven, and he came and was brought before the Ancient of
days, and there was given him dominion, and glory, and a kingdom that all
people, and nations, and languages, should serve him: his dominion is an
everlasting dominion, which shall not pass away, and the kingdom that which
shall not be destroyed."
Those are
the two visions that Daniel sees toward the consummation of the age. We shall
speak of that in the sermon next Sunday. But today we shall think upon, and
ask God to bless us as we seek the truth in those two personalities that are
presented here: the first vision, the Ancient of days; and the second vision,
the Son of man.
The
identification of the person in the second vision is most clear. He is the
incarnate Christ. “I saw . . . one like the Son of man come with the clouds of
heaven.” And in the apocalyptic chapter in Matthew 24, and in the text of the
Apocalypse in Revelation 1:7, the Son of man is identified in the glorious
coming at the end of the age. He comes in the shekinah glory of God; He
comes with clouds descending. So the second vision is clear. The Son of man
is the incarnate God. It is Christ—Jehovah, Jesus.
But who
is this Ancient of days? “I beheld till the Ancient of days descended”; then
He is described. And a second thing—He comes for judgment: “The judgment was
set and the books were opened.” As you read the passage, your first natural
response is that the Ancient of days is none other but God Himself—God the
Father. But in the vision He is described—personally described, what He looked
like. And in the vision, He is come for judgment. “And the books were
opened.”
Both of
those things are statedly and categorically denied in the Bible. There is no
description of God in the Bible. 1 Timothy 6, verse 16 says that God dwells in
light that no man can approach unto: “... whom no man hath seen, or can
see....” Colossians 1:15 says that God is invisible. He is named there “the
invisible God.” In the first chapter of John, verse 18, in the sixth chapter
of John, and in 1 John chapter 4, these words are thrice repeated: “No man hath
seen God at any time.” It is not possible for the human eye to look upon the
essence of deity.
Therefore,
there is no picture, there is no portrait, there is no description of God in
the Bible—just as there is no description of the Holy Spirit. How would you
describe in language the Holy Spirit? The subject, the person, the essence is
indescribable. It cannot be placed in speech. There is no man who has seen
God—never, ever.
In the
twenty-fourth chapter of the Book of Exodus, Moses said to God, “Let me see thy
glory.” And the Lord replied, “No man can see me and live. But I will place
you in a cleft in the rock and cover you there with my hand, and I will let all
my glory pass by.” And God placed Moses in the cleft of the rock and covered
him there with His hand. And when the glory of the Lord passed by, the Lord
took away His hand and Moses saw the afterglow, the twilight of the presence of
God. But no man can see the face of God and live.
A second
thing that is interdicted by the Word in the Scripture: this Ancient of days is
not only described personally—what he looked like—but it says that he has come
for judgment and the books are opened. In the fifth chapter of the Gospel of
John it is again statedly said that “the Father judgeth no man, but has
committed judgment to the Son.” Who is this Ancient of days? He is described,
and God is never described. He comes for judgment. But judgment belongs to
Christ alone. As the fifth chapter of 2 Corinthians states, “We shall all
stand before the bema of Christ.” And some of you who have been in Corinth
have stood in that place where Paul said, “I stood before the bema."
We shall all stand before the bema, the judgment seat of Christ.
Who is
this Ancient of days then? Who is described here and who has come for
judgment? The answer according to the Word of the Lord is very plain. This
vision of the Ancient of days is a theophany, it is an epiphany, it is a
manifestation of the preincarnate Christ.
This is
revelation that is repeated in the Old Testament many times. In the sixth
chapter of the Book of Isaiah, the prophet says that in the year that King
Uzziah died, he also saw the Lord Jehovah, high and lifted up. His train
filled the temple and his glory filled the earth. And above him stood the
seraphim crying, “Holy, holy, holy.” The twelfth chapter of the Gospel of John
says that Isaiah saw Jehovah Jesus when he saw the Lord high and lifted up. By
express language, he identifies that Jehovah as being a pre-incarnate vision of
Jesus the Christ.
In the
first Chapter of the book of Ezekiel, Ezekiel describes God. There again, he
is describing a pre-manifestation, a theophany of Christ. In the third chapter
of this Book of Daniel, while Nebuchadnezzar the king looks into the burning,
fiery furnace where the three Hebrew children have been cast, he sees a fourth
one. And he says the countenance, the form of the fourth is like the Son of
God—a theophany, a pre-manifestation of the incarnate Christ.
In the
twenty-fourth chapter of the Book of Exodus, it says that the elders saw God—He
was seated on a pavement like a sapphire stone—and describes Him and expressly
says, “And the elders saw God and did eat and drink.” They banqueted in His
presence, and they feasted in the glory of that vision. But the fourth chapter
of the Book of Deuteronomy, Moses said that there was no similitude of God seen
in the fiery mount of glory. “Therefore,” he said, “you cannot make any
likeness of God in heaven above or in earth beneath.” Well, what is that then,
that the elders saw when they say they saw God? They saw an epiphany, a
theophany. They looked upon the pre-manifestation of the preincarnate,
preexistent Christ.
And this
is a description that we find in the seventh chapter of the Revelation, in the
seventh chapter of Daniel, and repeated more precisely in the first chapter of
the Revelation. The vision is of Him who is God manifest in the flesh,
justified in the Spirit, seen of angels, believed on in the world, preached
unto the Gentiles, and received up into glory. The Ancient of days, whose garment
was white as snow, the hair of his head like wool, and from His presence—the
streams of the fiery burning furious flame. It is a like description in the
first chapter of Revelation. Hearing a great voice back of him, John turns to
see who speaks. And he sees in the midst of the seven lampstands, in the midst
of the churches, one like unto the Son of man, clothed with a garment down to
the foot, and gird about by the breast with a golden girdle. His head and his
hair were white like wool, as white as snow. His eyes were as a flame of fire,
His feet as if they burned in the furnace. His voice is the sound of many
waters; out of his mouth, a sharp, two-edged sword. And his countenance was as
the sun shineth in His strength. This is the incarnate, glorified Christ in
the first chapter of the Revelation, out of which I’ve just read; and this is
the pre-theophanic incarnate Christ in the seventh chapter of the book of
Daniel. It is the Lord Himself, the Ancient of days, the Lord Christ in His
essential preincarnate deity.
And in
the second vision, the Lord Christ, as the Son of man, incarnate, glorified,
coming in the clouds of heaven. Is Christ then Deity, and we to worship Him as
such? Is Christ God manifest in the flesh? To that the Scriptures add a
categorical affirmative. Yes—Christ is presented in the Word of God as Deity
Himself, clothed in human flesh and in human life.
The
gospel of John begins with a tremendous doctrinal statement: En archē
ēn ho logos, kai ho logos ēn pros ton theon, kai theos ēn ho
logos. Each one of those three clauses is fraught with eternal meaning. En
archē ēn ho logos–“in the beginning was the Word.” "All
things were created by Him and without Him was not anything made that was
made." That identifies the Word as the great Creator in the beginning.
“In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” En archē
ēn ho logos, “in the beginning was the Word.” All things were made by
Him.
The
second great theological stanza is, kai ho logos ēn pros ton theon. In
your King James version translated, “And the Word was with God.” Pros ton
theon means actually face to face with God—the identical thing that is
presented here in the seventh chapter of the prophet Daniel. And there sat the
Ancient of days, and there was brought near unto him the Son of man coming in
clouds of glory. The two are face to face, pros ton theon. One, the
Ancient of days, God preincarnate, the great Jehovah of the Old Covenant, and
the other the preincarnate manifestation of God pros ton theon, face-to-face.
Equal, the same.
And the
last stanza kai theos ēn ho logos--there is no article there to the
theos. Therefore, it is predicate; ēn ho logos , “and the
Word was God.” A categorical statement: “And the Word was God.” This is the
beginning of the Gospel of John, and it continues on in expression and in
delineation of the deity of the Prophet of Nazareth until it finds its great
consummation in the declaration and confession of the apostle Thomas, “My Lord
and my God.” What began as a theological doctrine and expression in the first
verse of the first chapter, in the great concluding exclamation in the
twentieth chapter of the Gospel of John is the great affirmation of Christian
experience. No longer just doctrine, no longer just words, but now in human
heart, in human experience, and in human life, my Lord and my
God.
Thereafter, following the gospel story of the
manifestation of the God in the flesh—thereafter, there is repeated the stated,
decisive, lucid, and clear doctrine of the deity of Christ. For example, in
Colossians 2:9, “For in him dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily.”
Second, Titus 2:13, a studied statement: “Looking for that blessed hope, and
the appearing of our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ.” And again, the first
chapter of Hebrews and the third verse, "For he," the Lord Christ,
"is the brightness of God’s glory and the express image of his
person." As the Lord said to Philip, “He that hath seen me hath seen the
Father.” What is God like? What the person of God like? What is the
manifestation of God like? He is the brightness of His glory and the express
image of His person. He is God manifest in the flesh.
Now, this
has been foreshadowed throughout all of the Old Testament story. So many times
do you find in the Old Covenant, the Old Testament, a person—shadowy,
undelineated, many times just names, but always one who receives worship as God
and who speaks as God. Sometimes, He appears in angelic form, sometimes in
human form, but He is always present, foreshadowing the final manifestation of
God in the flesh, in Christ incarnate.
Look for
just a moment. In the twenty-second chapter of the Book of Genesis, in
obedience to a command of God, Abraham is on Mount Moriah, where Solomon built
the temple. He is looking down into the face of his son Isaac. And in obedience
to the Word of the Lord, he has raised his hand to plunge the sacrificial knife
into the heart of the boy. Now listen to the Word of God: “And the angel of
the Lord spake out of heaven unto Abraham saying, Abraham, Abraham”--and then
the story that stopped the sacrifice. Then follow it on down and I quote
again: “And the angel of the Lord called, spake from heaven a second time and
said, By myself have I sworn, saith God, that in blessing I will bless thee.
And in thy seed shall all of the families of the earth be blessed.”
Who is
that angel of Jehovah who swears by Himself because He can swear by none
greater, and who calls Himself God? Who is that other person, always there,
always in the shadowy background? Again, in the thrity-first chapter of
Genesis, and I quote: “And the angel of Jehovah appeared unto Jacob and said, I
am the God of Bethel”—and then sent him back unto his kindred and into the
Promised Land. Who is that angel that appeared unto Jacob and called Himself
the God of Bethel?
Or again,
in the third chapter of the book of Exodus—why, Moses is attending Jethro’s
flock on the back side of the desert. As he spent those years, forty of them,
in solitude there appeared unto him, and I am quoting, “And the angel of the
Lord—the angel of Jehovah—appeared unto him in a flaming fire, in a bush that
burned unconsumed, and said to him, Take off thy shoes from off thy feet, for
the ground whereon thou standest is holy ground.” And the angel of the Lord
said unto him, “I am the God of Abraham, and of Isaac, and of Jacob.” Who is
this angel of Jehovah who calls Himself God?
Take
again, in the twenty-fourth chapter of the Book of Exodus, the Lord God said
unto Moses, “I send before you mine angel—mine angel. Be careful to obey him,
for my name is in him.” That is, the essence of God, the reality of God, the
power of God is in that angel. Who is that angel? It is none other than the
preincarnate Christ, and to Abraham, to Moses, to Isaiah, to Ezekiel, to
Nebuchadnezzar, to Daniel, He exhibits Himself, He manifests Himself
preincarnate; sometimes in the form of an angel, sometimes in the form of a
man, but always He is there. He is worshiped as God, and He calls Himself
God. And in the final manifestation, He is God in the flesh, Jehovah-Jesus.
We are taught to expect that in the Old Testament Scriptures themselves.
Again, a
passage in Isaiah—Isaiah 43:4, sung so gloriously in The Messiah. Listen to
it: “The voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of Jehovah,
prepare ye the way of the Lord. In the desert, make a highway for our God.
Every valley shall be exalted, every mountain shall be brought low. The
crooked shall be made straight, and the rough places plain. For the glory of
the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together.” And in the
third chapter of Matthew, and in the third verse of Matthew, the apostle says
that this was a great prophecy of the coming of Emmanuel, the Prince of glory.
The
prophecy of the coming of Jehovah in flesh, in manifestation, in human form and
life, was fulfilled in the appearance of Jesus the Christ. Is it right, then,
for us to worship Him as the true and only God, the manifestation of God in the
flesh? This is the essence of Deity seen in human form and in human life,
living in the Old Testament as the Angel of Jehovah, living in the New
Testament as Jesus the Christ, and coming again as the Son of man in clouds of
glory to receive for Himself dominion and glory and power forever and ever. Is
it right for us to worship him as Deity and as God? This has been the heart of
the Christian faith and the heart of the Christian worship since its
beginning. In the twenty-fourth chapter of the Gospel of Luke, in the
fifty-first verse, after the Lord was received up into heaven, the Scriptures
say, and I quote, “And the disciples worshiped him and returned in joy to
Jerusalem.” And they worshiped him as God and Savior, as God Emmanuel, as
"God with us," as God manifest in the flesh. They worshiped Him.
And the
story has never failed in the development through the Christian centuries
since. Pliny wrote a letter—Pliny the Younger, who was the governor, Roman
governor of Bithynia. Right after 100 A.D., he wrote a letter to Trajan, the
Roman Caesar. And in the letter to Trajan, he described this new sect called
Christians. And in their worship, he said—Pliny said—that they gathered
together Sunday mornings and sang praises of worship to Jesus. Scratched on
the wall of the Palatine Palace in Rome, is a caricature dating back to the
first Christian century. There, crudely etched on the wall, is a figure of a
man with an ass’s head, hanging on a cross. In front of him is another man
bowed in adoration and worship. And in ill-spelled letters underneath is this
caption, “Alexamenos worships his God.” From the beginning, the heart of the
Christian faith has been the worship of Jesus.
And it is
into His hands as God that we commend and commit our spirits when we die. In
the seventh chapter of the Book of Acts, telling the story of the martyrdom of
Stephen: “And they stoned Stephen as he called of the Lord saying: Lord Jesus,
receive my spirit.” The Christian dies in the arms of Jesus—safe in the arms
of Jesus, safe on His gentle breast. We die in the grace, in the hope, in the
blessedness, in the forgiveness, in the preciousness, in the promise of God,
Jehovah-Jesus.
And this
is to be the constant attitude and spirit of the Christian disciples. One of
bowing, one of adoration, one of worship in His presence. As Hebrews 1:6 says,
“And let all the angels of God worship him.” And as the second chapter of
Philippians, the tenth verse says, “Before him every knee shall bow, of things
in heaven," the angelic hosts, "of things in earth," every foe
that has ever lived, "and of things under the earth," in the nether
world. "And every tongue shall confess that he is Lord, Jehovah, to the
glory of God.” This is the attitude of worship and adoration of the disciples
of Christ. He is our great God and Savior, our coming King.
Robert
Browning, in one of his letters, describes a famous literary incident in the
life of Charles Lamb in London. They were together, the intellectuals, the men
of letters and geniuses of literature. And Charles Lamb began to speak about
what they would do if the great of the past should rise and suddenly appear in
the door. And somebody remarked that if Shakespeare were to come, they would
all stand in respect and in wonder at the Shakespearean genius, unrivaled in
the literary world. Then someone said, “But if Jesus Christ should come and
appear, all of us would kneel in humble worship and adoration.” God, manifest
in the flesh—the Angel of Jehovah, Christ incarnate, God walking among men.
Our hymns
are our greatest theological expression. The Ancient of days, the Son of man
worshiping, [unclear], the Jehovah-Jesus of the Bible. Listen to those
hymns:
O worship the king, all glorious above,
And gratefully sing His wonderful love.
Our Shield and Defender, the Ancient of Days,
Pavilioned in splendor and girded with
praise.
The Ancient of days, the coming King, God manifest in the
flesh:
Come, Thou Almighty King,
Help us Thy name to sing,
Help us to praise:
Father, all-glorious,
O’er all victorious,
Come and reign over us,
Ancient of Days.
The hymn
writers have sensed from the Holy Scriptures themselves, the great eternal
revelation of God in Christ Jesus. Preincarnate—the very essence of Jesus, the
angel of Jehovah, the Ancient of days. In Bethlehem—Prince Emmanuel, "God
with us," God manifest in the flesh, God walking and talking among men.
And He that hath seen Jesus, hath seen God. To love Jesus is to love God; to
receive Jesus is to receive God; to worship Jesus is to worship God; to accept
Jesus is to accept God; to love the appearing of Jesus is to love the appearing
of the great God and our Savior. The only God we’ll ever see is God manifested
in the flesh: Jesus, our Lord.
When,
therefore, as Christians we pray in His name, we ask help in His name, we die
in His name, we commend our souls to Him in His name, and we look forward to
the great triumphant, glorious appearance in His name, we are just believing
what God has made us to believe in every syllable of every refrain of the Old
Covenant and the New. "All hail the power of Jesus name, let angels
prostrate fall." "Let all the angels of God worship Him."
"Unto Him be the glory and dominion and power and honor forever and ever.
Amen." This is the Bible, the Word of God.
We sing
our hymn now, and as we sing it—a family to come, a couple to respond, or just
somebody you, make the decision now in your heart. And in a moment, when we
stand up to sing, down one of these stairways into the aisle, here to the
front: "Here I come, Pastor. Here I am." Maybe, "This is my
wife and these are our children, all of us are coming today," or just
you. As the Lord shall press the Word to your heart, as the Holy Spirit shall
make the appeal to your soul, answer with your life. Do it now; come now.
Make it now, while we stand and while we sing.