NEBUCHADNEZZAR (CONCLUSION)
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Daniel 2:3-12
12-01-96
And just for a moment, I thought there
are five Sundays in the month. I thought the last Sunday in the month, I
would speak on the twelfth chapter of the Book of Daniel about the eternal
consummation of the age.
Then, the preceding Sunday will be the
one before Christmas. And I thought I would speak from the Book of Daniel
on the mystic stone. That refers to our Lord and Savior, Christ
Jesus.
Then, I have three Sundays before the
month closes. And I thought, on one of them, I would speak of the lion’s
den and the writing on the wall; then, the preceding Sunday, on the fiery
furnace. And then, this morning, the first Sunday in the month, we shall conclude
our presentation of Nebuchadnezzar. It is one of the unusual things in
the Bible that there is more written and presented about Nebuchadnezzar than
about any other Gentile heathen monarch in all the Word of God.
Well, we have then this morning before
us the second chapter of the Book of Daniel. And it starts off, of
course, with the dream that the monarch has. Then, it continues with his
frustration that he cannot remember the dream and sends for the magi—the
Chaldeans, the magicians—to recover for him his forgotten dream, and, of
course, to give the interpretation thereof. When they are unable to
reply, he sentences all the group to death.
Then, beginning at the nineteenth verse,
you have the answer and the prayer and the intercession of Daniel. And he
is taken to the king, and giving the glory to God, he tells the king what he
dreamed, then the meaning of it.
This is repeated in the seventh chapter
of the Book of Daniel. And one cannot but marvel. Here it is about
600 B.C., and the Lord is outlining, in a dream that Daniel interprets, the
entire history of the world, the kingdoms of the world, the empires of the
world until that mystic stone that comes and destroys all of the kingdoms of
this planet and establishes a kingdom that shall stand forever.
Then
it closes, of course, with the wonderful and well-deserved exaltation on the
part of the king of the gracious gift of God to Daniel.
So, this morning, we’re going to close
with this study of Nebuchadnezzar. And then, if I have a minute left, I’d like
to speak of the language of the book.
Now, it is not unusual, according to the
Word of God, for the Lord to reveal His message to a heathen prince. And
that’s what He’s doing in the case of Nebuchadnezzar.
For example, God warned Pharaoh, the
king of Egypt, of a famine. And He did it through a dream. Again,
God spoke to Abimelech in a dream about his possible devastated judgment from
taking Sarah, the wife of Abraham, as his own paramour. Then, you have
the dream of the Midianite when there is given to him the vision of the
wonderful person of Gideon. So, there are times when God uses the
unrighteous for righteous purposes and He presents a holy message through the
unholy.
Now, in this second chapter of the Book
of Daniel, the first verse speaks of his spirit being troubled and sleep was
lost to him. There is no terror like the soul gripped in fear, the soul
in agony. The darkness adds to the fear. And on and on through the
hours of the night is it emphasized.
That brings intense agitation of
mind. Convinced that the dreams portent events of no usual importance, he
tried resolutely again and again to call it and to give shape to the various
images that still floated in his mind. But, all of it was in vain.
The more he tried, the more he failed.
The dream had startled the king. A
mighty colossus of brilliant metal suddenly destroyed by a stone. The
image falls in pieces while the stone grew to fill all the earth. Yet,
strong as the vision had been, no clear impression was made upon his mind, only
a continuing sense of deepening terror.
He tried, but could recall
nothing. So the frightened king is our contemporary. We are
troubled by things that we do not understand. We are in the same state of
mind as Nebuchadnezzar.
The great world events of our lifetime
bring to us a terrible and horrible dream. I lived through the first
World War. I remember almost every syllable of it. Most of us here
lived through the second World War. And the papers as always are filled with
the devastating confrontations in places like Egypt or the Middle East or those
terrible things that are happening in Eastern Europe. That’s the world in
which we live our lives.
Now, there is a meaning and a purpose of
all of these events. It is impossible to understand the savage moments of
history and arrange them in an intelligent plan without God. It is
amazing, I say, to me, how things develop.
We destroyed, when I was a youth, Kaiser
Wilhelm II:
Kaiser Bill went up the hill
To take a peep at France.
Kaiser Bill went down the hill
With bullets in his pants.
Do
you remember that? So we all followed the life of Kaiser Bill.
Then, what followed? Hitler, of
all things. So, we destroy Hitler. And all of all things, Stalin is
the ruler of that whole world. We destroy Fascism only to receive
Communism. And we destroy communism to receive extended poverty.
I haven’t been to Russia, but there has
been a lot of our people that have been and some of them still there. And
they describe for me the vacuity in the nation left by the fall of Communism is
almost indescribable.
So, we have China. And China is
delivered from the Japanese only to welcome Mao Tse-tung. It doesn’t
stop.
Nebuchadnezzar may have lived thousands
of years ago, but his face appears before us continually. He’s one of
us. He stands in our midst today.
Now, we come to what the world turns
to. And I speak of the incompetence of the intellectual. Wearied
with fruitless inward search, we also send for the magi: the wise men.
So, they’re there in the court to appear before Nebuchadnezzar: the magicians
and the astrologers and the sorcerers and the Chaldeans—the magi, the wise
men.
That’s our modern world exactly.
In the face of insoluble problems, national and international, we send for the
philosophers, the Brahman cast in India. And we select and elect and
listen to the words of these so-called super-intellectuals.
Well, they appear before the king in
great confidence, complimented that they are invited. And they are
presented with rich gifts and honors. Their rewards are achieved by the
skillful use of the king’s terror.
Then, their anticipation turns to
terrible confusion. The more the king failed to recall his dream, the
more determined he was that the wise men—the magi, the Chaldeans—should unravel
the vision for him. Did not the magi enjoy the wealth and the rank and
the power bestowed upon them? Did they not have influence with the
super-intellectuals? They must now make good their claim.
So we come, when, in their last abject
helplessness, they were unable, they were obliged to answer his question.
But, his rage knew no bounds. The magi fled out of the king’s
treasury. They could not tell his dream, much less what it meant.
He had been brought up not only to
revere them, but to obey those super-intellectuals. But, they were
dumbfounded and made every excuse and apology that mind could think of.
Well, the king was furious. Woe to
them that could not quiet the spirit and gratify the demands of this Oriental
despot.
So, the judgment was announced.
All of them are to die—all of them. All are to be slain. They don’t
know, like our intellectuals today.
So, like so many earthly rulers,
Nebuchadnezzar was a man of violence, of cruel temperament and without
restraint. So, in verse 13 of that second chapter, he seeks Daniel to
slay him.
Almost certainly these Jews lived apart
from the Chaldeans, the Babylonians. They were not with the magi who had
been so hastily called to the kingly palace. But, when they came to the
Jews—that’s Daniel, Meshach, Shadrach and Abednego—instead of being hurried to
the prison where the magi were collected for execution, Daniel had his appeal
to the head of the eunuchs and is taken into the king’s presence. And
Daniel promises to reveal the dream.
What faith! He’s confident God
would answer his supplication. What sublime faith: just trusting the Lord
for it.
He asked for time. Why ask for
time? The answer is in the subsequent line: that he might speak to God,
implore on bended knee the help, instruction and guidance from heaven.
That brings to us a wonderful lesson we
ought always to remember. Together they prayed. Together we ought
to pray. He could have prayed alone.
Do you remember what Jesus said in
Matthew 18 and 19? If you will be together—where two are gathered
together, or three—if you will be together, you can ask anything and the
Heavenly Father will bring it to pass.
So, these four youth are under the
sentence of death, but all night long they spent in a vigil of prayer. We
are to remember there is knowledge from God which is given at the moment when
the wisdom of man fails. There is One who can see light when man can only
detect darkness.
And naturally, isn’t that what Jesus
said? If you gather together and pray and ask anything of our Father in
heaven, He’ll do it for you. And those four young men asked, implored,
beseeched an answer from God. And Jesus says He will always answer.
That’s a good thing to remember in your
home. Any time a situation develops that needs God’s help and God’s
knowledge and God’s sustaining grace, pray together, call the family together,
pray together.
Then, don’t forget what followed
after. As God answered, they praised the Lord.
God is a God of knowledge. In 1
Samuel 2:3 Hannah calls Him that: a God of knowledge. Hannah’s praise
eventuated over the birth of Samuel. So, she praised God.
We change that hymn here just a little
bit: “Let us praise God together on our knees.” I changed that: “Let us
break the bread together on our knees. Let us drink the cup together on
our knees.” But, the song originally said: “Let us praise God together on
our knees. When I fall on my knees with my face toward the throne of
grace, Oh, God have mercy on me.”
And that’s what they did. They had
a community of prayer. Instantly, prayer turned to praise. They
returned thanks to God.
I have a comment. The man who
prays sincerely in the morning, will as sincerely praise God in the evening.
Is any afflicted? In the Bible, it says: “Let him pray.” Take it to
God. Make it a matter of prayer.
I have another comment. It is easy
to be a Christian when we want something. But, we believe as a heathen
atheist when we have a pain. Ask as a Christian, appeal to God as a
Christian, pray as a Christian and then give glory to God as a Christian.
I’m going to take the example of a man
in our church. He’s dead. I buried him. That’s the reason I
have the temerity to speak of him.
He was a very successful businessman,
not too far from our church. On one of the fine streets of our city, he
had a very effective and important business house.
Well, he belonged to our church, as I
say. And he became desperately ill. And I visited him several times
in the hospital and, of course, prayed for him.
In those visits, he said to me, “Pastor,
if God will answer your prayers and raise me up, I will attend church. I
will be faithful in my presence there. I will give my life to the Lord
and use my strength and my wealth to further his kingdom in the church.”
Wonderful! Wonderful! I
thought that was about as fine a thing as a man could say. If God will
heal me and raise me up, I’ll do wonders, by God. I’ll be there at
church. I’ll help in the work.
Will you believe this? God
answered that prayer: raised him up, sent him back to his business in health
and in strength. And he never came to church one time—not one time.
Not one time did he come to church, much less did he use his wealth and his
genius and his gifts to further the kingdom of God.
I can’t enter into that in my
mind. I just cannot. How do we ask of God and pray to God as a
Christian, and then like an infidel—like a heathen—never serve Him after the
prayer is answered? I don’t understand it.
When you pray, ask God anything.
It doesn’t matter. God invites us to do it. There’s not anything
that you cannot make as a subject of prayer. Do it. God invites us
to do it. Share with the Lord anything.
Only remember that, when the prayer is
answered, do good by the Lord. Just doubly give your life in strength and
devotion and support of Him and His kingdom.
So, in humility, they praised the
Lord. Daniel strove to make the king look away from him, Daniel, and look
to the God of answered prayer. Not, look what I did, but O king, look
what God has done. That’s the way we ought to be in all of our
life.
Now, an astonishing remarkable way of
God: look at His everlasting mercy to His people. Look at the situation
there. The city of Jerusalem is destroyed. The nation of Judah is
scattered. The temple is in ruins. The sacred vessels of the
sanctuary are now the property of a heathen king. The glory has departed
from between the cherubim—Ichabod, Ichabod: the glory is departed.
The inscription on the entire nation is that.
The sons and daughters of Judah now are
captives beside the Euphrates. How deeply distressed the whole of Israel
as they sat down by the rivers of Babylon.
But, in this state of agonizing tragedy,
I want you to look at the manifest grace and wisdom and power of God.
Completely apart from eternal advantages, God showed Israel that the way was
not dependent upon outward accoutrements, but upon His mercy.
And haven’t you heard me say there are
three things incomparably glorious that developed in the captivity of the
Jewish people in Babylon? Number one: they were never again
polytheistic. They were forever thereafter monotheistic.
When you read the story of the Jewish
people in the Old Testament, again and again and again and again, there they
are worshiping Baal. There they are worshiping a golden calf. There
they are, calling upon the name of the gods of the people all around
them. They were constantly, constantly idolatrous.
All you have to do is read it.
There’s no exception of it. But, when they experienced the tragedy of the
Babylonian Captivity, they were never again polytheistic.
How about them today? Could you
imagine a Jew bowing down before an image of Buddha or one of those one
thousand gods of the Hindus? Unthinkable. That’s one thing that
came out of the captivity: they were forever monotheistic.
Number two: the second thing that came
out of the captivity was the canon of the Old Testament. They gathered
together in the captivity—under Ezra, they gathered together the sacred
writings of the prophets and they canonized them. And there they are to
this day in this Book that I hold in my hand. This canon of the
Scriptures is born in the captivity. That’s the second great advantage
that came of it.
All right. A third one—and I thank
God for this one, that reaches even down to us. The remnant, those that
survived, the remnant that returned to Judah waited for, looked for, prayed
for, believed in the Messiah who was coming.
All you have to do to see that is to
read the Greek New Testament: how those Jewish people, when they returned back
to Judah to their homes, were looking for, praying for, expecting the glorious
appearing of the promised Messiah.
I only have one little aside here to
make about it. And that is, I do not know of a greater tragedy than when
He came, most of them did not receive Him, and therefore lost their nation,
lost their freedom, lost their people.
But, God was good and He took advantage
of the repudiation that our Lord found in His native people. He was
crucified. That’s our sins. We’re forgiven in the blood, the
atoning grace of our Lord.
And the Christian was scattered
abroad. And some of them came to America and won my great grandparents to
Jesus, and finally, came down to me.
Oh, the wonder of God in taking
advantage of the tragedies that happen to us in life and using them to open a
door to an incomparable blessing! And that can be true with you in every
one of your sadnesses and sorrows. When the outward fabric is dissolved,
the inward glory that seems restricted to its walls only breaks forth with
greater splendor and spreads throughout the world with greater speed.
It’s a marvel what God does through the
sorrows and tragedies of our lives! You remember the sermon of
Stephen. While he was being stoned to death, he looked up and there was
the Lord Jesus standing—the only time in the Bible the Lord is ever presented
as standing. Always the Lord is presented, pictured as seated. He’s
seated at the right hand of God. There’s no exception to that.
Always he’s seated. He’s on his throne. But when Stephen was being
stoned to death, he looked up and there was Jesus standing to receive him in
glory.
It is a wonderful thing what God can do
in the sorrows of our live! So often, when the visible church is in ruins
does God construct upon the rank a more glorious frame, a house not made with
hands, more beautiful than the temples of Baalbek, more impressive than the
cathedrals of Europe, more splendid than the theaters of Ionia and more
magnificent than the Temple of Solomon in all of its glory.
Often when the church has no miter upon
its head, and no Urim or Thummim upon its breast, the world reads more legibly
the inspiration upon her brow, namely, 2 Timothy 2:11: “The foundation of God
standeth sure. God knoweth them that are his own.” Beautiful
thing!
So, God has given the greatest manifestations
of His mind and power to sufferers. The children of God in the
wilderness—to them He gave the Ten Commandments. To the weeping Jeremiah,
He gave the prophecies of restoration. To the captive Daniel, beside the
banks of the Urai and the Hiddekel rivers, He unfolds the whole panorama, the
sweep of history through the ages. Paul is in prison, but the gospel
message of redemption is just scattered throughout the Roman world. John
is exiled, a prisoner on dreary Patmos, but the grand procession of the saints
is revealed to him. The two witnesses of prophecy in sackcloth, in the
Revelation, bring to us the marvelous hope of the end of the world. And
to men who felt they had nothing on earth, did God make known how much they had
in heaven.
Isn’t that a marvelous, marvelous way of
our Lord? God brings to naught the wisdom of this world. God
silences the so-called wisdom of men. God shows the wisdom of man to be
folly. Seeking to make the Bible conform to science, they have to rewrite
the books of science every 10 years.
You know, I can hardly believe such a
thing as this. In the library of the Louvre, in Paris, France, I guess
the largest library in the world, there are one and one half miles of books of
science that are without riddles. If you seek to make the faith of God conform
to books of science, you have to rewrite those books at least every 10
years. What was scientifically true yesterday is foolishness today.
It is amazing how God’s truth is revealed in Holy Scripture.
Now, I say, what Nebuchadnezzar did, we
do. When in despair, what do we do? We call upon the Chaldeans—the
magi, the wise men, the intellectuals, the intelligentsia. They did not
help the king. And they are as helpless today as they were then.
We call also upon the intellectual, the
influential, the professionals, the brain trust, when, actually, we need the
wisdom of God. Where philosophy ends, God begins. Where learning
concludes, God commences.
That’s a wonderful thing for us to
remember. Not in those books of science and not in those lectures of the
philosophers and not in the wisdom propagated by the professors—we look to
God. And as long as we look to God for answers, we will never, ever
fail.
Well, another unusual thing about God:
He saves the lost for the sake of the righteous. Daniel’s first request
in Daniel 2:24 is this: “Destroy not the magi of Babylon.”
Now, isn’t that something? God
gives life to the unrighteous because of the request and devotion of the
righteous.
You look at it in the Bible. The
house of Potiphar is blessed for Joseph’s sake. The prisoners and sailors
are spared in that Mediterranean storm for Paul’s sake. Israel is blessed
for Moses’ sake, standing in the breach.
And you look at this—could you believe
this? The Lord would have delivered Sodom, if he could have found 10
righteous. Had he been able, scouring up and down the streets of that
city—had he been able to find 10 righteous men, just 10, he would have spared
Sodom and Gomorrah and the cities of the plain—just for the sake of 10.
The Rapture is coming, when the church
is caught up. Then, what follows? The great tribulation. The
wicked are blessed for the sake of the righteous.
So, you have a church and out there are
those infidels who look with disdain and contempt upon the church. Even
here in Dallas, more than 50 percent have nothing to do with the church.
But, if there’s no church—you put it
down, crime and violence and sin are unspeakable. So, we are saved for
Jesus’ sake. He was the Righteous One.
Well, I don’t know what to do with these
five minutes I have left. I have an excursus that I have written that I
wanted to read. And I’m afraid to begin. So, we’ll just quit.
You’re so precious and gracious and
gifted to listen. And I look forward to next Sunday, when we gather here
in this sacred place.