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PREFACE TO THE TENTH EDITION
THE COMING PRINCE has been
out of print for more than a year; for it seemed inadvisable to reissue
it during the War. But the War has apparently created an increased interest
in the prophecies of Daniel; and as this book is therefore in demand,
it has been decided to publish a new edition without further delay. Not
that these pages contain any sensational "Armageddon" theories. For "a
place called in the Hebrew tongue Armageddon" is situated neither in France
nor in Flanders, but in Palestine; and the future of the land and people
of the covenant will be a main issue in the great battle which is yet
to be fought on that historic plain.
Prophetic students are apt to become adherents of one or other of two
rival schools of interpretation. The teaching of the "futurists" suggests
that this Christian dispensation is altogether a blank in the Divine scheme
of prophecy. And the "historicists" discredit Scripture by frittering
away the meaning of plain words in order to find the fulfillment of them
in history. Avoiding the errors of both these schools, this volume is
written in the spirit of Lord Bacon's dictum, that "Divine prophecies
have springing and germinant accomplishment throughout many ages, though
the height or fullness of them may belong to some one age." And this world
war is no doubt within the scope of prophecy, though it be not the fulfillment
of any special Scripture.
Very many years ago my attention was directed to a volume of sermons by
a devout Jewish Rabbi of the London Synagogue, in which he sought to discredit
the Christian interpretation of certain Messianic prophecies. And in dealing
with Daniel 9., he accused Christian expositors of tampering, not only
with chronology, but with Scripture, in their efforts to apply the prophecy
of the Seventy Weeks to the Nazarene. My indignation at such a charge
gave place to distress when the course of study to which it led me brought
proof that it was by no means a baseless libel. My faith in the Book of
Daniel, already disturbed by the German infidel crusade of "the Higher
Criticism," was thus further undermined. And I decided to take up the
study of the subject with a fixed determination to accept without reserve
not only the language of Scripture, but the standard dates of history
as settled by our best modern chronologists. [1]
The following is a brief summary of the results
of my inquiry as regards the great prophecy of the "Seventy Weeks." I
began with the assumption, based on the perusal of many standard works,
that the era in question had reference to the seventy years of the Captivity
of Judah, and that it was to end with the Coming of Messiah. But I soon
made the startling discovery that this was quite erroneous. For the Captivity
lasted only sixty-two years; and the seventy weeks related to the wholly
different judgment of the Desolations of Jerusalem. And further, the period
"unto Messiah the Prince," as Daniel 9:25 so plainly states, was not seventy
weeks, but 7+62 weeks.
The failure to distinguish between the several judgments of the Servitude,
the Captivity and the Desolations, is a fruitful source of error in the
study of Daniel and the historical books of Scripture. And it is strange
that the distinction should be ignored not only by the Critics, but by
Christians. Because of national sin, Judah was brought under servitude
to Babylon for seventy years, this was in the third year of King Jehoiakim
(B.C. 606). But the people continued obdurate; and in B.C. 598 the far
severer judgment of the Captivity fell on them. On the former capture
of Jerusalem, Nebuchadnezzar left the city and people undisturbed, his
only prisoners being Daniel and other cadets of the royal house. But on
this second occasion he deported the mass of the inhabitants to Chaldea.
The Jews still remained impenitent, however, in spite of Divine warnings
by the mouth of Jeremiah in Jerusalem and Ezekiel among the exiles; and
after the lapse of another nine years, God brought upon them the terrible
judgment of "The Desolations," which was decreed to last for seventy years.
Accordingly in B.C. 589, the Babylonian armies again invaded Judea, and
the city was devastated and burned.
Now both the "Servitude" and the "Captivity," ended with the decree of
Cyrus in B.C. 536, permitting the return of the exiles. But as the language
of Daniel 9:2 so plainly states, it was the seventy years of "The Desolations"
that were the basis of the prophecy of the seventy weeks. And the epoch
of that seventy years was the day on which Jerusalem was invested –
the tenth Tebeth in the ninth year of Zedekiah – a day that has
ever since been observed as a fast by the Jews in every land. (2 Kings
25:1.) Daniel and Revelation definitely indicate that the prophetic year
is one of 360 days. Such moreover was the sacred year of the Jewish calendar;
and, as is well known, such was the ancient year of Eastern nations. Now
seventy years of 360 days contains exactly 25, 200 days; and as the Jewish
New Year's day depended on the equinoctial moon, we can assign the 13th
December as "the Julian date" of tenth Tebeth 589. And 25, 200 days measured
from that date ended on the 17th December 520, which was the twenty-fourth
day of the ninth month in the second year of Darius of Persia –
-the very day on which the foundation of the second Temple was laid. (Haggai
2:18, 19.)
Here is something to set both critics and Christians thinking. A decree
of a Persian king was deemed to be divine, and any attempt to thwart it
was usually met by prompt and drastic punishment; and yet the decree directing
the rebuilding of the Temple, issued by King Cyrus in the zenith of his
power, was thwarted for seventeen years by petty local governors. How
was this? The explanation is that until the very last day of the seventy
years of "the Desolations" had expired, God would not permit one stone
to be laid upon another on Mount Moriah.
Dismissing from our minds, therefore, all mere theories on this
subject, we arrive at the following definitely ascertained facts:
- 1. The epoch of the Seventy Weeks
was the issuing of a decree to restore and build Jerusalem. (Daniel
9:25.)
2. There never was but one decree for the rebuilding of Jerusalem.
3. That decree was issued by Artaxerxes, King of Persia, in the month
Nisan in the 20th year of his reign, i.e. B.C. 445.
4. The city was actually built in pursuance of that decree.
5. The Julian date of 1st Nisan 445 was the 14th March.
6. Sixty-nine weeks of years – i.e. 173, 880 days –
reckoned from the 14th March B.C. 445, ended on the 6th April A.D.
32.
7. That day, on which the sixty-nine weeks ended,
was the fateful day on which the Lord Jesus rode into Jerusalem in
fulfillment of the prophecy of Zechariah 9:9; when, for the first
and only occasion in all His earthly sojourn, He was acclaimed as
"Messiah the Prince the King, the Son of David."
And here again we must keep to Scripture. Though God
has nowhere recorded the Bethlehem birth-date of Christ, no date in
history, sacred or profane, is fixed with greater definiteness than
that of the year in which the Lord began His public ministry. I refer
of course to Luke 3:1, 2. I say this emphatically, because Christian
expositors have persistently sought to set up a fictitious date for
the reign of Tiberias. The first Passover of the Lord's ministry, therefore,
was in Nisan A.D. 29; and we can fix the date of the Passion with absolute
certainty as Nisan A.D. 32. If Jewish or infidel writers set themselves
to confuse and corrupt the chronology of these periods, we would not
be surprised. But it is to Christian expositors that we owe this evil
work. Happily, however, we can appeal to the labors of secular historians
and chronologists for proofs of the divine accuracy of Holy Scripture.
The general attack upon the Book of Daniel, briefly discussed in the
"Preface to the Fifth Edition," is dealt with more fully in the 1902
reissue of Daniel in the Critics' Den. The reader will there
find an answer to the attack of the Higher Criticism on Daniel based
on philology and history; and he will find also that the Critics are
refuted by their own admissions respecting the Canon of the Old Testament.
Most of the "historical errors" in Daniel, which Professor Driver copied
from Bertholdt's work of a century ago, have been disposed of by the
erudition and research of our own day. But, when writing on the subject,
I recognized that the identity of Darius the Mede was still a difficulty.
Since then, however, I have found a solution of that difficulty in a
verse in Ezra, hitherto used only by Voltaire and others to discredit
Scripture. Ezra 5 tells us that in the reign of Darius Hystaspis the
Jews petitioned the throne, appealing to the decree by which Cyrus had
authorized the rebuilding of the Temple. The wording of the petition
clearly indicates that, to the knowledge of the Jewish leaders, that
decree had been filed in the house of the archives in Babylon. But the
search there made for it proved fruitless, and it was ultimately found
at Ecbatana (or Achmetha: Ezra 6:2). How then could such a State paper
have been transferred to the Median capital?
The only reasonable explanation of this extraordinary fact completes
the circle of proof that the vassal king whom Daniel calls Darius the
Mede was Gobryas (or Gubaru), who led the army of Cyrus to Babylon.
As various writers have noticed, the testimony of the inscriptions points
to that conclusion. For example, the Annalistic tablet of Cyrus records
that, after the taking of the city, it was Gobryas who appointed the
governors or prefects; which appointments Daniel states were made by
Darius. The fact that he was a prince of the royal house of Media, and
presumably well known to Cyrus, who had resided at the Median Court,
would account for his being held in such high honor. He it was who governed
Media as Viceroy when that country was reduced to the status of a province;
and to any one accustomed to deal with evidence, the inference will
seem natural that, for some reason or other, he was sent back to his
provincial throne, and that, in returning to Ecbatana he carried with
him the archives of his brief reign in Babylon. In the interval between
the accession of Cyrus and that of Darius Hystaspis, the Temple decree
may well have been forgotten by all but the Jews themselves. And although
it was a serious matter to thwart the execution of an order issued by
the king of Persia (Ezra 6:11), yet in this instance, as already noticed,
a Divine decree overruled the decree of Cyrus, and vetoed their taking
action upon it.
The elucidation of the vision of the Seventy Weeks, as unfolded in the
following pages, is my personal contribution to the Daniel controversy.
And as the searching criticism to which it has been subjected has failed
to detect in it an error or a flaw, [2]
it may now be accepted without hesitation or reserve.
The only disparaging comment which Professor Driver could offer upon
it in his Book of Daniel was that it is a revival in a slightly
modified form" of the scheme of Julius Africanus, and that it leaves
the seventieth week "unexplained." But surely the fact that my scheme
is on the same lines as that of "the father of Christian Chronologists"
creates a very strong presumption in its favor. And so far from leaving
the seventieth week unexplained, I have dealt with it in accordance
with the beliefs of the early Fathers. For they regarded that week as
future, seeing that they looked for the Antichrist of Scripture–
"an individual person, the incarnation and concentration of sin." [3]
– R. A.
TENTH EDITION FOOTNOTE
[1]
As regards the regnal years of Jewish Kings,
however, Fynes Clinton's month dates are here modified in accordance
with the Hebrew Mishna, which was a sealed book to English
readers when the Fasti Hellenici was written. With reference
to one date of cardinal importance I am specially indebted to the
late Canon Rawlinson and the late Sir George Airey.
[2]
One point may be worth notice in a footnote.
The R. V. reading of Acts 13:20 seems to dispose of my solution of
the perplexing problem of the 480 years of1 Kings 6:1. But here, in
accordance with their usual practice, and in neglect of the principles
by which experts are guided in dealing with conflicting evidence,
the Revisers slavishly followed certain of the oldest MSS. And the
effect on this passage is disastrous. For it is certain that neither
the Apostle said, nor the Evangelist wrote, that Israel's enjoyment
of the land was limited to 450 years, or that 450 years elapsed before
the era of the Judges. The text adopted by the Revisers is, therefore,
clearly wrong. Dean Alford regards it "as an attempt at correcting
the difficult chronology of the verse"; and, he adds, "taking the
words as they stand, no other sense can be given to them than
that the time of the Judges lasted 450 years." That is, as he goes
on to explain, the era within which occurred the rule of the Judges.
It is not that the Judges ruled for 450 years — in which case
the accusative would be used, as in verse 18 — but, as the use
of the dative implies, that the period until Saul, characterized by
the rule of the Judges, lasted 450 years. I need scarcely notice the
objection that I fail to take account of the servitude mentioned in
Judges 10:7, 8. That servitude affected only the tribes beyond Jordan.
[3]
Alford's Greek Test., Prol. to 2 Thessalonians
Chapter 5.
PREFACE TO THE FIFTH EDITION
A DEFENSE OF THE BOOK OF DANIEL
AGAINST THE "HIGHER CRITICISM"
This volume has been disparaged in some quarters
because, it is alleged, it ignores the destructive criticism which is
supposed to have led "all people of discernment" to abandon belief in
the visions of Daniel.
The charge is not altogether just. Not only are some of the chief objections
of the critics answered in these pages, but in proving the genuineness
of the great central prophecy of the book, the authenticity of the whole
is established, And the absence of a special chapter upon the subject
may be explained. The practice, too common in religious controversy,
of giving an ex parte representation of the views of opponents,
instead of accepting their own statement of them, is never satisfactory,
and seldom fair. And no treatise was available on the critics' side,
concise enough to afford the basis of a brief excursus, and yet sufficiently
full and authoritative to warrant its being accepted as adequate.
This want, however, has since been supplied by Professor Driver's Introduction
to the Literature of the Old Testament, [1]
a work which embodies the results of the so-called
"Higher Criticism," as accepted by the sober judgment of the author.
While avoiding the malignant extravagance of the German rationalists
and their English imitators, he omits nothing which erudition can with
fairness urge against the authenticity of the Book of Daniel. And if
the hostile arguments he adduces can be shown to be faulty and inconclusive,
the reader may fearlessly accept the result as an "end of controversy"
upon the subject. [2]
Here is the thesis which the author sets himself
to establish:
"In face of the facts presented by the Book of Daniel, the opinion that
it is the work of Daniel himself cannot be sustained. Internal evidence
shows, with a cogency that cannot be resisted, that it must have been
written not earlier than c. 300 B.C., and in Palestine; and it is at
least probable that it was composed under the persecution of Antiochus
Epiphanes, B.C. 168 or 167."
Professor Driver marshals his proofs under three heads:
(1) facts of a historical nature;
(2) the evidence of the language of Daniel; and
(3) the theology of the Book.
Under (1) he enumerates the following points:
- (a) "The position of the Book in
the Jewish Canon, not among the prophets, but in the miscellaneous
collection of writings called the Hagiographa, and among the
latest of these, in proximity to Esther. Though little definite is
known respecting the formation of the Canon, the division known as
the ' Prophets' was doubtless formed prior to the Hagiographa; and
had the Book of Daniel existed at the time, it is reasonable to suppose
that it would have ranked as the work of a prophet, and have been
included among the former."
(b) "Jesus, the son of Sirach (writing c. 200 B.C.), in his enumeration
of Israelitish worthies, c. 44-50, though he mentions Isaiah, Jeremiah,
Ezekiel, and (collectively) the Twelve Minor Prophets, is silent as
to Daniel."
(c) "That Nebuchadnezzar besieged Jerusalem and carried away some
of the sacred vessels in 'the third year of Jehoiakim' (Daniel 1:1
f.), though it cannot, strictly speaking, be disproved, is highly
improbable: not only is the Book of Kings silent, but Jeremiah, in
the following year (Jeremiah 25, etc.), speaks of the Chaldaeans
in a manner which appears distinctly to imply that their arms had
not yet been seen in Judah."
(d) "The 'Chaldaeans' are synonymous in Daniel with the caste of wise
men. This sense ' is unknown to the Assyro-Babylonian language, has,
wherever it occurs, formed itself after the end of the Babylonian
empire, and is thus an indication of the post-exilic composition of
the Book' (Schrader)."…
(e) "Belshazzar is represented as King of Babylon; and Nebuchadnezzar
is spoken of throughout chap. 5: (vv. 2, 11, 13, 18, 22) as his father."…
(f) "Darius, son of Ahasuerus, a Mede, after the death of Belshazzar,
is 'made king over the realm of the Chaldaeans.' There seems to be
no room for such a ruler. According to all other authorities, Cyrus
is the immediate successor of Nabu-nahid, and the ruler of the entire
Persian empire. "…
(g) "In 9:2 it is stated that Daniel 'understood by the books' the
number of years for which, according to Jeremiah, Jerusalem should
lie waste. The expression used implies that the prophecies of Jeremiah
formed part of a collection of sacred books, which nevertheless
it may be safely affirmed, was not formed in 536 B.C."
(h) "Other indications adduced to show that
the Book is not the work of a contemporary, are such as the following":
The points are the improbability, first, that a strict Jew would have
entered the class of the "wise men," or that he would have been admitted
by the wise men themselves; second, Nebuchadnezzar's insanity and
edict; third, the absolute terms in which he and Darius recognize
God, while retaining their idolatry.
I dismiss (f) and (h) at once, for the author himself,
with his usual fairness, declines to press them. "They should," he admits,
"be used with reserve." The mention of "Darius the Mede" is perhaps
the greatest difficulty which confronts the student of Daniel, and the
problem it involves still awaits solution. The unqualified rejection
of the narrative by many eminent writers only proves the incapacity
even of scholars of repute to suspend their judgment upon questions
of the kind. The history of that age is too uncertain and confused to
justify dogmatism, and, as Professor Driver justly remarks, "a cautious
criticism will not build too much on the silence of the inscriptions,
where many certainly remain to be brought to light". In Mr. Sayce's
recent work [3]
this caution is neglected. He accepts, moreover,
with a faith which is unduly simple, all that Cyrus says about himself.
It was obviously his interest to represent the acquisition of Babylonia
as a peaceful revolution, and not a military conquest. But the Book
of Daniel does not conflict with either hypothesis. Mr. Sayce here "reads
into it," as is so constantly done, what it in no way states or even
implies. There is not a word about a siege or a capture. Belshazzar
was "slain," and Darius "received" the kingdom; but how these events
came about we must learn from other sources. Professor Driver here admits
in express terms "that 'Darius the Mede' may prove, after all, to have
been a historical character"; [4]
and this is enough for our present purpose.
The remaining points I proceed to discuss seriatim.
(a) This is rightly placed first, as being
the most important. But its apparent importance grows less and less
the more closely it is examined. Our English Bible, following the Vulgate,
divides the Old Testament into thirty-nine books. The Jewish Canon reckoned
only twenty-four. These were classified under three heads – the
Torah, the Neveeim, and the Kethuvim (the Law,
the Prophets, and the Other Writings). The first contained the Pentateuch.
The second contained eight books, which were again classified in two
groups. The first four – viz., Joshua, Judges, Samuel, and Kings
– were called the "Former Prophets"; and the second four –
viz., Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and "the Twelve" (i.e. the minor
prophets reckoned as one book) – were called the "Latter Prophets."
The third division contained eleven books – viz., Psalms, Proverbs,
Job, Song of Songs, Ruth, Lamentations, Ecclesiastes, Esther, Daniel,
Ezra and Nehemiah (reckoned as one), and Chronicles. Now, an examination
of this list makes either of two conclusions irresistible. Either the
Canon was arranged under Divine guidance, or else the classification
of the books between the second and third divisions was an arbitrary
one. If any one adopts the former alternative, the inclusion of Daniel
in the Canon is decisive of the whole question. If, on the other hand,
it be assumed that the arrangement was human and arbitrary, the fact
that Daniel is in the third group proves – not that the book was
regarded as of doubtful repute, for in that case it would have been
excluded from the Canon, but that the great exile of the Captivity was
not regarded as a "prophet."
To the superficial this may seem to be giving up the whole case. But
using the word "prophet" in its ordinary acceptation, Daniel has no
claim whatever to the title, and but for Matthew 24:15 it would probably
never have been applied to him. His visions have their New Testament
counterpart, but yet no one speaks of "the prophet John." According
to 2 Peter 1:21 the prophets "spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost."
This characterized the utterances of Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and
"the Twelve." They were the words of Jehovah by the mouth of the men
who uttered them. The prophets stood apart from the people as witnesses
for God; but Daniel's position and ministry were wholly different. "Neither
have we hearkened unto Thy servants the prophets which spake in Thy
name": such was his humble attitude. Higher criticism may slight the
distinction here insisted on; but the question is how it was regarded
by the men who settled the Canon; and in their judgment its importance
was immense. Daniel contains the record, not of God-breathed words uttered
by the seer, but of the words spoken to him, and of dreams
and visions accorded him. And the visions of the latter half of his
book were granted him after more than sixty years spent in statecraft
– years the record of which would fix his fame in the popular
mind as statesman and ruler.
The reader will thus recognize that the position of Daniel in the Canon
is precisely where we should expect to find it. The critic speaks of
it as being "in the miscellaneous collection of writings called the
Hagiographa, and among the latest of these, in proximity to Esther."
But, in adopting this from earlier writers, the author is guilty of
what may be described as unintentional dishonesty. Daniel comes before
Ezra, Nehemiah, and Chronicles in a group of books which includes the
Psalms – those Psalms than which no part of their Canon was prized
more highly by the Jews – those Psalms, many of which they rightly
regarded as prophetic in the highest and strictest sense. [5]
But Daniel, we are told, was placed "in proximity
to Esther." What does the critic mean by this? He cannot wish to suggest
that Esther is held in low repute by the Jews, for he himself declares
that it came to be "ranked by them as superior both to the writings
of the prophets and to all other parts of the Hagiographa." As to Esther
coming before Daniel, he cannot have overlooked that it is bracketed
in the Canon with the four books which precede it – the Megilloth.
He cannot mean to imply that the books of the Kethuvim are arranged
chronologically; and he certainly cannot wish to create an ignorant
prejudice. The statement therefore is an enigma, and the discussion
under this head may be dosed by the general remark that (a)
implies that the Jews esteemed the books in the third division
of their Canon as less sacred than "the prophets." But this is wholly
baseless. In common with the rest, they were, as Josephus tells us,
"justly believed to be Divine, so that, rather than speak against them,
they were ready to suffer torture, or even death." [6]
(b) But little need be said in answer to
this. Canon Driver admits that the argument is one "which, standing
alone, it would be hazardous to press," and this is precisely its position
if (a) be refuted. If it were a question of the omission of Daniel's
name from a formal list of the prophets everything above urged would
apply here with equal force; but the reader must not suppose that the
son of Sirach gives any list of the kind. The facts are these. The Apocryphal
Book of Ecclesiasticus, which is here referred to, ends with a rhapsody
in praise of "famous men." This panegyric, it is true, omits the name
of Daniel. But in what connection would his name be included? Daniel
was exiled to Babylon in early youth, and never spent a single day of
his long life among his people, never was openly associated with them
in their struggles or their sorrows. The critic, moreover, fails to
notice that the Son of Sirach ignores also not only such worthies as
Abel, and Melchisedec, and Job, and Gideon, and Samson, but also Ezra,
who, unlike Daniel, played a most prominent part in the national life,
and who also gave his name to one of the books of the Canon. Let the
reader decide this matter for himself after reading the passage in which
the names of Daniel and Ezra ought to appear. [7]
If any one is so mentally constituted that the
omission leads him to decide against the authenticity of these two books,
no words of mine would influence him.
(c) The historical statement with which
the Book of Daniel opens is declared to be improbable on two grounds:
first, because "the Book of Kings is silent" on the subject; and, secondly,
because Jeremiah 25 appears inconsistent with it. The first point is
made apparently in error, for 2 Kings 24:1 states explicitly that in
Jehoiakim's days Nebuchadnezzar came up against Jerusalem, and that
the Jewish king became his vassal. [8]
And the second point is overstated. Jeremiah 25
is silent on the subject, and that is all that can be said. Now the
weight to be given to the silence of a particular witness or document
on any matter is a familiar problem in dealing with evidence. It entirely
depends on circumstances whether it counts for much, or little, or nothing.
Kings being a historical record, its silence here would count for something.
But why should a warning and a prophecy like Jeremiah 25 contain the
recital of an event of a few months before, an event which no one in
Jerusalem could ever possibly forget? [9]
But further discussion on these lines is needless, for the accuracy
of Daniel's statement can be established on grounds which the critic
ignores altogether. I refer to the chronology of the eras of the "servitude"
and the "desolations." Both are commonly confounded with the "captivity,"
which was only in part concurrent with them. These several eras represented
three successive judgments upon Judah. The chronology of these is fully
explained in the sequel, and a reference to the excursus (within this
work), or indeed a glance at the tables which follow, will supply proof
absolute and complete that the servitude began in the third year of
Jehoiakim, precisely as the Book of Daniel avers.
(d) I will refer under the second head of the
inquiry to the philological question here involved. It is not in any
sense a historical difficulty.
(e) The reader will find this point dealt with. Canon Driver
remarks: "It may be admitted as probable that Belsharuzur held command
for his father in Babylon; …but it is difficult to think that
this could entitle him to be spoken of by a contemporary as king."
If Belshazzar was regent, as the narrative indicates, it is difficult
to think that a courtier would speak of him otherwise than as king.
To have done so might have cost him his head! Daniel 5:7, 16, 29 affords
corroboration here in a manner all the more striking because it is wholly
undesigned. Nebuchadnezzar had made Daniel second ruler in the kingdom:
why does Belshazzar make him third ruler? Presumably because
he himself held but the second place. To avoid this the critics, trading
upon a possible alternative rendering of the Aramaic {as given in the
margin of the Revised Version}, conjecture a "Board of three." But assuming
that the words used may mean a triumvirate in the sense of chap.
6:2, the question whether this is their actual meaning must be settled
by an appeal to history. And history affords not the slightest hint
that such a system of government prevailed in the Babylonian Empire.
A true exegesis, therefore, must decide in favor of the alternative
and more natural view, that Daniel was to rule as third, the absent
king being first, and the king-regent second.
But Belshazzar is called the son of Nebuchadnezzar. The reader
will find this objection fully answered by Dr. Pusey (Daniel,
pp. 406-408). He justly remarks that "intermarriage with the family
of a conquered monarch, or with a displaced line, is so obviously a
way of strengthening the newly acquired throne, that it is a priori
probable that Nabunahit would so fortify his claim," and Professor
Driver himself allows (p. 468) that possibly the King may have
married a daughter of Nebuchadnezzar, "in which case the latter might
be spoken of as Belshazzar's father (= grandfather, by Hebrew usage)."
I will only add two remarks: first, the critics forget that even on
their own view of Daniel the existence of a tradition is prima facie
proof of its truth; and, secondly, if the usurper chose to be called
the son of Nebuchadnezzar, though with no sort of claim to the title,
no one in Babylon would dare to thwart him.
(g) Here are the words of Daniel 9:2 (R.V.):
"I Daniel understood by the books the number of the years, whereof the
word of the Lord came to Jeremiah the prophet, for the accomplishing
of the desolations of Jerusalem, even seventy years." The prophecy here
referred to is admittedly Jeremiah 25:11, 12. Now the word sepher,
rendered "book" in Daniel 9:2, means simply a scroll. It may denote
a book, as it often does in Scripture, or merely a letter. See
ex. gr. Jeremiah 29:1 (the letter which Jeremiah
wrote to the exiles in Babylon), or Isaiah 37:14 (Sennacherib's letter
to King Hezekiah). Then, again, Jeremiah 36:1, 2 records that in
the fourth year of Jehoiakim, the very year in which the prophecy of
Jeremiah 25: was given, all the prophecies delivered up to that time
were recorded in "a book." And in Jeremiah 51:60, 61 we find that some
ten years later a further "book" was written and sent to Babylon. Where,
then, is the difficulty? Professor Driver, moreover, himself supplies
a complete answer in his own criticism by adopting "the supposition
that in some cases Jeremiah's writings were in circulation for a while
as single prophecies, or small groups of prophecies" These may have
been the scrolls or "books" of Daniel 9.
But suppose, for the sake of argument, we admit that "the books" must
mean the sacred writings up to that period, what warrant is there for
affirming that no such "collection" existed in 536 B.C.? A more arbitrary
assertion was never made, even in the range of controversy. Is it not
absolutely incredible that the scrolls of the Law were not kept together?
And considering Daniel's intense piety, and the extraordinary resources
and means he must have had at his disposal under Nebuchadnezzar, may
it not "safely be affirmed" that there was not another man upon earth
so likely as himself to have had copies of all the holy writings? [10]
I now turn to the critic's second argument, which is based on the language
of the Book of Daniel. He appeals, first, to the number of Persian
words it contains; secondly, to the presence of Greek words;
thirdly, to the character of the Aramaic in which part of the
book is written; and, lastly, to the character of the Hebrew.
Underlying the argument founded on the presence of foreign words is
the unexpressed assumption that the Jews were an uncultured tribe who
had lived till then in boorish isolation. And yet four centuries before
Daniel's time the wisdom and wealth of Solomon were spoken of throughout
the then known world. He was a naturalist, a botanist, a philosopher,
and a poet. And why not a linguist also? Were all his communications
with his many foreign wives carried on through interpreters? He traded
with near and distant nations, and every one knows how language is influenced
by commerce. And can we doubt that the fame of Nebuchadnezzar attracted
foreigners to Babylon? What his relations were with foreign courts we
know not. Why may not Daniel have been a Persian scholar? The position
assigned to him under the Persian rule renders this extremely probable.
The number of Persian words in the book, according to Professor Driver,
is "probably at least fifteen"; and here is his comment upon them:
- "That such words should be found in books written
after the Persian Empire was organized, and when Persian influences
prevailed, is not more than would be expected"
But it was precisely in these circumstances that the
Book of Daniel was written. The vision of chap. 10 was given five years
after the Persian rule had been established, and these visions were
the basis of the book. Notes and records the writer doubtless had of
the earlier and historical portions of it; but it is a reasonable assumption
that the whole was written after the visions were accorded him.
As regards the Aramaic and the Hebrew of Daniel, I can of course express
no opinion of my own. But my position will be in no way prejudiced by
my incompetency in this respect. In the first place, there is nothing
new here. The critic merely gives in a condensed form what the Germans
have urged; and the whole ground has been covered by Dr. Pusey and others,
who, having examined it with equal erudition and care, have arrived
at wholly different conclusions. But, in the second place, it is unnecessary;
for the signal fairness with which Professor Driver states the results
of his argument enables me to concede all he says in this regard and
to dismiss the discussion of it to the sequel. Here axe his words:
- "The verdict of the language of Daniel is thus clear.
The Persian words presuppose a period after the Persian Empire had
been well established; the Greek words demand, the Hebrew supports,
and the Aramaic permits, a date after the conquest of Palestine by
Alexander the Great (B.C. 332). With our present knowledge this is
as much as the language authorizes us definitely to affirm" (p. 476).
May I restate this in other words? The Persian terms
raise a presumption that Daniel was written after a certain date. The
Hebrew strengthens this presumption, the Aramaic is consistent with
it, and the Greek words used establish the truth of it. Problems precisely
similar to this claim decision every day in our courts of justice. The
whole strength of the case depends on the last point stated. Any number
of argumentative presumptions may be rebutted; but here, it is alleged,
we have proof which. admits of no answer: the Greek words demand
a date which destroys the authenticity of Daniel.
Will the reader believe it that the only foundation on which this superstructure
rests is the allegation that two Greek words are found in the
list of musical, instruments given in the third chapter? At a, bazaar
held some time ago in one of our cathedral, towns, under the patronage
of the bishop of the: diocese, the alarm was given that a thief was
at work: among the company, and two ladies present had lost their purses.
In the excitement which followed, the stolen purses, emptied of course
of their contents, were found in the bishop's pocket! The "Higher Criticism"
would have handed him over to the police! Perhaps an apology is due
for this digression; but, in sober earnestness, surely the inquiry is
opportune whether these critics understand the very rudiments of the
science of weighing evidence. The presence of the two stolen purses
did not "demand" the conviction of the bishop. Neither should the presence
of two Greek words decide the fate of Daniel. [11]
The question would still remain, How did they
come to be there? According to Professor Sayce, himself a hostile authority,
the evidence of the monuments has entirely refuted this argument of
the critics [12]
It now appears that there were Greek colonies
in Palestine as early as the days of Hezekiah, and that there was intercourse
between Greece and Canaan at a still earlier period.
But let us admit, for the sake of argument, that the words are really
Greek, and that no such words were known in Babylon in the days of the
exile. Is the inference based on their presence in the book a legitimate
one? While some apologists of Daniel have pressed unduly the hypothesis
of a revision, such a hypothesis affords a most reasonable explanation
of difficulties of this particular kind. Why should we doubt the truth
of the Jewish tradition that "the men of the great synagogue wrote"
(that is, edited) the Book of Daniel? And if true, these Greek
words may be easily accounted for. If in the list of musical instruments,
and in the title of the "wise men," the editors found terms which were
foreign and strange to them, how natural for them to substitute words
which would be familiar to the Jews of Palestine. [13]
How natural, too, to spell such names as Nebuchadnezzar
and Abednego in the manner then become usual. These are precisely the
sort of changes which they would adopt; changes of no vital moment,
but fitted to make the book more suitable for those on whose behalf
they were revising it.
The critic's last ground of attack is the theology of the Book of Daniel.
This, he declares, "points to a later age than that of the exile." No
charge of error is suggested, for Professor Driver is careful
at the outset to repudiate what he calls the" exaggerations" of the
German rationalists and their English imitators. But his alliance with
such men warps his judgment, and betrays him into adopting statements
begotten of their mingled ignorance and malice. Let one instance suffice.
"It is remarkable also," he says, "that Daniel – so unlike the
prophets generally – should display no interest in the welfare
or prospects of his contemporaries." Not even in theological controversy
could another statement be found more flagrantly baseless and false.
In the entire history of the prophets, in the whole range of Scripture,
the ninth chapter of Daniel has no parallel for touching, earnest, passionate
"interest in the welfare and prospects" of contemporaries.
Now the question here is, not whether the doctrine of the Book be true,
for that is not disputed, but whether truth of such an advanced and
definite character could have been revealed at so early a period in
the scheme of revelation. It is not easy to fix the principles on which
such a question should be discussed. And the discussion may be avoided
by raising another question, the answer to which will decide the whole
matter in dispute. We know the "orthodox view" of the Book of Daniel.
What alternative does the critic propose for our acceptance? Here he
shall speak for himself, and the two quotations following will suffice:
- "Daniel, it cannot be doubted, was a historical person,
one of the Jewish exiles in Babylon, who, with his three companions,
was noted for his staunch adherence to the principles of his religion,
who attained a position of influence at the Court of Babylon, who
interpreted Nebuchadnezzar's dreams, and foretold as a seer something
of the future fate of the Chaldaean and Persian empires" (p. 479).
- "On the other hand, if the author be a prophet living
in the time of the trouble itself, all the features of the Book may
be consistently explained. He lives in the age in which he manifests
an interest, and which needs the consolations which he has to address
to it. He does not write after the persecutions are ended (in which
case his prophecies would be pointless), but at their beginning, when
his message of encouragement would have a value for the godly Jews
in the season of their trial. He thus utters genuine predictions;
and the advent of the Messianic age follows closely on the end of
Antiochus, just as in Isaiah or Micah it follows closely on the fall
of the Assyrian: in both cases the future is foreshortened" (p. 478).
The first of these quotations refers to Daniel himself,
the second to the supposed author of the Book which bears his name.
In the first we pass for a moment out of the mist and cloud of mere
theory and argument into the plain, clear light of fact. "It cannot
be doubted," or, in other words it is absolutely certain, that Daniel
was not only "a historical person," but "a seer"– that is to say,
a prophet. But plunging back again at once into the gloom, we
go on to conjecture the existence of another prophet in the days of
Antiochus – a real prophet, for "he utters genuine predictions"
for the encouragement of "the godly Jews in the season of their trial."
Now the position of the skeptic is in a sense unassailable. He
is like the obstinate juror who puts his back against the wall and refuses
to believe the evidence. But mark what this suggested compromise involves.
As already noticed, Daniel had no pretensions to the prophet's mantle
in the sense in which Jeremiah and Ezekiel wore it. He himself laid
no claim to it (see chap. 9:10). He, moreover, passed his life in the
splendid isolation of the Court of Babylon, while they were central
figures among their people – one in the midst of the troubles
in Jerusalem, the other among the exiles. It would not be strange therefore
if Daniel's name and fame had no such place as theirs in the popular
memory. But here we are asked to believe that another prophet, raised
up within historic times, whose "message of encouragement" must have
been on every man's lips throughout the noble Maccabean struggle, passed
clean out of the memory of the nation. The historian of this struggle
cannot have been removed from him by more than a single generation,
yet he ignores his existence, though he refers in the plainest terms
to the Daniel of the Captivity. [14]
The prophet's voice had been silent for centuries;
with what wild and passionate enthusiasm the nation would have hailed
the rise of a new seer at such a time! And when the issue of that fierce
struggle set the seal of truth upon his words, his fame would have eclipsed
that of the old prophets of earlier days. But in fact not a vestige
of his fame or name survived. No writer, sacred or secular, seems to
have heard of him. No tradition of him remained. Was there ever a figment
more untenable than this?
No such compromise between faith and unbelief is; possible. From either
of two alternatives there is no escape. Either the Book of Daniel is
what it claims. to be, or else it is wholly worthless. "All must be
true or all imposture." It is idle to talk of it as; being the work
of some prophet of a later epoch. It dates from Babylon in the days
of the Exile, or else it is a literary fraud, concocted after the time
of Antiochus Epiphanes. But how then could it come to be quoted in the
Maccabees – quoted, not incidentally, but in one of the most solemn
and striking passages in the entire book, the dying words of old Mattathias?
And how could it come to be included in the Canon? The critics make
much of its position in the Canon: how do they account for its
having a place in it at all?
It is reasonably certain that the first two divisions of the Canon were
settled by the Great Synagogue long before the days of the Maccabees,
and that its completion was the work of the Great Sanhedrin, not later
than the second century B.C. And we are asked to suppose that this great
College, composed of the most learned men of the nation, would have
accepted a literary fraud of modern date, or could have been duped by
it. This is one of the wildest and most reckless hypotheses imaginable.
Nor would this argument be sensibly weakened if the critics should insist
that the Canon may still have been open for a hundred years after the
death of Antiochus. [15]
If it was thus kept open, the fact would be a
further pledge and proof that the most jealous and vigilant care must
have been unceasingly exercised. The presence of the Book of Daniel
in the Jewish Canon is a fact more weighty than all the criticisms of
the critics.
Thousands there are who cling to the Book of Daniel, and yet dread to
face this destructive criticism lest faith should give way under the
influence. And yet this is all it has to urge, as formulated by one
of its best exponents. Of all these hostile arguments there is not so
much as one which may not be refuted at any moment by the discovery
of further inscriptions. In presence of some newly found cylinder from
the as yet unexplored ruins of Babylon, [16]
all this theorizing about improbabilities and
peddling over words might be silenced in a day. And this being so, it
is obvious to any one in whom the judicial faculty is not wanting that
the critics exaggerate the importance of their criticisms. Even if all
they urge were true and weighty, it should lead us only to suspend our
judgment. But the critics are specialists, and it is proverbial that
specialists are bad judges. And here it is possible for one who cannot
pose as a theologian or a scholar to meet them on more than equal terms.
With them it is enough that evidence of a certain kind points in one
direction. But they in whom the judicial faculty is developed will pause
and ask, "What is to be said upon the other side?" and "Will the proposed
decision harmonize with all the facts?" Questions of this kind, however,
have no existence for the critics. If they ever presented themselves
to Professor Driver's mind, it is to be regretted that he failed to
take account of them when stating the general results of his inquiry.
And if ignored by an author so willing to reach the truth, they need
not be looked for in the writings of the skeptics and apostates.
I have hitherto been dealing with presumptions and inferences and arguments.
To deny that these have weight would be both dishonest and futile. It
may be conceded that if the Book of Daniel had been brought to light
within the Christian era, they would suffice to bar its admission to
the Canon. But to the Christian the Book is accredited by the Lord Jesus
Christ Himself; and in presence of this one fact the force of these
criticisms is dispelled like mist before the sun. The very prediction
which the rationalists most cavil at, He has adopted in that discourse
which is the key to all unfulfilled prophecy (Matthew 24); and if Daniel
be proved a fraud, He whom we own as Lord is discredited thereby.
Such an argument as this the rationalists of the German school despise.
And with them the mention of Daniel in the Book of Ezekiel counts for
nothing, though according to their own canons it ought to outweigh much
of the negative evidence they adduce. Daniel is not mentioned by other
prophets; therefore, they argue, Daniel is a myth. Three times the prophecies
of Ezekiel speak of him; therefore, they infer, some other Daniel is
intended. Their argument is based on the silence of the sacred and other
books of the Jews. A man so eminent as the Daniel of the exile would
not, they urge, have been thus ignored. And yet they conjecture the
career of another Daniel of equal, or even greater eminence, whose very
existence has been forgotten! It is not easy to deal with such casuists.
But there is one argument, at least, which they cannot rob us of.
They have got rid of the second chapter and the seventh, and the closing
vision of the Book, but the great central prophecy of the Seventy Weeks
remains; and this affords proof of the Divine authority of Daniel, which
cannot be destroyed. Let them fix the date of the Book where they will,
they fail to account for this. From one definitely recorded historical
event – the edict to rebuild Jerusalem, to another definitely
recorded historical event – the public manifestation of the Messiah,
the length of the intervening period was predicted; and with accuracy
absolute and to the very day the prediction has been fulfilled.
To elucidate that prophecy this volume has been written, and as the
result constitutes my personal contribution to the controversy, I may
be pardoned for explaining the steps by which it has been reached. The
vision refers to 70 sevens of years, but I deal here only with the 69
"weeks" of the twenty-fifth verse. Here are the words:
- "Know therefore and discern that
from the going forth of the commandment to restore and to build Jerusalem
unto the Messiah, the Prince, shall be seven weeks and threescore
and two weeks: it shall be built again with street and moat, even
in troublous times." [17]
Now it is an undisputed fact that Jerusalem was rebuilt
by Nehemiah, under an edict issued by Arta-xerxes (Longimanus), in the
twentieth year of his reign. Therefore, notwithstanding the doubts which
controversy throws upon everything, the conclusion is obvious and irresistible
that this was the epoch of the prophetic period. But the month date
was Nisan, and the sacred year of the Jews began with the phases of
the Paschal moon. I appealed, therefore, to the Astronomer Royal, the
late Sir George Airy, to calculate for me the moon's place for March
in the year in question, and I thus ascertained the date required–
March 14th, B.C. 445.
This being settled, one question only remained, Of what kind of year
does the era consist? And the answer to this is definite and clear.
That it is the ancient year of 360 days is plainly proved in two ways.
First, because, according to Daniel and the Apocalypse, 31/2 prophetic
years are equal to 1, 260 days; and, secondly, because it can be proved
that the 70 years of the "Desolations" were of this character; and the
connection between the period of the "Desolations" and the era of the
"weeks" is one of the few universally admitted facts in this controversy.
The "Desolations" began on the 10th Tebeth, B.C. 589 (a day which for
four-and-twenty centuries has been commemorated by the Jews as a fast),
and ended on the 24th Chisleu, B.C. 520.
Having thus settled the terminus a quo of the "weeks," and the
form of year of which they are composed, nothing remains but to calculate
the duration of the era. Its terminus ad quem can thus with certainty
be ascertained. Now 483 years (69 x 7) of 360 days contain 173, 880
days. And a period of 173, 880 days, beginning March 14th, B.C. 445,
ended upon that Sunday in the week of the crucifixion, when, for the
first and only time in His ministry, the Lord Jesus Christ, in fulfillment
of Zechariah's prophecy, made a public entry into Jerusalem, and caused
His Messiahship to be openly proclaimed by "the whole multitude of the
disciples." (Luke 19)
I need not discuss the matter further here. In the following chapters
every incidental question involved is fully dealt with, and every objection
answered. [18]
Suffice it to repeat that in presence of the facts
and figures thus detailed no mere negation of belief is possible. These
must be accounted for in some way. "There is a point beyond which unbelief
is impossible, and the mind, in refusing truth, must take refuge in
a misbelief which is sheer credulity."
It was not till after the preceding pages were in print
that Archdeacon Farrar's Daniel reached my hands. Some apology
is due, perhaps, to Professor Driver for bracketing such a work with
his, but The Expositor's Bible will be read by many to whom The
Introduction is an unknown book. Both writers agree in impugning
the authenticity of the Book of Daniel; but their relative positions
are widely different, and no less so are their arguments and methods.
The Christian scholar writes for scholars, desirous only to elucidate
the truth. The popular theologian retails the extravagances of German
skepticism for the enlightenment of an easily deluded public. As we
turn from the one book to the other, we are reminded of the difference
between a criminal trial when in charge of a responsible law officer
of the Crown, and when promoted by a vindictive private prosecutor.
In the one case the lawyer's aim is solely to assist the Court in arriving
at a just verdict, In the other, we may be prepared for statements which
are reckless, if not unscrupulous.
And here we must distinguish between the Higher Criticism as legitimately
used by Christian scholars in the interests of truth, and the rationalistic
movement which bears that name. If that movement leads to unbelief,
it is in obedience to the law that like begets like. It is itself the
offspring of skepticism. Its reputed founder set out with the deliberate
design of eliminating God from the Bible. From the skeptic's point of
view Eichhorn's theories were inadequate, and De Wette and others have
improved upon them. But their aim and object are the same. The Bible
must be accounted for, and Christianity explained, on natural principles.
The miracles therefore had to be got rid of, and prophecy is the greatest
miracle of all. In the case of most of the Messianic Scriptures the
skepticism which had settled like a night mist upon Germany made the
task an easy one; but Daniel was a difficulty. Such passages as the
fifty-third chapter of Isaiah could be jauntily disposed of, but the
infidel could make nothing of these visions of Daniel. The Book stands
out as a witness for God, and by fair means or foul it must be silenced.
And one method only of accomplishing this is possible. The conspirators
set themselves to prove that it was written after the events it purports
to predict. The evidence they have scraped together is of a kind which
would not avail to convict a known thief of petty larceny – much
of it indeed has already been discarded; but any sort of evidence will
suffice with a prejudiced tribunal, and from the very first the Book
of Daniel was doomed.
Dr. Farrar's book reproduces every shred of this evidence in its baldest
and crudest form. His original contributions to the controversy are
limited to the rhetoric which conceals the weakness of fallacious arguments,
and the dogmatism with which he sometimes disposes of results accredited
by the judgment of authorities of the highest eminence. Two typical
instances will suffice. The first relates to a question of pure scholarship.
Referring to the fifth chapter of Daniel he writes:
- "Snatching at the merest straws, those who try to
vindicate the accuracy of the writer…think that they improve
the case by urging that Daniel was made 'the third ruler in the kingdom'
– Nabunaid being the first, and Belshazzar being the second!
Unhappily for their very precarious hypothesis, the translation 'third
ruler' appears to be entirely untenable. It means 'one of a board
of three.'"
"Entirely untenable!" In view of the decision of the
Old Testament Company of the Revisers on this point, the statement denotes
extraordinary carelessness or intolerable arrogance. And I have authority
for stating that the Revisers gave the question full consideration,
and that it was only at the last revision that the alternative rendering,
"rule as one of three," was admitted into the margin. On no occasion
was it contemplated to accept it in the text. [19]
The right rendering of ch. 5:29 is admittedly
"the third ruler" in the kingdom; but the authorities differ as to verses
7 and 16. Professor Driver tells me that, in his opinion, the absolutely
literal rendering there is "rule as a third part in the kingdom," or,
slightly paraphrasing the words, "rule as one of three" (as in R.V.
margin). Professor Kirkpatrick, of Cambridge, has been good enough
to refer me to Kautzsch's Die Heilige schrift des alten Testaments,
as representing the latest and best German scholarship, and his rendering
of verse 7 is "third ruler in the kingdom," with the note, "i.e.,
either as one of three over the whole kingdom (compare 6:3), or as third
by the side of the king and the king's mother." And the Chief Rabbi
(whose courtesy to me here I wish to acknowledge) writes:
- "I cannot absolutely find fault with– for translating
the words 'the third part of the kingdom, 'as he follows herein two
of our Hebrew Commentators of great repute, Rashi and Ibn Ezra. On
the other hand, others of our Commentators, such as Saadia, Jachja,
etc., translate the passage as 'he shall be the third ruler in the
kingdom.' This rendering seems to be more strictly in accord with
the literal meaning of the words, as shown by Dr. Winer in his Grammatik
des Chaldaismus. It also receives confirmation from Sir Henry Rawlinson's
remarkable discovery, according to which Belshazzar was the eldest
son of King Nabonidus, and associated with him in the Government,
so that the person next in honor would be the third."
It is perfectly clear, therefore, that Dr. Farrar's
statement is utterly unjustifiable. Is it to be attributed to want of
scholarship, or to want of candor?
Again, referring to the prophet's third vision, Archdeacon Farrar writes:
- "The attempt to refer the prophecy of the seventy
weeks primarily or directly to the coming and death of Christ…can
only be supported by immense manipulations, and by hypotheses so crudely
impossible, that they would have made the prophecy practically meaningless
both to Daniel and to any subsequent reader" (p. 287).
It is not easy to deal with such a statement with even
conventional respect. No honest man will deny that, whether the ninth
chapter of Daniel be a prophecy or a fraud, the blessings specified
in the twenty-fourth verse are Messianic. Here all Christian expositors
are agreed. And though the views of some of them are marked by startling
eccentricities even the wildest of them will contrast favorably with
Kuenen's exegesis, which, in all its crude absurdity, Archdeacon Farrar
adopts. [20]
Professor Driver's opinions are entitled to the
greatest weight within the sphere in which he is so high an authority.
[21]
But I have ventured to suggest that his eminence
as a scholar lends undue weight to his dicta on the general topics
involved, and that he shares in the proverbial disability of experts
in dealing with a mass of apparently conflicting evidence. The tone
and manner in which his inquiry is conducted shows a readiness to reconsider
his position in the light of any new discoveries hereafter. In contrast
with this there are no reserves in Dr. Farrar's denunciations. For him
retreat is impossible, no matter what the future may disclose. But to
review his book is not my purpose. The only serious counts in the indictment
of Daniel have been already noticed. His treatise, however, raises a
general question of transcendent importance, and to this I desire in
conclusion to refer.
With him the Book of Daniel is the merest fiction, differing from other
fiction of the same kind by reason of the multiplicity of its inaccuracies
and errors. Its history is but idle legend. Its miracles are but baseless
fables. It is, in every part of it, a work of the imagination. "Avowed
fiction" (p. 43), he calls it, for it is so obviously a romance
that the charge of fraud is due solely to the stupidity of the Christian
Church in mistaking the aim and purpose of "the holy and gifted Jew"
(p. 119) who wrote it.
Such are the results of his criticisms. What action shall we take upon
them? Shall we not sadly, but with deliberate purpose, tear the Book
of Daniel from its place in the Sacred Canon? By no means.
"These results," Dr. Farrar exclaims, "are in no way derogatory to the
preciousness of this Old Testament Apocalypse. No words of mine can
exaggerate the value which I attach to this part of our Canonical Scriptures..
.. Its right to a place in the Canon is undisputed and indisputable,
and there is scarcely a single book of the Old Testament which can be
made more richly profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction,
for instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete,
completely furnished unto every good work" (p. 4).
This is not an isolated statement such as charity might attribute to
thoughtlessness. Like words are used again and again in praise of the
book [22]
Daniel is nothing more than a religious novel,
and yet "there is scarcely a single book of the Old Testament"
of greater worth!
The question here is not the authenticity of Daniel but the character
and value of the Holy Scriptures. Christian scholars whose researches
lead them to reject any portion of the Canon are wont to urge that,
in doing so, they increase the authority, and enhance the value, of
the rest. But the Archdeacon of Westminster, in impugning the Book of
Daniel, takes occasion to degrade and throw contempt upon the Bible
as a whole.
Bishop Westcott declares that no writing in the Old Testament had so
great a share in the development of Christianity as the Book of Daniel.
[23]
Or, to quote a hostile witness, Professor Bevan
writes:
- "In the New Testament Daniel is mentioned only once,
but the influence of the book is apparent almost everywhere." [24]
"There are few books," says Hengstenberg, "whose
Divine authority is so fully established by the testimony of the New
Testament, and in particular by our Lord Himself, as the Book of Daniel."
Just as mist and storm may hide the solid rock from
sight, so this truth may be obscured by casuistry and rhetoric; but
when these have spent themselves it stands out plain and clear. In all
this controversy one result of the rejection of the Book of Daniel is
entirely overlooked or studiously concealed. If "the Apocalypse of the
Old Testament" be banished from the Canon, the Apocalypse of the New
Testament must share in its exclusion. The visions of St. John are so
inseparably interwoven with the visions of the great prophet of the
exile, that they stand or fall together. This result the critic is
entitled to disregard. But the homilist may by no means ignore it. And
it brings into prominence the fact so habitually forgotten, that the
Higher Criticism claims a position which can by no means be accorded
to it. Its true place is not on the judgment seat, but in the witness
chair. The Christian theologian must take account of much which criticism
cannot notice without entirely abandoning its legitimate sphere and
function.
No one falls back upon this position more freely when it suits his purpose,
than Archdeacon Farrar. He evades the testimony of the twenty-fourth
chapter of St. Matthew by refusing to believe that our Lord ever spoke
the words attributed to Him. But this undermines Christianity; for,
I repeat, Christianity rests upon the Incarnation, and if the Gospels
be not inspired, the Incarnation is a myth. What is his answer to this?
I quote his words:
- "But our belief in the Incarnation, and in the miracles
of Christ, rests on evidence which, after repeated examination, is
to us overwhelming. Apart from all questions of personal verification,
or the Inward Witness of the Spirit, we can show that this evidence
is supported, not only by the existing records, but by myriads of
external and independent testimonies."
This deserves the closest attention, not merely because
of its bearing on the question at issue, but as a fair specimen of the
writer's reasoning in this extraordinary contribution to our theological
literature. Here is the Christian argument:
- "The Nazarene was admittedly the son of Mary. The
Jews declared that He was the son of Joseph; the Christian worships
Him as the Son of God. The founder of Rome was said to be the divinely
begotten child of a vestal virgin. And in the old Babylonian mysteries
a similar parentage was ascribed to the martyred son of Semiramis,
gazetted Queen of Heaven. What grounds have we then for distinguishing
the miraculous birth at Bethlehem from these and other kindred legends
of the ancient world? To point to the resurrection is a transparent
begging of the question. To appeal to human testimony is utter folly.
At this point we are face to face with that to which no consensus
of mere human testimony could lend even an a priori probability."
[25]
On what then do we base our belief of the great central
fact of the Christian system? Here the dilemma is inexorable: to disparage
the Gospels, as this writer does, is to admit that the foundation of
our faith is but a Galilaean legend. By no means, Dr. Farrar tells us;
we have not only "personal verification, and the Inward Witness of the
Spirit, but we have also myriads of external and independent
witnesses." No Christian will ignore the Witness of the Spirit. But
the question here, remember, is one of fact. The whole Christian
system depends upon the truth of the last verse of the first chapter
of St. Matthew – I will not quote it. How then can the Holy Spirit
impart to me the knowledge of the fact there stated, save by the written
Word? I believe the fact because I accept the record as God-breathed
Scripture, an authoritative revelation from heaven. But to talk of personal
verification, or to appeal to some transcendental instinct, or to tens
of thousands of external witnesses, is to divorce words from thoughts,
and to pass out of the sphere of intelligent statement and common sense.
[26]
- -- R. A.
FIFTH EDITION FOOTNOTE
[1]
An Introduction to the Literature of the
Old Testament, by S. R. Driver, D. D., Regius Professor of Hebrew,
and Canon of Christ Church, Oxford. Third edition. (T. & T. Clark,
1892.) I wish here to acknowledge Professor Driver's courtesy in replying
to various inquiries I have ventured to address to him.
[2]
In accordance with the plan of the work, Chapter
11. opens with a precis of the contents of Daniel, together
with exegetical notes. With these notes I am not concerned, though
they seem designed to prepare the reader for the sequel. I will dismiss
them with two remarks. First, in his criticisms upon chap. 9:24-27
he ignores the scheme of interpretation which I have followed, albeit
it is adopted by some writers of more eminence than several of those
he quotes; and the four points he enumerates against the "commonly
understood" Messianic interpretation are amply dealt with in these
pages. And secondly, his comment on chap. 11., that "it can hardly
be legitimate, in a continuous description, with no apparent
change of subject, to refer part to the type and part to the antitype,"
disposes with extraordinary naivete of a canon of prophetic
interpretation accepted almost universally from the days of the post-Apostolic
Fathers down to the present hour!
[3]
The Higher Criticism and the Verdict of the
Monuments, by the Rev. A. H. Sayce.
[4]
Page 479, note. But the author's appeal
under (f) to "all other authorities" is scarcely fair, as Daniel
is the only contemporary historian, and the exploration of the ruins
of Babylon has yet to be accomplished. And as regards (h) but
little need be said. Professor Driver candidly owns that "there are
good reasons for supposing that Nebuchadnezzar's lycanthropy rests
upon a basis of fact." No student of human nature will find anything
strange in the recorded action of these heathen kings when confronted
with proofs of the presence and power of God We see its counterpart
every day in the conduct of ungodly men when events which they regard
as Divine judgments befall them. And no one accustomed to deal with
evidence will entertain the suggestion that the story of Daniel's
becoming a "Chaldean" would be invented by a Jew trained under the
strict ritual of post-exilic days. The suggestion that Daniel would
have been refused admission to the college in the face of the great
king's order to admit him really deserves no answer.
[5]
As the Psalms came first in the Kelhuvim
they gave their name to the whole; as ex. gr. when our
Lord spoke of "the Law of Moses, the Prophets,
and the Psalms" (Luke 24:44) He meant the entire Scriptures.
[6]
Against Apion, 1. 8.
[7]
This section of Ecclesiasticus begins with chap.
44., but the passage here in question is chap. 49: vv. 6-16.
[8]
Possibly the critic means to question whether
Jerusalem was actually captured, i. e. carried by storm, at
this time. I have, I admit, assumed this in these pages. But Scripture
nowhere says so. Taking all accounts together, we can only aver that
Nebuchadnezzar came up against Jerusalem, and laid siege to it, that,
in some way, Jehoiakim fell into his hands and was put in chains to
carry him to Babylon, and that Nebuchadnezzar changed his purpose
and left him as a vassal king in Judaea. He may have gone out to the
Chaldean king, as his son and successor afterwards did (2 Kings 24:12);
and it is very probable that Jehoiachin's action in this respect was
suggested by the leniency shown to his father.
[9]
The words "as it is this day," in ver. 18, appear
to be an allusion to the accomplished subjugation of Judaea. According
to ver. 19, Egypt was next to fall before Nebuchadnezzar; and chap.
46:2 records Nebuchadnezzar's victory over the Egyptian army in this
same year.
[10]
Professor Bevan's suggestion on this point is,
in my opinion, untenable. But I refer to it to show how an advanced
exponent of the Higher Criticism can dispose of (g). Commentary
on Daniel, p. 146. I have no doubt whatever that if Leviticus
was before Daniel, as well it might be, it was the law of the Sabbatical
years he had in view and not 26:18, etc.
[11]
I speak of two Greek words only, for kitharos
is practically given up. Dr. Pusey denies that these words are
of Greek origin. (Daniel, pp. 27- 30.) Dr. Driver urges that
in the fifth century B. C. "the arts and inventions of civilized life
streamed then into Greece from the East, and not from Greece Eastwards."
But surely the figure he uses here distorts his judgment. The influences
of civilization do not "stream" in the sense in which water streams.
There is and always must be an interchange; and arts and inventions
carried from one country to another carry their names with them. I
am compelled to pass by these philological questions thus rapidly,
but the reader will find them fully discussed by Pusey and others.
Dr. Pusey remarks, "Aramaic as well as Aryan words suit his real age,"
and "his Hebrew is just what one would expect at the age in which
he lived" (p. 578).
[12]
Higher Criticism and the Monuments, pp.
424 and 494.
[13]
On this subject see the Bishop of Durham's article
in Smith's Bible Dictionary.
[14]
1 Maccabees 2:60; see also chap. 1:54. The First
Book of Maccabees is a history of the highest repute, and the accuracy
of it is universally acknowledged.
[15]
The Sanhedrin, though scattered during the Maccabean
revolt, was reconstituted at its close. See Dr. Ginsburg's articles
"Sanhedrin" and "Synagogue" in Kitto's Cyclopaedia.
[16]
The ruins of Borsippa are practically unexplored;
and considering the character of the inscriptions found on other Chaldean
sites, we may expect to obtain hereafter very full State records of
the capital.
[17]
I follow the marginal reading of the R. V.,
which was the reading adopted by the American Company.
[18]
See chaps. 5-10.
[19]
As I have taken up this as a test question I
have investigated it closely.
[20]
His chapter on The Seventy Weeks provokes
the exclamation, Is this what English theology has come to! I do not
allude to such vulgar blunders as calling Gabriel "the Archangel"
(p. 275), or confounding the era of the Servitude with that of the
Desolations (p. 289), but to the style and spirit of the excursus
as a whole. For "immense manipulations" and "crudely impossible hypotheses"
no recent English treatise can compare with it.
[21]
I allude to his attempt to fix the date of the
Book by the character of its Hebrew and Aramaic. This, moreover, is
a point on which scholars differ. I have already quoted Dr. Pusey's
dictum. Professor Cheyne says: "From the Hebrew of the Book
of Daniel no important inference as to its date can be safely drawn"
(Encyc. Brit., "Daniel," p. 804); and one of the greatest authorities
in England, who has been quoted in favor of fixing a late date for
Daniel, writes, in answer to an inquiry I have addressed to him: "I
am now of opinion that it is a very difficult task to settle the age
of any portion of that Book from its language. I do not think, therefore,
that my name should be quoted any more in the contest."
[22]
See ex. gr. Pp. 36, 37, 90, 118, 125.
[23]
Smith's Bible Dict., "Daniel."
[24]
Com. Daniel, p. 15.
[25]
A Doubter's Doubts, p. 76
[26]
Professor Driver has since called my attention
to a note in the "Addends" to the third edition of his Introduction,
qualifying his admissions respecting Belshazzar. He has also informed
me that Professor Sayce is the "high Assyrio-logical authority" there
referred to. This enables us to discount his retractation. When writing
on (e) in the above Preface, I had before me pp. 524-9 of the
Higher Criticism and the Monuments, and I was impressed by
the force of the objections there urged against the Daniel story of
Belshazzar. Great was my revulsion of feeling when I discovered that
Professor Sayce's argument depends upon his misreading of the Annalistic
tablet of Cyrus. That tablet admittedly refers throughout to Belshazzar
as "the son of the King"; but when it records his death at the taking
of Babylon, Professor Sayce reads "wife of the King" instead of" son
of the King," and goes on to argue that, as Belshazzar is not mentioned
in the passage, he cannot have been in Babylon at the time! That "contract
tablets" would be dated with reference to the reign of the King,
and not of the Regent, is precisely what we should expect.
I have dealt fully with the Belshazzar question in my Daniel in
the Critics' Den, to which I would refer also for a fuller reply
to Dean Farrar's book. Having regard to the testimony of the Annalistic
tablet, that question may be looked upon as settled. And if, when
writing that work, I had had before me what the Rev. J. Urquhart brings
to light about Darius the Mede, in his Inspiration and Accuracy
of Holy Scripture, I should have considered that this, the only
remaining difficulty in the Daniel controversy, was no longer a serious
one.
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