PARAGRAPH DIVISIONS OF MODERN TRANSLATIONS
NASB | NKJV | NRSV | TEV | NJB (MT Versing |
Vision of the Ram and Goat | Vision of a Ram and a Goat | The Vision of the Ram and the Male Goat | Daniel’s Vision of a Ram and a Goat | Daniel’s Vision: the Ram and the Goat |
8:1-4 | 8:1-8 | 8:1-4 | 8:1-4 | 8:1-4 |
8:5-8 | 8:5-8 | 8:5-7 | 8:5-8 | |
The Little Horn | 8:8-12 | |||
8:9-14 | 8:9-12 | 8:9-14 | 8:9-12 | |
8:13-14 | 8:13 | 8:13-14 | ||
8:14 | ||||
Interpretation of the Vision | Gabriel Interprets the Vision | The Angel Gabriel Explains the Vision | The Angel Gabriel Interprets the Vision | |
8:15-17 | 8:15-22 | 8:15-17 | 8:15-17a | 8:15-26 |
8:17b-19 | ||||
8:18-19 | 8:18-26 | |||
The Ram’s Identity | ||||
8:20 | 8:20-22 | |||
The Goat | ||||
8:21-26 | ||||
(23-26) | 8:23-26 (23-24) (25) |
(23-25) | 8:23-26 | (23-26) |
7:27 | 7:27 | 7:27 | 7:27 | 7:27 |
READING CYCLE THREE (see
“Bible
Interpretation Seminar”)
FOLLOWING THE ORIGINAL AUTHOR’S INTENT AT PARAGRAPH LEVEL
This is a study guide commentary, which
means that you are responsible for your own interpretation of the Bible. Each of us must walk in the
light we have. You, the Bible, and the Holy Spirit are priority in interpretation. You must not
relinquish this to a commentator.
Read the chapter in one sitting. Identify the subjects (reading cycle #3). Compare
your subject divisions with the five translations above. Paragraphing is not inspired, but it is
the key to following the original author’s intent, which is the heart of interpretation. Every
paragraph has one and only one subject.
CONTEXTUAL INSIGHTS
A. Chapters 2, 7 and 8 of Daniel are related as they reveal a sequence of four coming kingdoms and a fifth eternal divine kingdom.
Chapter 2 | Chapter 7 | Chapter 8 | Chapter 9 | Chapter 11 |
1. gold 2. silver 3. bronze
4. iron/clay 5. stone |
winged lion bear winged leopard
fierce beast |
—– ram goat (little horn)
—– |
—– —– Dan. 9:24-27 Maccabean (?)
Dan. 9:24-27 |
—– —– Dan. 11:1-35,40-45 Seleucids & Ptolemies
Dan. 11:36-39 (end-time antichrist) —– |
B. Several of the kingdoms are specifically identified
1. Neo-Babylonian, Dan. 2:38
2. Medo-Persia, Dan. 8:20
3. Greece, Dan. 8:21
4. Rome, Dan. 2:44,45
5. The Eternal Kingdom of God, Dan. 2:35,44-45; 7:9-10,13-14,18,22,27
C. As in his first vision Daniel was compelled to focus on the fourth kingdom; two years later (compare Dan. 7:1 with 8:1) God revealed information about the second and third kingdoms in another vision.
The little horn of the third kingdom is focused on because it (he) will impact the lives and worship of Israel more than any other previous one. The little horn of the fourth kingdom will also impact God’s people (i.e., end-time Antichrist, cf. 2 Thessalonians 2).
D. The language has switched back to Hebrew because Daniel 8-12 are messages for God’s people. This vision is primarily about the future suffering and domination caused by the little horn against Israel. For them the vision is about a limited time of suffering and desecration followed by a divine intervention. The twenty-three hundred evenings and mornings (cf. Dan. 8:14) were a sure promise of the deliverance and restoration of the temple/Jerusalem.
E. The book by D. Brent Sandy, Plowshares and Pruning Hooks: Rethinking the Language of Biblical Prophecy and Apocalyptic, has been very helpful and I recommend it to all who attempt to understand Daniel 7-12.
The other book that has been so helpful in understanding the different genres of the Bible is How to Read the Bible For All Its Worth by Gordon Fee and Doug Stuart.
As interpreters our worst enemies are:
1. western culture and evangelical Christianity’s over-emphasis on literalism
2. a systematic eschatology (usually personally unexamined), which has been given to us by sincere, godly, well-meaning parents, pastors, denominations, and authors.
F. Satan does not know God’s plans; therefore, he must have an anti-God leader prepared and active in every age (cf. 1 John 2:18) to carry out his bidding. Antiochus is one example of a selfish, self-centered, atheistic individual who wants, not only political and military power, but also adoration, even worship, and there have been many others throughout human history like him. Fallen humanity regularly produces this type of individual. Yet, God is still sovereign and He even uses these kinds of persons to accomplish His will, as He does Satan.
G. As is typical of Hebrew literature, a general account (Daniel 7) is followed by a more detailed description of one particular aspect (e.g., Gen. 1:1-2:3 vs. 2:4-25).
WORD AND PHRASE STUDY
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: DANIEL 8:1-4
1“In the third year of the reign of Belshazzar the king a vision appeared to me, Daniel, subsequent to the one which appeared to me previously. 2I looked in the vision, and while I was looking I was in the citadel of Susa, which is in the province of Elam; and I looked in the vision and I myself was beside the Ulai Canal. 3Then I lifted my eyes and looked, and behold, a ram which had two horns was standing in front of the canal. Now the two horns were long, but one was longer than the other, with the longer one coming up last. 4I saw the ram butting westward, northward, and southward, and no other beasts could stand before him nor was there anyone to rescue from his power, but he did as he pleased and magnified himself.”
8:1 “In the third year of the reign of Belshazzar” This shows that the vision of chapter 8 came
after a time span of two years from the vision of chapter 7. We do not know when or how long Belshazzar
served as co-regent under his father, Nabonidus, before the fall of the Neo-Babylon Empire by the army of
Cyrus II, Cyrus the Great (cf. Daniel 5). Chapter restarts the Hebrew section of the book of Daniel
(i.e., Dan. 1:1-2:3; 8:1-12:13).
▣ | |
NASB | ”previously” |
NKJV | ”the first time” |
NRSV, Peshitta | ”at first” |
TEV | ”I saw a second vision” |
NJB | ”originally” |
REB | ”my earlier vision” |
JPSOA | ”appeared to me earlier” |
LXX | ”the first one” |
This is literally “at the first” (BDB 321, e.g., 9:21; Gen. 13:3; 2 Sam. 21:9,10;
2 Kgs. 17:25; Neh. 11:17), which is idiomatic for the vision Daniel received earlier in Belshazzar’s
reign (i.e., Daniel 7).
8:2 “I was in the citadel of Susa” Susa later became the capitol of the kingdom of Persia
(cf. Neh. 1:1); but at this time it was simply a large, fortified city in the province of Elam
(i.e., east of the Tigris River, cf. Isa. 22:6; Jer. 49:34-39). It would later be called Shushan
(cf. Neh. 1:1; Esther 1:2,5). The Greek name was Susa.
Was Daniel physically in Susa, or was this part of the vision? He could have been in Susa
on governmental business (cf. Dan. 8:27). There seems to be no integral part of the vision linked to this
locality.
Several visions in the Bible involve some type of mental or physical transport.
- Ezekiel, from Babylon, to the temple in Jerusalem, Ezek. 8 (cf. Ezek. 3:14; 11:1; 43:5)
- Philip, in Gaza, taken to Azotus, Acts 8:39-40
- John, on Patmos, taken to heaven, Rev. 4:2 (cf. Rev. 17:3; 21:10)
▣ “I looked in the vision, and I myself was” Daniel sees himself in his vision for the first time.
▣ “Ulai Canal” This was a 900 foot wide irrigation canal north of the city (BDB 19 I), which
connected two rivers. The ancient versions in Greek, Aramaic, and Latin translate this rare Hebrew word
“canal” or “river” (BDB 385) as “Ulai gate,” which would affect the translation of Dan. 8:16.
8:3 “a ram which had two horns” This seems to refer to Medo-Persia (cf. Dan. 8:20) and is analogous to
the bear with one side lifted of Daniel 7 and the breast and arms of silver in chapter 2.
The horns are described by several features.
- two horns
- one longer than the other
- the longer one came up after the other was in place
They probably represent the historical fact that Cyrus (1/2 Median) first conquered Media
and then later became the king of Persia after the fall of Babylon. The two horns may also be parallel
to the bear of chapter 7, raised on one side (showing the dominant kingdom of Persia in the Medo-Persian
Empire (cf. Dan. 8:20).
8:4 “I saw the ram butting westward, northward and southward “ Many use this as parallel to the
three ribs in the bear’s mouth, Dan. 7:5, to describe the three directions of Medo-Persian conquest.
▣ “nor was there anyone to rescue from his power; but he did as he pleased and magnified
himself“ There are several aspects to this phrase that characterize the arrogance of these
Gentile kings and kingdoms (cf. Dan. 8:8,11,25).
- They thought no nation, army or god could thwart their desires (cf. Dan. 2:21).
- The essence of human rebellion is “I did it my way” (“he did as he pleased,” Dan. 8:4).
- The king magnified himself (like the little horns of chapters 7 and 8), which attracts
God’s notice and judgment (this phrase could be understood as relating to the power and
size of his kingdom as in Dan. 8:9, but this Hebrew word (BDB 152) has a negative connotation
in this chapter). - He did as he pleased, which is a recurrent theme (cf. Dan. 5:19; 11:3,16,36-37).
This prediction is a good place to remind all interpreters of the fuzzy nature of
apocalyptic literature. The details are often for effect, not literal fulfillment (cf. D. Brent Sandy,
Plowshares & Pruning Hooks: Rethinking the Language of Biblical Prophecy and Apocalyptic,
pp. 117-128). In fact, Greece did repel Persia’s advance several times (490 B.C.. and
480 B.C..). Apocalyptic literature cannot be interpreted or evaluated by the details. Often,
which of the details have significance can only be known after the fulfillment in history!
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: DANIEL 8:5-8
5“While I was observing, behold, a male goat was coming from the west over the surface of the whole earth without touching the ground; and the goat had a conspicuous horn between his eyes. 6He came up to the ram that had the two horns, which I had seen standing in front of the canal, and rushed at him in his mighty wrath. 7I saw him come beside the ram, and he was enraged at him; and he struck the ram and shattered his two horns, and the ram had no strength to withstand him. So he hurled him to the ground and trampled on him, and there was none to rescue the ram from his power. 8Then the male goat magnified himself exceedingly. But as soon as he was mighty, the large horn was broken; and in its place there came up four conspicuous horns toward the four winds of heaven.“
8:5 “a male goat was coming from the west over the surface of the whole earth without touching
the ground” This refers to Greece (cf. Dan. 8:21; 11:3). Notice the speed of the victory (334-331
B.C.) and direction from which Alexander III, known as Alexander the Great, came. This
parallels the leopard with four wings of Dan. 7:6.
▣ “the surface of the whole earth” This is a hyperbolic statement which refers to the known
world of the day.
▣ “a conspicuous horn between his eyes” This refers to Alexander III, known as Alexander
the Great, who conquered the whole known world and died at the age of 32 (cf. Dan. 8:8,21-22; 11:4).
The term “conspicuous” (BDB 303) is very similar to the term “vision” (BDB 302) in Dan. 8:1.
In Isaiah it is used for a vision or oracle several times (cf. Isa. 21:2; 29:11). It means “conspicuous”
only in this context (Dan. 8:5,8).
8:6-7 “rushed at him in his mighty wrath. . .and he was enraged at him” We know that Persia, under
Darius III, attacked Greece several times over the Hellespont (490 and 480 B.C.). This made
Greece so angry that when Alexander finally crossed this narrow gap of water in 334 B.C.
with thirty thousand soldiers and five thousand cavalry, he engaged the Persian army with over 600,000 soldiers
and soundly defeated them several different times. Alexander would not make a peace treaty with Persia!
If one reads Daniel 8 alone, he would expect one decisive battle, but in fact, there were
three major decisive battles. The prediction is true, but fuzzy (as are all apocalyptic details, see note
at Dan. 8:4).
8:8 “the male goat magnified himself exceedingly” See note at Dan. 8:4,5.
▣ “the large horn was broken and in its place came up four conspicuous horns toward the four
winds of heaven” This refers to the death of Alexander the Great (323 B.C.) in Babylon
at the age of 32 or 33 caused by swamp fever. The unexpected, sudden death of Alexander caused great
and prolonged conflict throughout his kingdom. The governors or generals who were dominant as separate
regional satraps throughout his kingdom continued to maintain their control.
- Antigonus in Asia
- Demetrius in Greece
- Ptolemy in Egypt
- Cassander in Macedonia
- Lysimachus in Thrace
- Zipoetes in Bithynia
- Mithradates in Pontus
- Seleucus in Syria/Babylon
Of these eight power centers, numbers 1, 3, and 8 became dominant.
I agree with E. J. Young that the “four conspicuous horns toward the four winds of heaven”
may be an idiom of universal rule not relating specifically to any four generals. Apocalyptic literature
is designed to give an emotional general impression, not detailed facts of history.
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: DANIEL 8:9-14
9“Out of one of them came forth a rather small horn which grew exceedingly great toward the south, toward the east, and toward the Beautiful Land. 10It grew up to the host of heaven and caused some of the host and some of the stars to fall to the earth, and it trampled them down. 11It even magnified itself to be equal with the Commander of the host; and it removed the regular sacrifice from Him, and the place of His sanctuary was thrown down. 12And on account of transgression the host will be given over to the horn along with the regular sacrifice; and it will fling truth to the ground and perform its will and prosper. 13Then I heard a holy one speaking, and another holy one said to that particular one who was speaking, ‘How long will the vision about the regular sacrifice apply, while the transgression causes horror, so as to allow both the holy place and the host to be trampled?’ 14He said to me, ‘For 2,300 evenings and mornings; then the holy place will be properly restored.'”
8:9 “a rather small horn which grew exceedingly great toward the south, toward the east and toward
the Beautiful land” This refers to the fourth Seleucid ruler known as Antiochus IV Epiphanes (175-164
B.C.). We learn from history that he gained, through craftiness (cf. Dan. 8:24), a rather
extensive kingdom and was especially a problem to the Jewish people of Palestine (i.e. “the beautiful land,”
cf. Dan. 11:16,41).
The Hebrew term gdl (BDB 152, Qal IMPERFECT with waw)
appears in Dan. 8:8, 9, 10-11. In 8:8 it means “magnified himself”; in 8:9 it means “grew exceedingly great,”
as it does metaphorically in 8:10, “it grew great.” It is obvious that at least two senses are possible.
- arrogance, Dan. 8:8,10,11
- size, extent, Dan. 8:9.10
It is hard to know which is the intent of the original author.
8:10 “to the host of heaven” The PREPOSITION “to” is translated in poetry as
“as far as,” “even to,” or “up to” (cf. Dan. 8:11).
The term “host” often applies to YHWH”s angelic army (TEV, cf. Jos. 5:14,15; 1 Sam. 1:3;
Neh. 9:6), but in this context (cf. Dan. 8:12) it refers to
- the people of God (“saints,” cf. Dan. 7:18,22,27)
- a metaphor for the little horn’s ambition to rival God (e.g., Isa. 14:13, the kings of Babylon),
in which case the stars would refer to angels or heaven
It is problematic that in the span of four verses this term (BDB 838) is used in several
senses.
- “the host of heaven,” Dan. 8:10 (faithful believers or angels)
- “the commander of the host,” Dan. 8:11 (angels)
- “the host,” Dan. 8:12 (believers)
- “the host,” Dan 8:13 (believers or temple worshipers and temple servants)
Here is where context is crucial. Hebrew, being such an ancient language, uses terms in several
ways (semantic field). Our problem as modern interpreters is that we demand specific historically verifiable
details and consistent, lexical usage. The genre and our distance in time from the actual events make
these demands impossible. This is a faith document, not a history book!
▣ “and some of the stars to fall to the earth” Usually in Jewish extra-biblical apocalyptic
literature falling stars refer to angels coming to earth, but in this context “stars” is a parallel to
“hosts” (the people of God, cf. Dan. 8:24a; 12:3; see
SPECIAL TOPIC: LORD OF
HOSTS); therefore, this idiom is referring to the earlier promises of God that Israel will be like
the stars of heaven (in number, cf. Gen. 15:5; Jer. 33:22; in glory, cf. Dan. 12:3).
This verse refers to the little horn of the third kingdom attacking God’s people, as did
the little horn of the fourth kingdom in Dan. 7:21,25. There is an anti-God force loose in creation. It
can be identified by its attack on God’s Messiah and God’s people!
8:11 “It even magnified itself to be equal with the Commander of the host” One characteristic
of these Gentile kings has been their arrogance. The influence of the fall (cf. Genesis 3) continues!
The phrase “to be equal” is the same PREPOSITION as “up to the hosts” in
Dan. 8:10.
“The Commander” is the Hebrew word (BDB 978) for “chief,” “ruler,” “official,” “captain,”
or “prince.” This could refer to:
- YHWH, Dan. 8:25
- Son of Man, possibly Dan. 8:25; 7:13-14
- a powerful angel, Dan. 8:13; 10:1-9
- Michael, Israel’s national angel, Dan. 10:13,31; 12:1
The next few phrases seem to imply either #1 or #2.
▣ “it removed the regular sacrifice from Him and the place of His sanctuary was thrown down” This
seems to refer to something involving the daily morning and evening sacrifices in the temple ritual called
“the continual” (cf. Exod. 29:38-42; Num. 28:1-8). This daily ritual was stopped (“removed,” BDB 926, KB 1202,
Hophal PERFECT; which is the Qere reading; the second VERB
BDB 1020, KB 1527, Hophal PERFECTG may refer to the same event) by Antiochus IV Epiphanes and he further defiled the temple by regularly offering a swine on
the altar and placing an image of Zeus in the Holy Place (cf. Dan. 11:31; 12:11). Antiochus tried to
Hellenize the Jews (cf. I Macc. 1.54-61; II Macc. 4.11-6.11) by forcing them to eat the flesh of swine. This
caused the rebellion of the priest of Moden, whose son, Judas Maccabees, through an extended guerilla warfare,
finally succeeded in defeating the Seleucid army and, in 165 B.C., cleansed and restored
the temple. In modern times, this is known as the Festival of Lights (Hanukkah) , and is celebrated in
December (the date changes each year because the Jews use a lunar calendar).
8:12 “on account of transgression” Some see this as:
- the sins of the Jewish people (cf. Dan. 9:24) which God allowed to be punished by a foreign
leader (cf. Isa. 10:5; Jer. 51:20) - the sins of Jewish leadership which helped Antiochus; or more probably in this context
- Antiochus IV Epiphanes’ sin (cf. Dan. 8:13,23)
I think #3 fits best.
▣ “the host” This seems to refer to the people of God. See note at Dan. 8:10.
▣ “the regular sacrifice” See note at Dan. 8:11.
▣ “it will fling truth to the ground” The “it” here refers to the actions of the little horn.
The same VERB (BDB 1020, KB 1527) appears in v. 11 and in Ezek. 19:12, but the concept is
expressed in Isa. 59:14. In general it refers to the worship of God or the word of God. Notice the little horn
is allowed by YHWH to do this evil.
▣ “perform its will and prosper” This refers to fallen humanity’s independent attitude,
which is a recurrent theme in Daniel (cf. Dan. 5:19; 8:4; 11:3,16,36).
8:13 “I heard a holy one” This is translated “saint” in Dan. 7:18,21,22,25 and refers to faithful
believers. Here it must refer to the conversation between two angels (cf. possibly Dan. 7:27) for Daniel’s
benefit. Other OT titles for angels are
- “sons of God” (cf. Gen. 6:2; Job 1:6; 2:1; 38:7; Ps. 29:1; 89:6-7)
- “holy ones” (cf. Dan. 4:13; Ps. 89:5, 7; Zech. 14:5)
- “watchers” (cf. Dan. 4:13, 17, 23)
- sometimes “man” or “men” (cf. Dan. 8:15,16; 9:20; 10:5,16,18; 12:6-7; Zech. 1:8,10,19; 2:1,3)
▣ “How long” This does not refer to Jeremiah’s prophcy about a seventy year exile (cf. Dan. 9:2;
Jer. 25:11,12; 29:10; Zech. 7:5). It is connected to the “little horn” of the third empire (i.e., Greece,
cf. Dan. 8:21), which is being discussed in Dan. 8:9-14. Therefore, this time frame is related to the
atrocities of Antiochus IV (175-164 B.C.), who desecrated the temple and attempted to force
individual, faithful Jews to become Hellenists.
The TEV translates this so that the three aspects of the question stand out.
- How long will these things that were seen in the vision continue?
- How long will an awful sin replace the daily sacrifices?
- How long will the army of heaven and the Temple be trampled on?
H. C. Leupold, Exposition of Daniel, p. 352, says that the Hebrew text has four
items in apposition to “vision.”
- the regular daily offerings
- the crime-causing horror
- the sanctuary to be trodden under foot
- the host to be trodden under foot
▣ | |
NASB | ”while lthe transgression causes horror” |
NKJV | ”the transgression of desolation” |
NRSV | ”the transgression that makes desolate” |
TEV | ”the awful sin” |
NJB | ”of horrifying iniquity” |
REB | ”impiety causes desolation” |
LXX | ”the sin of desolation” |
Peshitta | ”iniquity and corruption” |
This probably refers to the idol of Zeus Olympius, that Antiochus placed in the temple
(II Maccabees 6:2). This VERB, “makes desolate” (BDB 1030, KB 1563, Qal
ACTIVE PARTICIPLE) may be a word play from the Canaanite deity, Ba’al Shamem
(“Lord of Heaven”), because “heaven” has the same consonants as “makes desolate.” Zeus was the Greek
counterpart of Ba’al.
This same phrase appears in Dan. 9:27; 11:31; and 12:11. It refers to different atrocities,
but all are connected by rebellion against God and His people. In the Bible it can refer to
- Antiochus IV
- Titus’ destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70
- the end-time antiChrist (the book of Revelation)
It is obviously a multiple fulfillment prophecy.
▣ | |
NASB, NKJV, NRSV, Peshitta | ”the host” |
TEV | ”the army of heaven” |
NJB | ”the army” |
NEB, REB | ”the fairest of all lands” |
JPSOA | ”the (heavenly) hosts” |
The MT has the NOUN “hosts” (BDB 838, cf. vv. 10,11,12,13), which means
“army,” “war,” or “warfare.” BDB suggests this refers to Michael, the angel-prince of Israel. The Hebrew
is MASCULINE SINGULAR.
However, it could be a collective use of Judah’s military.
The NEB, REB have a similar Hebrew root, “and of the beauty.”
- and of the army ‒ וצבא
- and of the beauty (cf. v. 9) ‒ וצבי
8:14 | |
NASB, NKJV, JPSOA, Vulgate | ”He said to me”” |
NRSV, LXX, Peshitta | ”he answered him” |
TEV | ”the other angel answered” |
NJB | ”the first replied” |
REB | ”the answer came” |
The MT has “and he said to me,” but context seems to require “him”
(i.e., two interpreting angels speaking to another, cf. v. 13).
- to me ‒ אלי
- to him ‒ אליו
The UBS Text Project, p. 312, suggests “to me,” but gives it a “C” rating (considerable doubt).
▣ “For 2,300 hundred evenings and mornings” This phrase has been interpreted in
two ways:
- 2300 full days (E. J. Young, pp. 173-175)
- a number equivalent to three and a half years that seems to follow the usage in Genesis 1
(“evenings and mornings”) and the phrase related to persecution in Dan. 7:25
Context favors #2 because of the use of a similar period of time in Daniel and Revelation. See
note at Dan. 7:25.
Differing commentators choose one or the other. I like #2, but H. C. Leupold, Exposition
of Daniel, p. 355, quotes a German commentator, Meinhold (1889), “. . .an entirely satisfactory
computation has neither been found here nor for the kindred periods in chapters nine and twelve.” The
problem is that we forget that this is apocalyptic/prophetic literature, not history.
▣ | |
NASB, REB | ”the Holy Place will be properly restored” |
NKJV, JPSOA | ”the sanctuary shall be cleansed” |
NRSV | ”the sanctuary shall be restored to its rightul state” |
TEV | ”the Temple will be restored” |
NJB | ”the sanctuary will have its rights restored” |
LXX | ”the sanctuary shall be purified” |
Peshitta | ”then righteousness shall prevail” |
This VERB, Niphal PASSIVE (BDB 842, KB 100, PERFECT
WITH WAW) is used in this form only here in the OT. The basic meaning is “to be made just or
righteous,” so here it would imply, “shall be put in right or properly pure condition.” December 12,
165 B.C. was the date of the cleansing and restoration of the temple in Jerusalem by
Judas Maccabeus. See note at Dan. 8:11.
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: DANIEL 8:15-17
15 “When I, Daniel, had seen the vision, I sought to understand it; and behold, standing before me was one who looked like a man. 16And I heard the voice of a man between the banks of Ulai, and he called out and said, ‘Gabriel, give this man an understanding of the vision.’ 17So he came near to where I was standing, and when he came I was frightened and fell on my face; but he said to me, ‘Son of man, understand that the vision pertains to the time of the end.'”
8:15 “I sought to understand” As the Gentile kings needed Daniel’s God-given gift to understand
their dreams, so Daniel needs heavenly beings to help him. Angelic mediation and interpretation is one
of the characteristics of apocalyptic literature. Humans cannot discover truth. It must be revealed!
▣ “who looked like a man” This is the Hebrew word gbr, (BDB 149) which makes up
Gabriel’s name. This has nothing to do with Dan. 7:13. Angels often appear in human form (cf. Zech. 1:8,10;
2:1,4). This does not describe their true essence, simply how they appear to us. See note at Dan. 8:13.
8:16 “Gabriel” Only two angels are named in the Bible, Gabriel and Michael. Michael is called the
Archangel of Israel (cf. Dan. 10:13,21; 12:1; Jude 1:9), while Gabriel seems to be God’s messenger angel
(cf. Dan. 9:21; Luke 1:19,26). His name means “man of God” or “strong man of God” (BDB 150).
8:17 “I was frightened and fell on my face” Humans are shocked at the presence and awesomeness
of the spiritual realm.
- God, Gen. 17:3; Job 13:11,21; Ezek. 1:28; 3:23; 44:4
- angels, Dan. 8:17; 10:9,10,12,15,19; Rev. 1:17
- visions, Job 7:14 (4:13-14); Dan. 7:28; 8:27
▣ “Son of man” Here “man” simply refers to Daniel as a human being (Adam, cf. Dan. 8:16),
as in Ezek. 2:1; 3:1; 4:1; 5:1; 6:2; 7:2; 12:2,8; and Ps. 8:4. The angel Gabriel is addressing Daniel.
▣ “understand” This is a Hiphil IMPERATIVE (BDB 106, KB 122), as it is
in Dan. 8:16 (cf. John Joseph Owens, Analytical Key to the Old Testament, vol. 4, p. 737). Gabriel
is commanded by the man above the Ulai (i.e., an angel) to help Daniel understand the conversation
(cf. Dan. 8:15), spoken in the dialogue between the two holy ones (i.e., angels) in Dan. 8:13-14.
▣ “the vision pertains to the time of the end” This vision seems to refer not to the far
future, but the relatively near future (i.e., Empires of Persia and Greece). This should give modern
interpreters a warning about trying to define the phrase “the time of the end” (cf. Dan. 8:19) as always
eschatological. In Dan. 11:40 “the end time” is used of the period of Greek rule involving the kingdoms
of the Ptolomies and Seleucids (323-165 B.C.).
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: DANIEL 8:18-26
18“Now while he was talking with me, I sank into a deep sleep with my face to the ground; but he touched me and made me stand upright. 19He said, ‘Behold, I am going to let you know what will occur at the final period of the indignation, for it pertains to the appointed time of the end. 20The ram which you saw with the two horns represents the kings of Media and Persia. 21The shaggy goat represents the kingdom of Greece, and the large horn that is between his eyes is the first king. 22The broken horn and the four horns that arose in its place represent four kingdoms which will arise from his nation, although not with his power.
23In the latter period of their rule,
When the transgressors have run their course,
A king will arise,
Insolent and skilled in intrigue.
24His power will be mighty, but not by his own power,
And he will destroy to an extraordinary degree
And prosper and perform his will;
He will destroy mighty men and the holy people.
25And through his shrewdness
He will cause deceit to succeed by his influence;
And he will magnify himself in his heart, And he will destroy many while they are at ease.
He will even oppose the Prince of princes,
But he will be broken without human agency.
26The vision of the evenings and mornings
Which has been told is true;
But keep the vision secret,
For it pertains to many days in the future.'”
8:18 “I sank into a deep sleep” The presence of the spiritual realm causes humans to be frightened
and pass out (BDB 922, KB 1191, cf. Gen. 15:12; Job 4:13; Dan. 10:9). In Rev. 1:17 John looked as if he
had died!
▣ “he touched me” The angel’s touch was a great comfort (cf. Dan. 10:10,16,18; 1 Kgs. 19:7;
Rev. 1:17).
8:19 “the final period of the indignation” This term (BDB 276) is used often in Isaiah of YHWH’s
indignation against His people for their covenant faithlessness; therefore, He punishes them by means
of foreign nations (cf. Isa. 10:5-6,25; 13:2-16 [esp. v. 5]). However, His indignation will pass
(cf. Isa. 26:20; 30:27; 66:7-24 [esp. v. 14]). This theme is continued in Ezekiel (cf. Ezek. 21:31;
22:24,31). It is foreshadowed in Deut. 28:49-57.
In the context of the book of Daniel this indignation (BDB 276) has to do with the
independence and arrogance of the Gentile nations who God used to judge His people. Their arrogance
is projected into the distant future (i.e., Greece for Dan. 8:19 and end-time Antichrist for 11:36
[cf. Dan. 7:8,20-22,23-26; 2 Thessalonians 2; Revelation 12-13]). Now He will judge these Gentile
nations (cf. Dan. 11:36).
▣ “for it pertains to the appointed time of the end” This phrase (BDB 417) is found
here and in Dan. 11:27,29,35, which all refer to events relating to Greece, especially Antiochus IV, who
aggressively attacks God’s people.
The confusion so common in interpreting Daniel is the failure to:
- recognize its genre and to try to identify all details historically
- recognize its near future symbols and its far future symbols
- the little horns of Dan. 7:8
- Dan. 9:1-23 vs. 9:24-27
- Dan. 11:1-35,40-45 vs. 11:31-39
- recognize its merging of anti-God kingdoms. The fourth kingdom is Rome, but more, it is all
Gentile world-dominating powers.
8:20 “the ram. . .Media and Persia” The ram was the sign of Persia (Aries, the Zodiac sign), but
the ram was also the guardian spirit of Persia and the king wore the ram’s emblem to battle.
8:21 “the shaggy goat. . .Greece” In Dan. 8:5 there is a Hebrew CONSTRUCT for male
goat (BDB 862 and 777). In Dan. 8:21 there are two words which the Handbook on the Book of Daniel,
from the Untied Bible Societies, says is made up of the Hebrew word for male goat (BDB 972 II) and the
Aramaic word for he-goat (BDB 862), which are in opposition, p. 222. The ADJECTIVE form
of this term means “hairy,” therefore, the additional word “shaggy” in Dan. 8:21. This additional term
usually refers to the goats offered as a sin-sacrifice (cf. Lev. 4:23,24; 9:15; 16:5,7-8; Num. 7:16).
The goat was the Zodiac sign of Greece, Capricorn, and it was the national symbol of the
Macedonian coat of arms. These two verses are very historically specific in the identification of the
second and third Gentile kingdoms of Daniel’s vision.
▣ “the first king” This is obviously Alexander the Great.
8:22 “although not with his power” None of the rival Greek generals (satraps) ever equaled the power
and extent of Alexander’s kingdom!
8:23-26 These verses are in poetic form in the NASB, NRSV, NJB, and REB translations.
8:23 “A king will arise, insolent and skilled in intrigue” This seems to describe Antiochus IV
Epiphanes’ rise to power.
▣ | |
NASB | ”insolent and skilled in intrigue” |
NKJV | ”who understands sinister schemes” |
NRSV | ”skilled in intrigue” |
TEV | ”stubborn, vicious and deceitful” |
NJB | ”ingenious-minded man” |
REB | ”a master of strategem” |
JPSOA | ”impudent and versed in intriuge” |
LXX, Peshitta | ”who understands obscure sayiings” |
This is literally “strong of face” (CONSTRUCT BDB 738 and 815) and
“one who understands riddles” (CONSTRUCT BDB 106 and 295).
8:24 “his power will be mighty, but not by his own power” Here again, is the recurrent theme
of God’s control and direction of human history (cf. Dan. 8:25f; 2:20-23). God used Assyria, Babylon,
Persia, Greece, Rome, and will use whomever He chooses to accomplish His will (cf. Romans 9)! Often humans,
even redeemed humans, do not understand (cf. Isa. 55:8-11).
▣ | |
NASB | ”he will destroy to an extraordinary degree” |
NKJV, LXX | ”he shall destroy fearfully” |
NRSV | ”shall cause fearful destruction” |
TEV, Peshitta | ”will cause terrible destruction” |
NJB | ”will plot incredible schemes” |
REB | ”he will work havoc untold” |
JPSOA | ”he will be extraordinarily destructive” |
The first VERBAL (BDB 810, KB 927) is a Niphal PARTICIPLE
and the second VERB (BDB 852 II, KB 1026) is a Hiphil PERFECT with
waw. This word is often used for the wonders and marvelous works of God (cf. Exod. 15:11; Isa. 25:1;
29:14; Dan. 12:6). Here, however, it speaks of the terribly destructive acts of this king of the third
empire (cf. 8:11-13).
▣ “And prosper and perform his will“ See note at Dan. 8:12.
▣ | |
NASB | ”will destroy mighty men” |
NKJV, JPSOA, Peshitta | ”shall destroy the mighty” |
NRSV, NJB, LXX | ”shall destroy the powerful” |
TEV | ”will bring destruction on powerful men” |
REB | ”will work havoc on the mighty nations” |
The VERB means “corrupt” (BDB 1007, KB 1469, Hiphil PERFECT
with waw, cf. Gen. 6:12; Deut. 4:16; 31:29; Ezek. 16:47), “ruin” (cf. Mal. 3:11), or
“destroy” (cf. Dan. 8:25; Isa. 36:10; Jer. 51:20).
The ADJECTIVE “mighty” usually means numerous (BDB 783, cf. “many” of
Dan. 8:25d). Because of Daniel’s literary style it is surely possible that “the mighty men” and “the
holy people” are parallel. The other option would be to see “mighty men” as the army of national or
political rivals. The full phrase denotes the king’s (small horns) complete success.
This phrase “the holy people” is literally “the people of the holy ones,” which is very
similar to Dan. 7:27. Many scholars believe that the phrase in Dan. 7:27 is parallel to “holy ones” of
Dan. 7:18,22, and 25. In context Dan. 8:24 cannot refer to angels.
8:25 This fits what we know of Antiochus IV. See also I Maccabees 1:29-41,44-50; 4:38-39.
▣ “He will magnify himself in his heart” The VERB (BDB 152, KB 178) is
a Hiphil IMPERFECT. This has been the recurrent problem of fallen humanity and
especially of tyrannical dictators and potentates. This activity always attracts God’s attention
(cf. Isa. 9:9; 10:12; Dan. 5:20; 8:11; 11:36-37).
▣ | |
NASB | ”while they are at ease” |
NKJV | ”in their prosperity” |
NRSV, TEV | ”without warning” |
NJB, JPSOA | ”taking them unawares” |
REB | ”when they least expect it” |
LXX | ”be deceit” |
Peshitta | ”suddenly” |
The term “at ease” (BDB 1017) means quietness in the sense of security, but without
warning at such a time and in such a place (probably “the Beautiful Land,” i.e., Palestine,
cf. Dan. 8:9,11,16,41), they will be attacked (cf. Dan. 11:21,24).
The attacker will be the king of Dan. 8:23 and those attacked will be “the mighty men and
the holy people” of 8:24.
▣ “he will even oppose the Prince of princes” The VERB (BDB 763, KB 840) is
a Qal IMPERFECT. This same word, “prince” (BDB 978, cf. Dan. 8:11,25; 10:13,21; 12:1)
is translated “commander” in 8:11 and seems in context to refer to YHWH (cf. Jos. 5:12-15). The Hebrew
word does not imply a crown prince, co-regent, or ruler in waiting as it does in English, but the chief
leader. It is used of the Messiah in Isa. 9:6,7; of Michael the Archangel (cf. Jude 9); and of Israel
in Dan. 10:13,21; 12:1.
The redundant “Prince of princes” is a Hebrew superlative, “the greatest of all rulers”
(i.e., King of Kings, cf. 2:37,47; Ezek. 26:7; or [God of gods]; Ezra 7:12).
▣ “But he will be broken without human agency” The VERB (BDB 990, KB 1402) is a
Niphil IMPERFECT. This is the recurrent theme of God’s sovereignty and control
(cf. Dan. 2:20-23).
8:26 “evenings and mornings” This refers to the offering of a lamb in the temple each morning and
evening (cf. Dan. 8:11-14,19). The Jewish culture starts the new day at evening, following the order of
Gen. 1:5,8,13,19,23,31.
The vision and prophecy of chapter 8 is future to Daniel, but past to us. This gives us
a great opportunity to evaluate prophetic/apocalyptic language in a known event (cf. D. Brent Sandy,
Plowshares and Pruning Hooks: Rethinking the Language of Biblical Prophecy and Apocalyptic,
pp. 103-128). We can read I Maccabees, Josephus, and secular histories to compare how the event was
recorded in the Bible and outside the Bible. The differences show us (1) the stylized language of Hebrew
prophecy and (2) the over-the-top emotional hyperboles of apocalyptic symbolism.
▣ “Which has been told” See Dan. 8:15-25.
▣ “is true” This (BDB 54; see
SPECIAL TOPIC: AMEN) should
possibly be understood as certain to happen just the way it was revealed in Dan. 8:15-25. For a good
discussion of meaning and truth in Scripture see Kevin. J. Vanhoozer, Is There a Meaning in
This Text?
▣ “But keep the vision secret” This secrecy is seen in Dan. 7:28 and 12:4,9. This is literally,
“stop us” or “shut up” (BDB 711, KB 771, Qal IMPERATIVE, cf. 2 Kgs. 3:19;
2 Chr. 32:4,30; the PASSIVE in Dan. 12:9). This means that the phrase may mean to conserve
the vision, not keep it secret!
NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: DANIEL 8:27
27“Then I, Daniel, was exhausted and sick for days. Then I got up again and carried on the king’s business; but I was astounded at the vision, and there was none to explain it.”
8:27 | |
NASB | “I was exhausted and sick for days” |
NKJV | “fainted and was sick for days” |
NRSV | “was overcome and lay sick for some days” |
TEV | “I was depressed and ill for several days” |
NJB | “lost consciousness; I was ill for several days” |
REB | “having been weak many days my strength failed and I lay sick for some days” |
JPSOA | “I was stricken, and languished many days” |
Peshitta | “trembled and was troubled for some days” |
The vision of both Dan. 7:28 and 8:27 made Daniel physically ill.
▣ “there was none to explain it“ This phrase is surprising in light of Dan. 8:15-19!
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
This is a study guide commentary, which means that you are
responsible for your own interpretation of the Bible. Each of us must walk in the light we have. You,
the Bible, and the Holy Spirit are priority in interpretation. You must not relinquish this to a commentator.
These discussion questions are provided to help you think through the major issues of this
section of the book. They are meant to be thought-provoking, not definitive.
- What two kings are mentioned in chapter 8?
- Should we identify the little horn of chapter 7 with the little horn of chapter 8?
Why or why not? Who are these little horns? - Who are the transgressors in Dan. 8:12, 23?
- To whom does the prophesy relate: to Daniel’s time; to the Maccabean period, to Jesus’
time, or to the end time? Why?
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