Read: Daniel 1:1-21
We’re
living in some troubling times, aren’t we? Economies rise and fall. Terrorist activity and natural disasters put
us on edge. Some politicians and world leaders abuse their powers. In this
first of three lessons, our scripture focus is planted firmly in an even worse situation.
As with
all good Biblical study, we must first seek to understand the context and
situation of the Scripture at hand. It is then that we can start to draw
application and contemporary meaning. So, let’s set the stage.
The nation
of Israel had been split in two following Solomon’s reign – Judah (South) and
Israel (North). Because of ongoing sin and idolatry, God’s only recourse was to
punish them for their sins, of which they had no intention of repenting. In the
very first chapter of Jeremiah, where the prophet hears the call of God to be
one of Israel’s premiere prophets, God’s intent is made clear (Jeremiah 1:13-16).
13
The word of the LORD came to me again: "What do you see?"
"I see a boiling pot, tilting away from the north," I answered.
"I see a boiling pot, tilting away from the north," I answered.
14
The LORD said to me, "From the north disaster will be poured out on all
who live in the land. 15 I am about to summon all the peoples of the
northern kingdoms," declares the LORD.
"Their kings will come and set up their thrones
in the entrance of the gates of Jerusalem;
they will come against all her surrounding walls
and against all the towns of Judah.
"Their kings will come and set up their thrones
in the entrance of the gates of Jerusalem;
they will come against all her surrounding walls
and against all the towns of Judah.
16 I
will pronounce my judgments on my people
because of their wickedness in forsaking me,
in burning incense to other gods
and in worshiping what their hands have made.
because of their wickedness in forsaking me,
in burning incense to other gods
and in worshiping what their hands have made.
They had
some terrible neighbors who had pressed and oppressed them for a very long
time. The Assyrians, a fierce and warring nation, had been mighty in the land,
but Babylonia was on the rise. Babylonia was led by a king named Nebuchadnezzar.
His desire was to conquer not only Assyria, but to take as much land as he
could in the process. Of particular interest to all of the largest and warring
nations was a little strip of land known as Israel. This area was important for
several reasons. It was the primary passage way between Northwestern Asia
(modern day Iran, Iraq and Syria) and Egypt. It was a vital shipping area. It
was God’s country and covetous nation-builders wanted it because they had not
yet been able to get it. Some of the ways that oppressive nations warred
against their neighbors. Taxes and tributes were required – paying these let
the people stay in their nations and not receive any punishment. Human exchange
– a conquering country would take some of their own people and plant them in
the conquered country to infiltrate and influence their cultural and religious
practices. Exile – Conquering nations would destroy all places of worship and
culture, often exporting all or most of the people. Some conquerors would leave
behind the poorest and feeblest to till the land for the conquering nation.
(the Babylonian way). Decimation – Conquering nations would leave nothing alive
or fit: fields would be burned, wells
filled, all or almost all of the people would be killed or taken as slaves (the
Assyrian way) Which of these would you choose?
The book
of Daniel takes place after a significant exile by the Babylonians was put upon
the nation of Israel and specifically on the city of Jerusalem. This was a major turning point in the
spiritual life of God’s chosen people.
They had consistently refused to completely obey God’s law as handed
down through Moses. Isaiah prophesied that this would happen in 2 Kings
20:12-20. See what Isaiah said in verses 16-18.
Then Isaiah said to Hezekiah,
"Hear the word of the LORD: The time will surely come when everything in
your palace, and all that your fathers have stored up until this day, will be
carried off to Babylon. Nothing will be left, says the LORD. And some of your
descendants, your own flesh and blood, that will be born to you, will be taken
away, and they will become eunuchs in the palace of the king of Babylon."
It’s
pretty easy to just read that Scripture, isn’t it? It just kind of rolls off of our tongues and
doesn’t become real for us. So, let’s try to flesh this out. Stay with me
because there’s a lot of good news ahead. Sometimes the good news gets better
when we really know how bad the bad news is.
In 587
B.C. Nebuchadnezzar, the king of Babylonia found his way through the weakened
Assyrian ranks and attacked Jerusalem. He did this by several ways including a
war tactic called a siege. The
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia helps us to understand this tactic in
detail: “The siege was a strategy intended to bring the population of the city
and its surrounding territory under the control of the attacker. The siege
might represent an initial conquest by the hostile force or an effort to regain
control of her rebellious city. The siege of the city by a hostile force
involved pitching camp near it, blocking the roads, and cutting off access to
sources of water outside the city. A fortified city could be captured by six
possible actions.
1. An approaching army could take a
position outside the city and by this show of force intimidate the population
into surrendering without a fight.
2.
A city might be taken by a ruse or a trick, a strategy successfully used by
Joshua and the conquest of Ai (Joshua
8:10 – 23). If these two methods
fail, four other actions could be attempted, either singly or in combination,
but they all required more concentrated force: going over, through, or under
the wall; or establishing a prolonged siege.[1]
3. The quickest way to gain access to a city was
by going over the wall of the city.
However, this was dangerous to those who climbed the ladders and ropes
and many soldiers were lost.
4. Another approach would be by use of a
battering ram or some type of leverage to beat down the gate of his city.
5. Access to walled cities could be gained by earthen
or wood ramps that enabled large numbers of soldiers to charge the wall and
quickly drop down into the city.
6. One more method would be to cut off all
sources of livelihood for the inhabitants which would include water and food
supply.[2]”
Jerusalem,
a mighty walled city, was besieged for three months! Let’s imagine what that
means. Day and night residents of the city might have heard the booming of the
battering ram on the city gates. Day and night people in their homes might have
heard the incessant hammering of wood as ramps are built against their sturdy
wall. Water rations began and thirsty children would cry to their mothers for a
cup of cold water. Meals became sparser and, as the siege went on, there was
less and less fresh produce from which to choose. No one could go outside of
the city for fear of being captured or killed. The men of the city were
constantly armed and had stations across the wall. Fear and restlessness
prevailed for three months.
For
centuries the Israelites had known their God to protect and save them from
their enemies. Although several times Israel had fallen to some of their enemies,
God had always brought them back. There was a deep and abiding belief that God
would never let Jerusalem be destroyed.[3]
However this belief was based on a Pollyanna-type of untruth. Although God had
chosen them as a people to bring his message to all the nations of the earth,
the covenant made between God and Moses had conditions. In Leviticus 26:27- 45 and Deuteronomy 28:15-68 we can read
extensive lists of consequences for the Hebrews had if they do not keep the
covenant God had so graciously offered to them and to which they had agreed.
These passages of Scripture are commonly known as curses, which are the
consequences of breaking the covenant with the holy God. These are not fun
lists to read. They include things like piles of dead bodies on tops of idols,
cities in ruins, sanctuaries laid waste, failed crops and herds, confusion,
evil, no rest, constant weariness and longing, wasting away. But this nation was
made up of people just like you and me. Sometimes we forget about these
consequences because we are so busy convincing ourselves that God has chosen us
that we no longer see the need for careful review and realignment of our lives.
And with
God there is always redemption. In Leviticus
26:40-45 we read that God created a loophole. Essentially, he tells them
that if they confess their sin and repent (turning back to God) he won't
remember those sins. As a people, he will not reject or abhor them forever.
Always with God our consequences can have a better end. And with God our
consequences can be carried with his great help.
The
Israelites had lived so long believing that because of God's promises for an
eternal nation under his rule, no matter what they did God would save them. When
they could hear the siege works against the city walls it may not even have
occurred to many of them that they should throw out their idols, they should
stop practicing magic arts, that they should stop cheating their neighbors and
that they should stop lying to God.
But Israel's
sin was so pervasive, was so normalized and so predictable that God's patience
had run out. Therefore, God permitted the Babylonians to destroy the city of
Jerusalem, the Temple which was the very center of the entire nations worship,
and the city where they believed God dwelled with them. Babylon carried off ten
thousand people as captives in exile.
This was
not a random picking of people throughout the city. For, remember that part of
an exile by a conquering nation was to capture the best of the conquered
nation—people, animals and material goods. We can imagine that they lined up
all the best and the brightest in the middle of the market. We can imagine that
they got the city records and discovered who were the most influential families
and then systematically seized their sons and daughters to be used in the
Babylonian empire. One of the most devastating things an enemy can do to any
nation or people is to take away their children and cause them to be raised outside
of their own culture–assimilating them into a culture so different from their
own that the children would forget. And these children would still make
valuable contributions to the capturing nation.
The
Babylonians were idol worshipers. Their high God was Marduk and there were
many, many other gods they worshiped. They were a violent people. They were a
people set on taking all that was good of these people and reprogramming and
reusing them for the benefit of their own culture.
Can you
imagine what it would be like to have soldiers come into your home, search for
your children and take them away while you were screaming and crying? Can you
imagine what it would be for those young people and children? After three
months of siege against the city and living in great fear, the soldiers come to
their rooms, tied their hands and feet and threw them into carts to be taken
away to Babylon.
This is
what Daniel and his friends experienced. We have no way of knowing if Daniel
and his friends ever saw their parents or family again. We do know that they
were from highly respected and influential families and were known to be bright
young men. This was precisely the kind of booty that the Babylonians wanted.
Not only did they take the treasured items from the temple of God Most High,
but they took the human commodity of bright young people to assimilate into
their culture and used those skills and those gifts to the advance their own
nation.
The trip
to Babylon was not a short one. All the soldiers with their captives had to go
North for 500 miles, up and around the Arabian desert, and then Southeast for another
500 miles to the center of Babylon. The roads would have been dusty, rough and
terrible. Biblical scholars believe that Daniel and his friends were probably
only fifteen years of age when they were taken captive by Babylon. Fifteen-year-old
boys were covered with dust and their hearts were broken, terrified of what
might come next. They did not know if they would ever see their families again
or Jerusalem itself, for as they left they could see the great stones of the
wall of Jerusalem tumbling down and falling scattered to the earth. They had no
idea what was ahead for them—slavery or death?
The city, once defended by a monumental wall quite possibly 39 feet wide
121 feet high[4], was
naked, exposing the homes and the marketplaces. No other marauding force would
ever have to climb that wall again. The devastation was complete, thorough, and
precisely what the Babylonians wanted.
Let’s
break this down for today. Not many of us have lived in walled cities. So, what
are our walls? What are the things that
help us feel safe and protected? Home,
families, marriages, financial security, credit cards, savings, ingenuity,
businesses, good physical and mental health?
You’ve probably got a few of these things in mind right now.
Our
literal, emotional or spiritual landscapes change, don’t they? All of the things that we cling to can
suddenly disappear. Because we live in a
fallen world and because we have an enemy who constantly lays siege to our
souls, minds and bodies we are subject to change.
When
trouble comes, does everything change?
For Daniel, and 10,000 of his countrymen, nearly everything changed. They
could not recognize land marks, the food was strange and smelled odd, the dress
was uncomfortable, the language was hard to understand, the religion was
confusing. What gave Daniel the courage, confidence and decisiveness in the
face of all of this trouble and while everything
seemed to change?
I hope we
know the answer. And if we don’t, we’ll
learn how to get to the Answer in the next lesson. For now, take a good, hard
look at your walls of security. What might change if spiritual, emotional, political or
financial siege works would come up against them? Where has or would our courage and confidence
rest?
Answer
these two questions right now.
If
___________ were taken away from me right now, what would change?
If
___________ were taken away from me right now, what would not change?
It’s very
simple exercise, but it can help to be honest about what happens during seasons of change. In our
next lesson we will explore not only how Daniel handled these kinds of changes,
but how we can also.
Read aloud
this wonderful prayer from Daniel 2:19b-22.
"Praise be to
the name of God for ever and ever;
wisdom and power are his.
wisdom and power are his.
21 He changes times and seasons;
he sets up kings and deposes them.
He gives wisdom to the wise
and knowledge to the discerning.
he sets up kings and deposes them.
He gives wisdom to the wise
and knowledge to the discerning.
22 He reveals deep and hidden things;
he knows what lies in darkness,
and light dwells with him.”
he knows what lies in darkness,
and light dwells with him.”
Amen
M.R.
Hyde
Copyright
2019
[1]
The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia: Q-Z, Geoffrey W. Bromiley, http://books.google.com/books?id=MHbhdA9U5EwC&pg=PA503&lpg=PA503&dq=biblical+times+siege&source=bl&ots=QVGJPaJyFl&sig=VkmMyoYmCNMeOfD2l1lONNUNvho&hl=en&ei=uADBSpyXLczU8AangK3BAQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3#v=onepage&q=times%20and%20seasons&f=false
9/28/09.
[2] Ibid.
[3] A History of Israel, 3rd
Edition, John Bright, Westminster Press, Philadelphia, p. 269-298.