A nerdy friend once suggested I get a tattoo (wait, would this disqualify him from being nerdy?) that says ā€œI heart Daniel,ā€ and, from the trenches of commentary writing, I have to say Daniel is the man who gets most of my time these days. Though, letā€™s be clear: Iā€™m not writing a commentary about Daniel the man. The book isnā€™t about him. Itā€™s about God. And while thereā€™s plenty to be said about Daniel as a model of faithfulness, if thatā€™s all we take away from the book, weā€™ve missed the point.

Weā€™re in Daniel 7, and itā€™s a remarkable chapter for many reasons. It stands as the heart of the book, the chapter that holds the entire thing together. But I am getting ahead of myself.

Understanding what makes Daniel 7 remarkable begins with knowing what makes it stand out in the book. Daniel 7 is unique for several reasons. The first weā€™ve already talked about: the shift from easy-breezy narrative to wild and wacky apocalyptic, an unsettling world weā€™ll live in for the rest of the book. A second notable feature of the chapter you may miss if you (1) donā€™t read the entire book in one sitting and/or (2) are not a grammar nut: the grammar shifts from third-person (Daniel is ā€œhe/himā€ in chs. 1-6) to first-person (Daniel is ā€œI/meā€ in chs. 7-12). A third aspect of the chapter is that it marks the shift from stories about Jews in exile (chs. 1-6) to visions about the Jewsā€™ future back in the land (chs. 7-12).

All these changes in chapter 7 (genre, grammar, perspective) have made lots of people want to divide the book neatly in half: the first half is third-person narrative stories set in exile, and the second half is first-person apocalyptic visions about the Jewsā€™ future.

It would be nice if things were this easy. šŸ™‚ Chapter 7 may be part of the first-person-apocalyptic-visions-about-Jews-back-in-the-land half of the book (chs. 7-12), but itā€™s also tied to the first half of the book such that you canā€™t simply split the book between chapters 6 and 7. Hereā€™s how chapter 7 is tied to the first half of the book, particularly, chapters 2-6:

  • Language: Chapter 7 is in Aramaic, like chapters 2-6. Chapters 8-12 switch back to Hebrew (like ch. 1)
  • Structure: Chapter 7 is part of the (Aramaic) chiasm of chapters 2-7. Chapter 7 relates to chapter 2 (and chs. 3 & 6 are related, and chs. 4 & 5 form the heart of the chiasm. You remember all this, donā€™t you?)
  • Contents: Chapter 7 takes another look at the four empires we first met in chapter 2 . Nearly every commentator I know reads the two chapters as complementary.

So, you can see we have a problem. Or, rather, a ā€œproblem.ā€ You simply canā€™t divide this book. Chapter 7 wonā€™t let you. It is the hinge on which the book turns, and its message of hope puts everything that follows in perspectiveā€¦something we are wont to lose, often.

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