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Daniel was one of the most powerful men in Babylon. Evil men wrote a new law that everyone in Babylon had to bow down and worship the king, or be killed.
Because Daniel worshipped only the Lord, he would not bow down before Darius. Daniel's enemies rejoiced. "King Darius, now you must punish Daniel. He has broken the law."
Sadly, the king ordered that his friend Daniel be thrown into a den of hungry lions. How he marveled the next morning when Daniel was still alive. He wrote a letter to his nation, "Daniel's God is the living God. He does mighty miracles. He saved Daniel from the lions."
Daniel in the lion's den is recorded in chapter six of
one of the Bible's most interesting books. Only twelve chapters, it details the life and
prophecies of one of God's most trusted charges. It includes more fulfilled prophecy than
any other book in the Bible and is sanctioned as authentic by Christ Himself. (Matthew
24:15)
God so blessed Daniel that the prophet not only
excelled in earthly kingdoms because of his discernment of dreams and signs, but he also
lay much of the prophetic foundation upon which the book of Revelation builds. Daniel
prophesied the coming of everyone from Christ to Alexander the Great to Cleopatra.
Daniel's famous "seventieth week" describes the ancestry, rise, and fall of the
antichrist, and the glorious Second Coming of Christ.
As God often does, He made great that which was small.
Daniel was of royal lineage but only about sixteen years old when Babylonian king
Nebuchadnezzar destroyed Jerusalem and carried the Jews into captivity. Along with his
three aforementioned friends, Daniel was favored first by God and then by Nebuchadnezzar.
Daniel and his cohorts are described in chapter one as
good-looking and without blemish, "showing intelligence in every branch of wisdom,
endowed with understanding and discerning knowledge." Daniel, a Jew, would go on to
become prime minister of Babylon and work for at least three kings: Nebuchadnezzar,
Belshazzar, and Darius. His inspired work left Nebuchadnezzar and Darius proclaiming
Daniel's God to be living and true.
It was Darius who was tricked by Daniel's rivals into
signing a decree banning for one month any petition to a god or man except Darius. Daniel
ignored the edict. His fear of God far outdistanced his fear of men. As he always did
three times a day, Daniel opened his windows toward Jerusalem, where he knew the Spirit of
God had dwelled in Solomon's temple, and he prayed as all of us should.
"He might have compromised his integrity by
ceasing to pray to God during the month the decree was in effector by praying
privately, perhaps in the night, when no one could see him worshiping at his window,"
writes Gleason Archer in The Expositor's Bible Commentary. "To rationalize
such compromises to preserve his role in government would have been easy. But Daniel could
not compromise. For him the issue was whether he was going to please man or obey
God."
God saved the lions' appetite for Daniel's rivals,
teaching us the power of prayer and faith that made Daniel so completely mighty in spirit.
Daniel provided an example by responding to the enemy's false accusations with
uncompromising faith and trust in God. In turn, God used Daniel to show us how to answer
our enemies: let Him deal with them.
Daniel also demonstrates how to pray. In chapter nine,
the prophet realizes from reading the book of Daniel that the Babylonian captivity would
last only seventy years. The end was near. So Daniel returned to his knees and exhibited
powerful prayer in verses 4-19.
So effectual is such prayer that God sent the angel
Gabriel with His answer even before Daniel had completed his supplication. Today, you can
be sure that though God has revealed no cataclysmic prophecy to you, or helped you
interpret a king's dream, He is there for you. The book of Daniel is nothing if not an
affirmation of the utter sovereignty of our God. He sees all, knows all, and controls all,
and He loves you enough to make it all work together for your good. (Romans 8:28)
To find God during your hardship, go to the portal
Daniel knew best. Go to your knees. Model your prayer after Daniel's and model your life
after Daniel 11:32: "The people who know their God will display strength and take
action."