This summary of the book of Daniel provides information about the title, author(s), date of writing, chronology, theme,
theology, outline, a brief overview, and the chapters of the Book of Daniel.
Author, Date and Authenticity
The book implies that Daniel was its author in several passages, such as
9:2; 10:2. That Jesus concurred is clear from his reference to " ?the abomination
that causes desolation,' spoken of through the prophet Daniel" (Mt 24:15; see
note there), quoting 9:27 (see note there); 11:31; 12:11. The book was probably completed c. 530 b.c., shortly after Cyrus the Great, king of Persia, captured
the city of Babylon in 539.
The widely held view that the book of Daniel is largely fictional rests mainly
on the modern philosophical assumption that long-range predictive prophecy
is impossible. Therefore all fulfilled predictions in Daniel, it is claimed,
had to have been composed no earlier than the Maccabean period (second century
b.c.), after the fulfillments had taken place. But objective evidence excludes
this hypothesis on several counts:
To avoid fulfillment of long-range predictive prophecy in the book, the
adherents of the late-date view usually maintain that the four empires
of chs. 2 and 7 are Babylon, Media, Persia and Greece. But in the mind of the author, "the Medes and Persians" (5:28;;) together
constituted the second in the series of four kingdoms (2:32-43; see note
there). Thus it becomes clear that the four empires are the Babylonian, Medo-Persian, Greek and Roman.
The
language itself argues for a date earlier than the second century. Linguistic
evidence from the Dead Sea Scrolls (which furnish authentic samples of
Hebrew and Aramaic writing from the third and second centuries b.c.; see
essay, p. 1939) demonstrates that the Hebrew and Aramaic chapters of Daniel
must have been composed centuries earlier. Furthermore, as recently demonstrated,
the Persian and Greek words in Daniel do not require a late date. Some
of the technical terms appearing in ch. 3 were already so obsolete by the
second century b.c. that translators of the Septuagint (the pre-Christian
Greek translation of the OT) translated them incorrectly.
Several of the fulfillments of prophecies in Daniel could not have taken
place by the second century anyway, so the prophetic element cannot be
dismissed. The symbolism connected with the fourth kingdom makes it unmistakably
predictive of the Roman empire (2:33;7:7,19), which did not take control
of Syro-Palestine until 63 b.c. Also, a plausible interpretation of the
prophecy concerning the coming of "the Anointed One, the ruler," approximately
483 years after "the issuing of the decree to restore and rebuild Jerusalem"
(9:25;9:25-27), works out to the time of Jesus' ministry.
Objective evidence, therefore, appears to exclude the late-date hypothesis
and indicates that there is insufficient reason to deny Daniel's authorship.
Theological Theme
The theological theme of the book is summarized in 4:17; 5:21: "The Most
High (God) is sovereign over the kingdoms of men." Daniel's visions always
show God as triumphant (7:11,26-27;8:25;9:27). The climax of his sovereign rule is described in Revelation: "The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ [i.e., Messiah, ?Anointed One'], and he will
reign for ever and ever" (rev 11:15;da 2:44;7:27;s).
Literary Form
The book is made up primarily of historical narrative (found mainly in chs. 1 - 6) and apocalyptic ("revelatory") material (found mainly in chs. 7 - 12). The latter may be defined as symbolic, visionary, prophetic literature, usually
composed during oppressive conditions and being chiefly eschatological in theological
content. Apocalyptic literature is primarily a literature of encouragement
to the people of God (see Introduction to Zechariah: Literary Form and Themes;
see also Introduction to Revelation: Literary Form). For the symbolic use of
numbers in apocalyptic literature see Introduction to Revelation: Distinctive
Feature.