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  • Daniel 6:24View Full Chapter

    24 The king then ordered that the men who had accused Daniel be brought and thrown into the lions’ pit—including their wives and children. They hadn’t even reached the bottom of the pit before the lions overpowered them, crushing all their bones.

  • Daniel 6:26View Full Chapter

    26 I now issue this command: In every region of my kingdom, all people must fear and revere Daniel’s God because:

    He is the living God.
        God stands firm forever.
    His kingship is indestructible.
        God’s rule will last until the end of time.

  • Daniel 6:27View Full Chapter

    27 He is rescuer and savior;
        God performs signs and miracles in heaven and on earth.
    Here’s the proof:
        He rescued Daniel from the lions’ power.

  • Daniel 6:28View Full Chapter

    28 And so Daniel was made prosperous during the rule of Darius and during the rule of Cyrus the Persian.

  • Daniel 7:1View Full Chapter

    Daniel’s vision: four beasts

    In the first year of Babylon’s King Belshazzar, Daniel had a dream—a vision in his head as he lay on his bed. He wrote the dream down. Here is the beginning of the account:

  • Daniel 7:2View Full Chapter

    I am Daniel. In the vision I had during the night I saw the four winds of heaven churning the great sea.

  • Daniel 7:15View Full Chapter

    Beasts interpreted

    15 Now this caused me, Daniel, to worry. My visions disturbed me greatly.

  • Daniel 7:28View Full Chapter

    28 The account ends here.

    Now as for how I, Daniel, felt about this: My thoughts disturbed me greatly. My mood darkened considerably, and I kept thinking about this matter.

  • Daniel 8:1View Full Chapter

    Vision of a ram and a goat

    In the third year of King Belshazzar’s rule, a vision came to me, Daniel, some time after the earlier vision I had.

  • Daniel 8:15View Full Chapter

    Vision interpreted

    15 Now I, Daniel, needed help understanding the vision I saw. Suddenly standing in front of me was someone who looked like a man.

  • Daniel 1View Full Chapter

    Jerusalem taken by the Babylonians

    In the third year of the rule of Judah’s King Jehoiakim, Babylon’s King Nebuchadnezzar came to Jerusalem and attacked it. The Lord handed Judah’s King Jehoiakim over to Nebuchadnezzar, along with some of the equipment from God’s house. Nebuchadnezzar took these to Shinar, to his own god’s temple, putting them in his god’s treasury.

    Training for royal service

    Nebuchadnezzar instructed his highest official Ashpenaz to choose royal descendants and members of the ruling class from the Israelites— good-looking young men without defects, skilled in all wisdom, possessing knowledge, conversant with learning, and capable of serving in the king’s palace. Ashpenaz was to teach them the Chaldean language and its literature. The king assigned these young men daily allotments from his own food and from the royal wine. Ashpenaz was to teach them for three years so that at the end of that time they could serve before the king. Among these young men from the Judeans were Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah. But the chief official gave them new names. He named Daniel “Belteshazzar,” Hananiah “Shadrach,” Mishael “Meshach,” and Azariah “Abednego.”

    Test

    Daniel decided that he wouldn’t pollute himself with the king’s rations or the royal wine, and he appealed to the chief official in hopes that he wouldn’t have to do so. Now God had established faithful loyalty between Daniel and the chief official; 10 but the chief official said to Daniel, “I’m afraid of my master, the king, who has mandated what you are to eat and drink. What will happen if he sees your faces looking thinner than the other young men in your group? The king will have my head because of you!”

    11 So Daniel spoke to the guard whom the chief official had appointed over Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah: 12 “Why not test your servants for ten days? You could give us a diet of vegetables to eat and water to drink. 13 Then compare our appearance to the appearance of the young men who eat the king’s food. Then deal with your servants according to what you see.”

    14 The guard decided to go along with their plan and tested them for ten days. 15 At the end of ten days they looked better and healthier than all the young men who were eating the king’s food. 16 So the guard kept taking away their rations and the wine they were supposed to drink and gave them vegetables instead. 17 And God gave knowledge, mastery of all literature, and wisdom to these four men. Daniel himself gained understanding of every type of vision and dream.

    Result of the training

    18 When the time came to review the young men as the king had ordered, the chief official brought them before Nebuchadnezzar. 19 When the king spoke with them, he found no one as good as Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah. So they took their place in the king’s service. 20 Whenever the king consulted them about any aspect of wisdom and understanding, he found them head and shoulders above all the dream interpreters and enchanters in his entire kingdom. 21 And Daniel stayed in the king’s service until the first year of King Cyrus.

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