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William B. Nelson - Daniel

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William B. Nelson Daniel
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These accessible volumes break down the barriers between the ancient and modern worlds so that the power and meaning of the biblical texts become transparent to contemporary readers.

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To my wonderful daughters Jennifer and Amanda who were patient and - photo 1

_______

To my wonderful daughters, Jennifer and Amanda,
who were patient and understanding
when I had to be away in the library
writing this commentary

Ps. 19:711, 3 Jn. 4

_______

Table of Contents

Foreword

Abbreviations

Introduction

1 Daniel and His Three Friends Avoid Defilement (Dan. 1:121)

2 Daniel Interprets Nebuchadnezzars Dream (Dan. 2:149)

3 The Gold Image and the Blazing Furnace (Dan. 3:130)

4 The King Becomes a Beast-Man and Then Recovers (Dan. 4:137)

5 The Writing on the Wall (Dan. 5:131)

6 The Lions Pit (Dan. 6:128)

7 The Four Beastly Kingdoms and Gods Kingdom (Dan. 7:128)

8 The Vision of the Ram and the Male Goat (Dan. 8:127)

9 Daniels Prayer and the Seventy Weeks (Dan. 9:127)

10 The Final Revelation: Prologue (Dan. 10:111:2a)

11 The Final Revelation: The Body (Dan. 11:2b12:4)

12 The Final Revelation: Epilogue (Dan. 12:513)

For Further Reading

Subject Index

Scripture Index

Foreword

As an ancient document, the Old Testament often seems something quite foreign to modern men and women. Opening its pages may feel, to the modern reader, like traversing a kind of literary time warp into a whole other world. In that world sisters and brothers marry, long hair mysteriously makes men superhuman, and temple altars daily smell of savory burning flesh and sweet incense. There, desert bushes burn but leave no ashes, water gushes from rocks, and cities fall because people march around them. A different world, indeed!

Even God, the Old Testaments main character, seems a stranger compared to his more familiar New Testament counterpart. Sometimes the divine is portrayed as a loving father and faithful friend, someone who rescues people from their greatest dangers or generously rewards them for heroic deeds. At other times, however, God resembles more a cruel despot, one furious at human failures, raving against enemies, and bloodthirsty for revenge. Thus, skittish about the Old Testaments diverse portrayal of God, some readers carefully select which portions of the text to study, or they avoid the Old Testament altogether.

The purpose of this commentary series is to help readers navigate this strange and sometimes forbidding literary and spiritual terrain. Its goal is to break down the barriers between the ancient and modern worlds so that the power and meaning of these biblical texts become transparent to contemporary readers. How is this to be done? And what sets this series apart from others currently on the market?

This commentary series will bypass several popular approaches to biblical interpretation. It will not follow a precritical approach that interprets the text without reference to recent scholarly conversations. Such a commentary contents itself with offering little more than a paraphrase of the text with occasional supplements from archaeology, word studies, and classical theology. It mistakenly believes that there have been few insights into the Bible since Calvin or Luther. Nor will this series pursue an anticritical approach whose preoccupation is to defend the Bible against its detractors, especially scholarly ones. Such a commentary has little space left to move beyond showing why the Bibles critics are wrong to explaining what the biblical text means. The result is a paucity of vibrant biblical theology. Again, this series finds inadequate a critical approach that seeks to understand the text apart from belief in the meaning it conveys. Though modern readers have been taught to be discerning, they do not want to live in the desert of criticism either.

Instead, as its editors, we have sought to align this series with what has been labeled believing criticism . This approach marries probing, reflective interpretation of the text to loyal biblical devotion and warm Christian affection. Our contributors tackle the task of interpretation using the full range of critical methodologies and practices. Yet they do so as people of faith who hold the text in the highest regard. The commentators in this series use criticism to bring the message of the biblical texts vividly to life so the minds of modern readers may be illumined and their faith deepened.

The authors in this series combine a firm commitment to modern scholarship with a similar commitment to the Bibles full authority for Christians. They bring to the task the highest technical skills, warm theological commitment, and rich insight from their various communities. In so doing, they hope to enrich the life of the academy as well as the life of the church.

Part of the richness of this commentary series derives from its authors breadth of experience and ecclesial background. As editors, we have consciously brought together a diverse group of scholars in terms of age, gender, denominational affiliation, and race. We make no claim that they represent the full expression of the people of God, but they do bring fresh, broad perspectives to the interpretive task. But though this series has sought out diversity among its contributors, they also reflect a commitment to a common center. These commentators write as believing criticsscholars who desire to speak for church and academy, for academy and church. As editors, we offer this series in devotion to God and for the enrichment of Gods people.

R OBERT L. H UBBARD J R .
R OBERT K. J OHNSTON
Editors

Abbreviations
ABAnchor Bible
Abod. Zar.Abodah Zarah
A . D .anno Domini
ANEPThe Ancient Near East in Pictures Relating to the Old Testament. Edited by J. B. Pritchard. Princeton, 1954
ANETAncient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament. Edited by J. B. Pritchard. Princeton, 1969
Ant.Josephus, Jewish Antiquities
AOTCAbingdon Old Testament Commentaries
Aram.Aramaic
BASORBulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research
B . C .before Christ
BDBBrown, F., S. R. Driver, and C. A. Briggs, A Hebrew and English Lexicon of the Old Testament. Oxford, 1907
BHSBiblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia. Edited by K. Elliger and W. Rudolph. Stuttgart, 1983
ca.circa
CBQCatholic Biblical Quarterly
cent.century
cf.confer, compare
ch(s).chapter(s)
col.column
CTACorpus des tablettes en cuniformes alphabtiques dcouvertes Ras Shamra-Ugarit de 1929 1939. Edited by A. Herdner. Mission de Ras Shamra 10. Paris, 1963
DSSDead Sea Scrolls
e.g.exempli gratia, for example
1 En.1 Enoch
2 Esd.2 Esdras
EvQEvangelical Quarterly
ExpTimExpository Times
GBSGrove Biblical Series
Gk.Greek
GKCGesenius Hebrew Grammar. Edited by E. Kautzsch. Translated by A. E. Cowley, 2nd ed. Oxford, 1910
HCHammurabis Code
Heb.Hebrew
hiph.hiphil
Hist.Herodotus, Histories ; Polybius, Histories
HSMHarvard Semitic Monographs
ICCInternational Critical Commentary
i.e.id est, that is
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