THE CAPTIVES IN THE COURT OF NEBUCHADNEZZAR
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Daniel 1:1-21
2-11-68 8:15 a.m.
On the radio you are sharing the services of the
First Baptist Church in Dallas. This is the pastor bringing the morning
message entitled The Captives in the Court of Nebuchadnezzar. The first
ten messages that have been delivered on this book were introductory.
And when Mr. Zondervan came to visit us about two
or three weeks ago, he said, “I think that we ought to keep those ten messages
to themselves and publish them in a book to themselves.” That will be done.
The first ten messages—you remember how they, how they followed one another:
the first one, Why the Critics Assail the Book of Daniel, and the second
one, Daniel Is Eaten Up in the Critic’s Den, and the third one, How
the Critics Fare in the Fiery Furnace, and on through ten of them. They
are all introductory concerning the Book of Daniel, and they will be published
this fall in a volume to themselves.
This morning, we begin the exposition of the text
itself. And the message covers the first chapter. And Sunday after Sunday
thereafter, we shall follow the unfolding of the Word of God in this most
unusual and interesting of all the books in human literature.
Now, let us begin.
In the
third year of the reign of Jehoiakim king of Judah came Nebuchadnezzar king of
Babylon unto Jerusalem and besieged it.
And the
Lord gave Jehoiakim king of Judah into his hand, with part of the vessels of
the house of God: which he carried into the land of Shinar”—into the lower
Mesopotamian Valley, into Babylonia—to the house of his god. And he brought
the vessels with the treasure into the house of his god.
[Daniel 1:1, 2]
Now, as you read those two sentences, they seem
introductory, without particular significance. You would think as you enter
into the Book of Daniel, that they are merely for the purpose of explaining why
it was that Daniel was in Babylon.
But if you look at those sentences more carefully,
they have in them a deeply significant statement. Look at it. “And the Lord
gave Jehoiakim, king of Judah, into his hand.” That record, that phraseology
has a message to all nations of all time, and particularly and especially to
us; “And the Lord gave Jehoiakim into his hand.” For, you see, God had
prophesied hundreds of years before that, because of the sins of Judah, the
nation would be delivered into the hands of the Babylonians. You will find
that in the twentieth chapter of 2 Kings. And you will find it in the
thirty-ninth chapter of the prophet Isaiah. God had said, because of the sins
of Judah, the nation will be delivered into the hands of the Babylonians.
And the years passed. And a century and more
passed. But the words of God never fall to the ground, whether there be words
of judgment or whether there be words of blessing. As Isaiah 40:8 says, “The
grass withereth, the flower fadeth, but the Word of God shall endure forever.” Or,
as our Savior said in Matthew 24 and 25, “Heaven and earth shall pass away, but
My words shall not pass away.”
And God had said that because of the sins of the
nation, the nation would be destroyed and would be carried captive into
Babylon. And that’s what those introductory sentences refer to. This thing
that came to pass came to pass in the judgment of Almighty God. “And the Lord
gave Jehoiakim into the hand of the king of Babylon.”
Is it not a tragedy that the children suffer for
the sins of the parents? The sins of Manasseh, king of Judah, the son of
Hezekiah, whom God would not forgive, and the sins of the sons of Manasseh all
carried with it the destruction of the capital city of Jerusalem and the
destruction of the nation of Judea.
But that is the law of federal headship that continues
uninterruptedly as the fifth chapter of the Book of Roman says, “By one man sin
entered into the world and death by sin.” [Romans
5:12] Because of the sin of Adam, all of us sin and meet and face the
judgment of death. That is the law of federal headship. And you, whatever you
do involves your children as whatever your fathers did, involves us. There is
a theology there I haven’t time to discuss this morning. But it’s a frightful
thing. It’s a heavy thing.
Can you imagine now the sorrow and the anguish of
soul of these young Hebrew lads as they are taken captive and emasculated and
made eunuchs in the court of the heathen king? Just a moment’s meditation will
bring to us vividly the cries of sorrow that overwhelm these four young men,
Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah, as they were taken to be captives and
eunuchs in the court of a heathen king.
So vividly was that grief of being taken away from
home, that when Daniel was over ninety years of age, when he prayed three times
every day, he opened his window toward home. After he had reached the age of ninety
years, and after he had been in the court of the king of Babylon over seventy years,
still remembered, still loved, still grieved for the people and the land and
the city of home. In the life and captivity of Daniel, we are so deeply
reminded of the paralleling of his life with that of Joseph.
Joseph—in the forty-second chapter of the Book of
Genesis—Joseph, now prime minister of Egypt, could hear his brethren as they
spoke one to another when they came to the land of Egypt for food. And those
brethren said one to another, “This evil has befallen us because of our brother
Joseph when we heard his cries and when we saw the anguish of his soul.” And
Reuben said, “Did not I say unto thee, sin not against the child?” After the
years and the years, I can understand that. The sorrow and the cries and the
sobs and the tears and the anguish of soul, as Daniel and those three Hebrew
children were carried away into Babylon.
I said a moment ago, it is remarkable how the life
of Daniel parallels that of the life of Joseph: both of them carried captive
into exile, both of them rising to be prime minister of a foreign kingdom by
virtue of their personal and pristine character and qualities. Both of them
with the powers of prophecy that elevated them above their brethren, both of
them making the wisdom of the day and the enchanters and the astrologers around
them—of which there were a multitude in Egypt and in Babylon—seem ridiculous in
the sight of those who knew wisdom and truth, and both of them used of God to
protect their people in an hour of great need and sorrow.
There is hardly a character in all history and,
certainly, in the Bible that is comparable to that of Daniel. He is one of the
few men of whom God has nothing but good to say, as God depicts the life and
character of Joseph, of Jonathan, and now of Daniel. He was a tremendous man:
a giant intellectually, an executive of tremendous ability, a man of virtue and
godly character, and a man of illimitable faith. So we now turn following the
life of Daniel and his three friends, captives in the court of Nebuchadnezzar.
We now turn and follow the attempt to assimilate them into heathen culture and
worship.
So, according to the commandment of the King
Ashpenaz, the master of the eunuchs, picks them out of all the young men of the
seed royal, of the household of the king, who are without blemish, who are fine
specimens in mind, in body, and he says, “Three years train them in the
learning and lore and language of the Chaldeans. Then after the three-year
course, let them stand before me.” Well, there is nothing wrong in their
instruction and education in Chaldean learning, language, and wisdom. There is
nothing in their Judean learning to interdict their Chaldean learning, nothing
at all.
Moses, the Bible says, was learned in all the
wisdom and in all of the knowledge of the Egyptians. Saul of Tarsus, who
became called the apostle, was a man who was graduated from the Greek
University in Tarsus, capital of the Roman province of Cilicia. And when Paul
stood to speak before Areopagus, the high and supreme court of the Athenian
nation, he quoted from their own Greek poets. There’s nothing wrong in
learning the wisdom and lore of the Chaldeans. But the point of this learning
was in order to undo and to wipe out the knowledge of Jehovah God. And that is
a tragedy in any language, in any nation, in any institution, in any age, and
in any child.
And the purpose of education is that we might take
out of the heart of the child the knowledge of God. And so much of modern
education is like that. Its diabolical and dark purpose seems to be that we
might undo and destroy the faith of the child, of the youngster, of the
teenager, of the student, in God. I can see that in the purpose of this
educational course by what they did in changing the names of the young men.
Their names, Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah, those are beautiful names
bestowed upon them in hope and in assurance by godly and pious parents.
Why, I can just see those parents as they took
those babies, placed in their arms and they named them Daniel, el or jah,
or iah. El is God, jah Jehovah, ’elohîm, God,
Jehovah. Daniel, “God does judge.” Hananiah, “God is gracious.” John comes
from that, Hananiah. Mishael, “God has no equal.” And Azariah, “God is my
helper.”
I can just see the godliness of the parents in the
naming of those four children. But look what Nebuchadnezzar did to them. “And
he gave them names,” and without exception their names exalt the idols of the
king. And the purpose of it is to take out of their lives all of the knowledge
and reverence of Jehovah God. In each instance, the name given to each one of
those boys is the name of some heathen idolatrous deity. To Daniel, he gave
the name of Belteshazzar. And his name, Belteshazzar means “Bel will protect”
them. And to Hananiah he gave the name of Shadrach, Shadrach, the name of the
moon god. And to Mishael he gave the name of Meshach. His identity name is of
the god of mirth. And to Azariah, he gave the name of Abednego, the “servant
of (the heathen god) Nebo.” It was an attempt to wipe out the name of God and
the memory of the altars of worship of their youth.
Isn’t it strange how God is? God had written
those names in His book a long time before Nebuchadnezzar wrote those new names
in his book. And God had a purpose of those young men. “And he that keepeth
Israel will neither slumber nor sleep.” [Psalm
121:4] Now, you see what happens? You look at what happens. “And the
king commanded that they eat the food from the king’s table and drink the wine
which he drank.” They were to be gilded Babylonians.
Now, from the Babylonian point of view, that was a
gracious thing to do. They’re going to live the life of a king. They are
going to eat at the king’s table. And they’re going to drink from the king’s
flask and flavum. Oh, I can just see the luxury of that life in the court of
Babylonia! And the purpose of it was to make them forget the God of the Jews,
and the altars of their youthful worship, and the memory of their pious
parents. But sometimes that’s hard to do. How do you forget? How do you
forget godly parents? And how do you forget those prayers and Scriptures and
devotions of childhood and of youth?
I do not know how long the Psalmist was in Babylon
when he wrote these words, “If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand
for get her cunning. If I do not remember thee, let my tongue cleave to the
roof of my mouth—if I prefer not Jerusalem above my chief joy.” [Psalm 137:5, 6] How do you forget the love
and grace and prayers and blessing and teaching and example of godly and pious
parents?
Daniel was born in the days of good king Josiah.
Daniel could remember as a child the finding of the book of the law in the
temple. Daniel could remember the days of the great spiritual reformation.
Daniel’s heart was warmed by the fires of that revival. And Daniel heard
Jeremiah the prophet preach, and in Babylon, had a copy of the Book of Jeremiah
and studied it and read it. How do you forget? And isn’t it strange that it
was just there that Daniel drew the line? Isn’t that an amazing thing? Isn’t
that an amazing thing? “And Daniel purposed in his heart that he would not
defile himself with the king’s meat, nor with the wine that he drank.” [Daniel 1:8]
Isn’t that an amazing thing? All of that Chaldean
lore, all of that way of court education, all of the things of the wisdom and
learning of the Chaldean he studied, and when he passed his examination after
the three-year course, there was none other like those four men. But when it
came to the identification of their lives with the lives of the world, and the submersion
and amalgamation of their lives in the worship of heathen gods, there Daniel
and those three young men drew the line.
Isn’t that an unusual thing? That food had been
offered to idols. And according to the eleventh chapter of Leviticus it was
unclean for a Jew. God had said, “My people shall be a peculiar people.” That
word “peculiar,” peculium in Latin, means “a private possession.” They belong
to God. “And Daniel purposed in his heart that he would not defile himself
with the meat offered to idols and with the wine from the king’s table.” [Daniel 1:8]
Ah, that tells so much about the young man! He’s
not bitter against God, nor does he charge God foolishly. But he has
illimitable faith in God, even in the hours and days of tragic, indescribable
sorrow and captivity. And he refused to be swayed by the world. Where in the
earth is there a boy today who refused to be taken in by the world and what
they do? Where is there a young woman today who refuses to conform to the morays
and morality of this modern world? Practically all of them bow and bend. Not
Daniel and his three friends. They refused. They refused.
He purposed in his heart. “As a man thinketh in
his heart, so is he.” [Proverbs 23:7] “Keep
thy heart with all diligence, for out of it are the issues of life.” [Proverbs 4:23] And he asked for pulse to eat
and water to drink. Isn’t that something? Here is the menu of King
Nebuchadnezzar. Look at all of those dainties, and look at all of those wine
lists.
When you sit down at any luxurious cafe or
restaurant today, the first thing they’ll put in your hand is a wine list. And
the first thing they will ask you when you get on an airplane is, “Would you
like to have a cocktail?” That’s the world. And as I ride these planes and as
I eat in these restaurants, it will be a rare somebody who doesn’t follow the
menu of Nebuchadnezzar but not Daniel and his three young friends. They refuse
the menu and ask bread from heaven, to eat at the table of the Lord, and to
drink from the cup that belongs to God; pulse to eat.
You know, I’ve never had such a good time in my
life as I have had trying to find out what that word “pulse” means. One of the
finest men I know swears up and down that that is black-eyed peas. One of the
finest commentators that I have been reading says that’s cabbage. Maybe we
don’t quite know the kind of seed or herb it refers to, but it refers to some
kind of vegetables—plain, simple fare. Ah, it takes character and courage to live
a life of restraint and temperance and self-discipline. Give us pulse to eat
and give us water to drink. Next Sunday morning, I’m going to preach a sermon
on Wine or Water. And it will be interesting. It will be interesting.
Now, I must hasten. God honors the devotion and
the piety and the choice of these young men, Daniel and his three friends. God
honors them. Look. Look. The way God does sometimes is the most amazing
thing in the world to me, and how He does it. And you have one of those brilliant
illustrations of how God works here in this first chapter of the Book of
Daniel. The Lord God looked down from heaven and He saw the piety and the
devotion and the faith of those young men. God saw it from heaven. And God
said, “I will honor that faith and that devotion. I will feed them from My
table,” says the Lord God. “And they will eat My food. And they will drink My
drink. And I will make the prince of the eunuchs My accomplice in bringing it
about.”
Now, isn’t that something? The sovereign will of
Nebuchadnezzar the great king is, “They shall eat from my table meat offered to
idols. And they shall drink wine from my flask.” That’s the sovereign will of
Nebuchadnezzar. But the sovereign will of God is, “I shall feed them from My
table. And they shall drink from My cup.” There is an irony in this that I
can’t escape. And God uses the master of the eunuchs, the prince of the court
of Nebuchadnezzar to bring it about. Isn’t that something?
Another instance of that same thing is when God
brought up the little child Moses. In whose house did Moses grow up? In the
house of Pharaoh himself! In the house of the daughter of the king himself,
she brought him up. God saw to it that Moses had the finest background and
instruction in the land. And God brought it to pass that the daughter of
Pharaoh himself brought him up. And God made that the prince of the eunuchs
feed and give drink to these four children that belong to Him. Isn’t that an
amazing thing? “God brought Daniel into favor and tender love with the prince
of the eunuchs.” Isn’t that something?
Just like when the chief butler forgot Joseph and
left him in prison. God didn’t forget him. God looked upon him there in that
dungeon, God remembered him. Just like Paul and Silas in the dungeon, God
remembered them. “And the Lord God brought Daniel into favor and tender love
with the prince of the eunuchs.” And God honored their commitment. “Let our
countenances be looked upon and at the end of ten days.” Their countenances were
looked upon, and God was shining through their face.
I can tell all the women of all the world that all
the makeup in this earth will not take the place of a beautiful and glorious
and godly spirit shining through the eyes of a wonderful Christian girl—nothing,
nothing. Beauty is the heart shining through. And ten thousand tons of
lipstick and rouge and mascara and eye dope, and all the rest of that stuff
cannot hide a worldly and a compromised spirit. True beauty is God shining
through. And I want you to know some of the prettiest girls I have ever seen
in my life are the ugliest. Isn’t that a screwy thing? But it’s the truth. A
girl who honors God, and the love and the life and the glory of the Lord is in
her—her heart is right.
And that’s true of young men. Some of the finest
and most glorious young men I have ever known are some of the ugliest. But God
is in their lives. Do you remember Alfred Lord Tennyson’s of Sir Galahad who
found the Holy Grail, the cup of the Last Supper?
My good
blade carves the casques of men,
My tough
lance thrusteth sure,
My
strength is as the strength of ten,
Because
my heart is pure.
Their countenances, their faces, they radiate it,
it was God shining through. And when they stood before the king, after their
three-year course, they had ten times more knowledge and understanding than all
of the others around them. For the Book says, they not only had understanding
and knowledge in the wisdom and lore of the Chaldeans, but they also had
understanding in the wisdom of God.
Education and understanding and learning that is
just of this world is empty. It is unrewarding. It is sterile. It leads to
nothing but disillusion and despair. But the wisdom from above leads to life
and glory and the fullness of character, the blessing of heaven. There are two
kinds of wisdom. There is a wisdom of the world, and we ought to go to school
to learn it. But there is also a wisdom of God. And we ought to sit at the
feet of the Lord to learn it. And these four young men had the wisdom of the
world, yes, but they also had the wisdom of God.
And the chapter closes, “And Daniel continued
until the first year of King Cyrus,” that is, his life as a minister in the
court of Babylon. Forty-four years he was Nebuchadnezzar’s prime minister, and
entered into the life of the court of the Medo-Persian Empire. All through
those years, Daniel was the public servant of the king and of the Lord Jehovah
God. And that verse intends to convey to us that the life and ministry of
Daniel spanned the entire seventy years of the captivity.
And I can easily think that the last great
achievement of this prophet statesman was to negotiate the liberation of the
Judean captives in the court of Cyrus, the king of the Medo-Persian Empire. As
he laid before Cyrus the prophecies of Isaiah that the people would return, and
as he laid before Cyrus the prophecy of Jeremiah that at the end of seventy
years the people would return, and in 536 BC, the first year of Cyrus those seventy
years had matured. And I can see Daniel, aged Daniel toward a hundred years of
age, I can see him lay before Cyrus those prophecies. The Word of God, look
what God has said. Laying it before Cyrus, and Cyrus reading. Isaiah calls
him by name 157 years before Cyrus was born; laying it before Cyrus. And Cyrus
publishes the decree and God’s people are free. And they can return home, negotiating
by this godly prophet, statesman, Daniel.
Oh, my people, we’re going to wade in deep waters
these coming days! But your souls are going to grow fat. You’re going to be
blessed as I am blessed as we read what God has done through this glorious,
marvelous, incomparable statesman, Daniel, God’s faithful servant.
Now, we must sing our song of appeal. And while we
sing it, you, somebody you, give himself to Jesus, put his life in the
fellowship of the church. A couple or a family as God shall say the word,
shall open the door, come and stand by me. “Here I am, pastor, here I come. I
take the Lord as my Savior today. I give my life to Him.” Or, “This is my
wife, pastor, and my children, we are all coming together.” As the Spirit
shall press the appeal to your heart, make it now, make it this morning. Come
now, while we stand and while we sing.