FULFILLED PROPHECY A POTENT ARGUMENT
FOR THE BIBLE
BY
ARNO C. GAEBELEIN,
“Produce your cause, saith the Lord;
bring forth your strong reasons, saith the King of Jacob. Let them bring them
forth, and show us what shall happen; let them show the former things, what they
be, that we may consider them, and know the latter end of them, or declare us
things to come. Show the things that are to come hereafter, that we may know,
that ye are gods” (Isaiah 41:21-23). “I declare the end from the beginning, and
from ancient times the things that are not yet done, saying, My counsel shall stand,
and I will do all my pleasure” (Isaiah 46:10).
This is Jehovah’s challenge to the
idol-gods of Babylon to predict future events. He alone can do that. The Lord
can declare the end from the beginning, and make known things that are not yet
done. The dumb idols of the heathen know nothing concerning the future. They
cannot predict what is going to happen. And man himself is powerless to know
future events and cannot find out things to come. Jehovah, who has made this
challenge and declaration, has also fully demonstrated His power to do so. He
has done it in His holy Word, the Bible. Other nations possess books of a
religious character, called “sacred books.” Not one of them contains any
predictions concerning the future. If the authors of these writings had
attempted to foretell the future, they would have thereby furnished the
strongest evidence of their deceptions. The Bible is the only book in the world
which contains predictions. It is pre-eminently that, which no other book could
be, and none other is, a book of prophecy. These predictions are declared to be
the utterances of Jehovah; they show that the Bible is a supernatural book, the
revelation of
God.
PROPHECY NEGLECTED AND DENIED
In view of this fact it is
deplorable that the professing Church of today almost completely ignores and
neglects the study of prophecy, a neglect which has for one of its results the
loss of one of the most powerful weapons against infidelity. The denial of the
Bible as the inspired Word of God has become widespread.
If prophecy were intelligently
studied such a denial could not flourish as it does, for the fulfilled
predictions of the Bible give the clearest and most conclusive evidence that
the Bible is the revelation of God. To this must be added the fact that the destructive
Bible criticism, which goes by the name of “Higher Criticism,” denies the
possibility of prophecy. The whole reasoning method of this school, which has
become so popular throughout Christendom, may be reduced to the following:
Prophecy is an impossibility; there is no such thing as foretelling future
events. Therefore a book which contains predictions of things to come, which
were later fulfilled, must have been written after the events which are
predicted in the book. The methods followed by the critics, the attacks made by
them upon the authenticity of the different books of the Bible, especially upon
those which contain the most startling prophecies (Isaiah and Daniel), we
cannot follow at this time. They deny everything which the Jewish Synagogue and
the Christian Church always believed to be prophecy, a supernatural unfolding
of future events.
PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE
The prophecies of the Bible must be
first of all divided into three classes:
1. Prophecies which have found already their fulfillment.
2. Prophecies which are now in process of
fulfillment. Many predictions written several thousand years ago are now being
accomplished before our eyes. We mention those which relate to the national and
spiritual condition of the Jewish people and the predictions concerning the
moral and religious condition of the present age.
3. Prophecies which are still unfulfilled. We have
reference to those which predict the second, glorious and visible coming of our
Lord, the re- gathering of Israel and their restoration to the land of promise,
judgments which will fall upon the nations of the earth, the establishment of
the Kingdom, the conversion of the world, universal peace and righteousness, the
deliverance of groaning creation, and others.
These great prophecies of future
things are often robbed of their literal and solemn meaning by a process of
spiritualization. The visions of the prophets concerning Israel and Jerusalem,
and the glories to come in a future age, are almost generally explained as
having their fulfillment in the Church during the present age. However, our
object is not to follow the unfulfilled prophecies, but prophecies fulfilled
and in process of fulfillment. At the close of our treatise we shall point out
briefly that in the light of fulfilled prophecies, the literal fulfillment of
prophecies still future is perfectly assured.
FULFILLED PROPHECY A VAST THEME
Fulfilled prophecy is a vast theme
of much importance. It is equally inspiring and interesting. Volumes could be
written to show how hundreds of Divine predictions written in the Bible have
passed into history. What God announced through His chosen instruments has come
to pass. History is bearing witness to the fact that the events which
transpired among nations were pre-written in the Bible, even as prophecy is
nothing less than history written in advance. As much as space permits we shall
call attention to the fulfilled prophecies relating to the person of Christ; to
the Jewish people; and to a number of nations, whose history, whose rise and downfall,
are divinely predicted in the Bible. Furthermore, we shall mention the great
prophetic unfoldings as given in the Book of Daniel, and how many of these
predictions have already found a most interesting fulfillment.
MESSIANIC PROPHECIES AND THEIR
FULFILLMENT
The Old Testament contains a most
wonderful chain of prophecies concerning the person, the life and work of our
Lord. As He is the center of the whole revelation of God, the One upon whom all
rests, we turn first of all to a few of the prophecies which speak of Him. This
also is very necessary. The destructive criticism has gone so far as to state
that there are no predictions at all concerning Christ in the Old Testament.
Such a denial leads to and is linked with the denial of Christ Himself,
especially the denial of His Deity and His work on the cross.
To follow the large number of
prophecies concerning the coming of Christ into the world and the work He was
to accomplish we cannot attempt in these pages. We point out briefly in a
general way what must be familiar to most Christians who search the Scriptures.
Christ is first announced in Genesis 3:15 to be the seed of the woman, and
therefore a human being. In Genesis 9:26-27 the supremacy of Shem is predicted.
The full revelation of Jehovah God is connected with Shem and in due time a son
of Shem, Abraham, received the promise that the predicted seed was to come from
him. (Genesis 12:8). Messiah was to come from the seed of
Abraham.
Then the fact was revealed that He
was to come from Isaac and not from Ishmael, from Jacob and not from Esau. But
Jacob had twelve sons. The Divine prediction pointed to Judah and later to the
house of David of the tribe of Judah from which the Messiah should spring. When
we come to the prophecies of Isaiah we learn that His mother is to be a virgin.
(Isaiah 7:14). But the son born of the virgin is Immanuel, God with us. Clearly
the prophetic Word in Isaiah states that the Messiah would be a child born and
a Son given with the names, “Wonderful, Counsellor, Mighty God, the Everlasting
Father, the Prince of Peace” (Isaiah 9:6).
The promised Messiah is to be the
seed of a woman, of the seed of Abraham, of David, born of a virgin. He is to
be Immanuel, the Son given, God manifested in the flesh. This promised Messiah,
the Son of David, should appear (according to Isaiah 11:1) after the house of
David had been stripped of its royal dignity and glory. And what more could we
say of the prophecies which speak of His life, His poverty, the works He was to
do, His rejection by His own people, the Jews. In that matchless chapter in
Isaiah, the fiftythird, the rejection of Christ by His own nation is predicted.
In another chapter a still more startling prophecy is recorded: “Then I said, I
have labored in vain, I have spent my strength for naught and in vain.” This is
Messiah’s lament on account of His rejection. Then follows the answer,
which contains a most striking
prophecy: “It is a light thing that Thou shouldest be My servant to raise up
the tribes of Jacob and to restore the preserved of Israel: I also will give
Thee for a light to the Gentiles, that Thou mayest be My salvation unto the
ends of the earth” (Isaiah 49:5,6).
Here the revelation is given that He
would not alone be rejected by His own nation, but that He would also bring
salvation to the Gentiles. What human mind could have ever invented such a
program! The promised Messiah of Israel, the longed-for One, is predicted to be
rejected by His own people and thus becomes the Saviour of the despised
Gentiles. His sufferings and His death are even more minutely predicted.
In the Book of Psalms the sufferings
of Christ, the deep agony of His soul, the expressions of His sorrow and His
grief, are pre-written by the Spirit of God. We mention only one Psalm, the
twenty-second. His death by crucifixion is prophesied. Yet death by crucifixion
was in David’s time an unknown mode of death. Cruel Rome invented that horrible
form of death. The cry of the forsaken One is predicted in the very words which
came from the lips of our Saviour out of the darkness which enshrouded the cross.
So are also predicted the words of mockery by those who looked on; the piercing
of His hands and feet; the parting of the garments and the casting of the lots.
In the fifty-third chapter of Isaiah, the purpose of His death is so blessedly
predicted. He was to die the substitute of sinners. There we find also His
burial and His resurrection predicted. All this was recorded 700 years before
our Lord was born. In the Psalms we find the prophecy that the rejected One
would occupy a place at the right hand of God (Psalm 110:1). He was to leave
the earth. David’s Son and David’s Lord was to have a place in the highest
glory, even at the right hand of God, to wait there till His enemies are made
His footstool. It is indeed a wonderful chain of prophecies concerning Christ.
We could give a very few of these predictions. How they all were long ago
literally fulfilled in the coming, in the life, in the death, in the
resurrection and ascension of our adorable Lord, all true believers know.
THE JEWISH PEOPLE
When Frederick the Great, King of
Prussia, asked the court chaplain for an argument that the Bible is an inspired
book, he answered, “Your Majesty, the Jews.” It was well said. To the Jews were
committed the oracles of God. (Romans 3:2). These oracles of God, the Holy
Scriptures, the Law and the Prophets, are filled with a large number of
predictions relating to their own history. Their unbelief, the rejection of the
Messiah, the results of that rejection, their dispersion into the corners of
the earth, so that they would be scattered among all the nations, the
persecutions and sorrows they were to suffer, the curses which were to come
upon them, their
miraculous preservation as a nation,
their future great tribulation and final restoration — all these and much more
were over and over announced by their own prophets. All the different epochs of
the remarkable history of Israel were predicted long before they were reached.
Their sojourn in Egypt and servitude, as well as the duration of that period,
was announced to Abraham. The Babylonian captivity of 70 years and the return
of a remnant to occupy the land once more was announced by the pre-exile prophets,
who also predicted a far greater and longer exile, their present world-wide
dispersion and a return which up to 1914 has not yet come. Of the deepest
interest and the greatest importance in connection with the predictions of the
return from Babylon is the naming of the great Persian
king through whom the return was to
be achieved. This great prophecy is found in the Book of Isaiah: “That saith of
Cyrus, He is My shepherd, and shall perform all My pleasure: even saying of
Jerusalem, She shall be built; and of the temple, Thy foundation shall be laid.
Thus saith Jehovah to His anointed, to Cyrus, whose right hand I have holden,
to subdue nations before him; and I will loose the loins of kings, to open the doors
before him, and the gates shall not be shut” (Isaiah 44:28; 45:1). This
prediction was made about 200 years before Cyrus was born. A careful study of
the part of Isaiah where these words are found will show that they are linked
with the challenge of Jehovah and the declaration that He knows the end from
the beginning; the passages we have already quoted. In naming an unborn king
and showing what his work would be, Jehovah demonstrates that He knows the
future. The great Jewish historian, Josephus, informs us that when Cyrus found
his name in the Book of Isaiah, written about 200 years before, an earnest
desire laid hold upon him to fulfill what was written. The beginning of the
Book of Ezra gives the proclamation of Cyrus concerning the temple. When the
Prophet Isaiah received the message which contained the name of the Persian
king, he wrote it down faithfully, though he did not know who Cyrus was. Two
centuries later Cyrus appeared and then issued his proclamation which fulfilled
Isaiah’s prediction. Higher criticism denies the genuineness of all this. In
order to disprove this prophecy as well as others, they declare that Isaiah did
not write the book which bears his name. For about 2500 years no one ever
thought of even suggesting that Isaiah is not the author of the book. They have
invented an unknown person, whom they call Deutero-Isaiah, i.e., a second
Isaiah. They claim that he wrote chapters 40-66. With this they have not
stopped. They speak now of a third Isaiah, a Trito-Isaiah, as they call him.
With their supposed learning they claim to have discovered that some of the
chapters of Isaiah were written in Babylon and others in Palestine. However,
all the arguments, advanced by the critics for a composite authorship and
against one Isaiah who lived and wrote his book at the time specified in the
beginning of Isaiah, are disproven by the book itself. One only needs to study
this book to find out the unity of the message. One person must be the author
of the
Book of Isaiah.
A REMARKABLE CHAPTER
The Pentateuch contains many of the
prophecies concerning the future history of the Jews. One of the most
remarkable chapters is the twenty eighth chapter in Deuteronomy. It is one of
the most solemn chapters in the Pentateuch. Orthodox Hebrews read in their
synagogues each year through the entire five books of Moses. When they read
this chapter, the Rabbi reads in a subdued voice. And well may they read it
softly and ponder over it, for here is pre-written the sad and sorrowful
history of their wonderful nation. Here thousands of years ago the Spirit of
God through Moses outlined the history of the scattered nation, all their
suffering and tribulation, as it has been for well nigh two millenniums and as
it is still. Here are arguments for the Divine, the supernatural origin of this
book which no infidel has ever been able to answer; nor will there ever be
found an answer. It would take many pages to follow the different predictions
and show their literal fulfillment in the nation which turned away from Jehovah
and disobeyed His Word.
Apart from such general predictions
as are found in verses 64-66 and fulfilled in the dispersion of Israel, there
are others which are more minute. The Roman power, which was used to break the
Jews, is clearly predicted by Moses, and that in a time when no such power
existed. Read verses 49-50: “The Lord shall bring a nation against thee from
far, from the end of the earth, as swift as the eagle flieth, a nation, whose
language thou shalt not understand.” The eagle was the standard of the Roman
armies; the Jews understood many oriental languages, but were ignorant of
Latin. “Which shall not regard the person of the old, nor show favor to the
young.” Rome killed the old people and the children. “And he shall besiege thee
in all thy gates, until thy high and fenced walls come down, wherein thou trustedst, throughout all thy land”(verse 52).
Fulfilled in the siege and overthrow
of Jerusalem by the Roman legions.“The tender and delicate woman among you,
which would not adventure to set the sole of her foot upon the ground for delicateness
and tenderness, shall eat her children, for lack of all things in the siege and
straitness wherewith thine enemy shall distress thee in thy gates” (54-57).
Fulfilled in the dreadful sieges of
Jerusalem, perhaps the most terrible events in the history of blood and tears
of this poor earth. Every verse, beginning with the fifteenth, to the end of
this chapter has found its oft repeated fulfillment. It does not surprise us
that the enemy hates this book, which bears such a testimony, and would have it
classed with legends. Of much interest is the last verse of this great
prophetic chapter. “And Jehovah will bring thee into Egypt again with ships, by
the way whereof I said unto thee, Thou shalt see it no more again; and there ye
shall sell yourselves unto your enemies for bondmen and bondwomen, and no man shall
buy you.” When Jerusalem was destroyed by the Romans, all who did not die in
the awful calamity were sent to the mines of Egypt, where the slaves were
constantly kept at work without being permitted to rest or sleep till they
succumbed. The whip of Egypt fell once more upon them and they suffered the
most terrible agonies. Others were sold as slaves. According to Josephus, about
100,000 were made slaves so that the markets were glutted and the word
fulfilled, “No man shall buy you.”
THEIR DISPERSION AND PRESERVATION
When Balaam beheld the camp of Israel
he uttered a prophecy which is still being fulfilled. “Lo, the people shall
dwell alone and shall not be reckoned among the nations” (Numbers 23:9).
God had separated the nation and
given to them a land. And this peculiar people, living in one of the smallest
countries of the earth, has been scattered throughout the world, has become a
wanderer, without a home, without a land. Like Cain they wander from nation to
nation. Though without a land they are still a nation. Other nations have
passed away; the Jewish nation has been preserved. They are among all the
nations and yet not reckoned among the nations. All this is written beforehand
in the Bible. “And you will I scatter among the nations, and I will draw out
the sword after you: and your land shall be a desolation and your cities
shall be a waste” (Leviticus 26:33).
“And Jehovah will scatter you among the people, and ye shall be left few in
number among the nations, whither Jehovah shall lead you away” (Deuteronomy
4:27). “And Jehovah will scatter you among all peoples, from the one end of the
earth even unto the other end of the earth; and there thou shalt serve other
gods, which thou hast not known, thou nor thy fathers, even wood and stone. And
among these nations shalt thou find no ease, and there shall be no rest for the
sole of thy foot; but Jehovah will give thee there a trembling heart, and
failing of eyes, and pining of soul. And thy life shall hang in doubt before
thee; and thou shalt fear night and day, and shalt have no assurance of thy life.
In the morning thou shalt say, Would it were even! and at even thou shalt say,
Would it were morning! for the fear of thy heart which thou shalt fear, and for
the sight of thine eyes, which thou shalt see” (Deuteronomy 28:64-67). “And yet
for all that, when they be in the land of their enemies, I will not reject
them, neither will I abhor them, to destroy them utterly, and to break My
covenant with them; for I am Jehovah their God” (Leviticus 26:44). In many
other passages the Spirit of God predicts their miraculous preservation.
“Massacred by thousands, yet
springing up again from their undying stock, the Jews appear at all times and
in all regions. Their perpetuity, their national immortality, is at once the
most curious problem to the political inquirer; to the religious man a subject
of profound and awful admiration.” (*Milman: “History of the Jews.”)
Herder called the Jews “the enigma
of history”. What human mind could have ever foreseen that this peculiar
people, dwelling in a peculiar land, was to be scattered among all nations,
suffer there as no other nation ever suffered, and yet be kept and thus marked
out still as the covenant people of a God, whose gifts and callings are without
repentance. Here indeed is an argument for the Word of God which no infidel can
answer. Jehovah has predicted the history of His earthly people.
“Though I make a full end of all
nations whither I have scattered thee, yet will I not make a full end of thee”
(Jeremiah 30:11).
THE LAND AND THE CITY
Palestine, the God-given home of
Israel, the land which once flowed with milk and honey, has become barren and
desolate. Jerusalem, once a great city, the hallowed city of David, is trodden
down by the Gentiles. All this is more than once predicted in the Word of
Prophecy. “I will make thee a wilderness, and cities which are not inhabited. And
I will prepare destroyers against thee, every one with his weapons; and they
shall cut down thy choice cedars, and cast them into the fire. And many nations
shall pass by this city, and they shall say every man to his neighbor,
Wherefore has the Lord done thus unto this great city? Then they shall answer,
Because they have forsaken the covenant of the Lord their God, and worshipped
other gods and served them” (Jeremiah 22:7-9). “And the generation to come,
your children that shall rise up after you, and the foreigner that shall come
from a far land shall say, when they shall see the plagues of that land even
all the nations shall say, Wherefore hath Jehovah done thus unto this land,
what meaneth the heat of this great anger?” (Deuteronomy 29:22-25).
Thus it has come to pass. Their land
is being visited by Gentiles from all over the world who behold the
desolations. Many other passages could be added to the above — passages which
prophesied the very condition of the promised land and the city of Jerusalem
which are found there now, and which have existed for nearly two thousand
years.
The national rejection of Israel and
the fulfillment of the threatened curses have come to pass, and the land in its
barren condition witnesses to it. Even the duration of all this is indicated in
the prophetic Word. There is a striking passage in Hosea. “I will go and return
to My place, till they acknowledge their offence and seek My face; in their
affliction they will seek Me early. Come, let us return unto the Lord; for He
hath torn, and He will heal us; He hath smitten and He will bind us up. After
two days will He revive us; in the third day He will raise us up, and we shall
live in His sight” (Hosea 5:15-6:2).
According to this prophecy Jehovah
is to be in their midst and is to return to His place. It refers to the
manifestation of the Lord Jesus Christ among His people. They rejected Him; He
returned to His place. They are to acknowledge their offence. Elsewhere in the
Word predictions are found which speak of a future national repentance of
Israel when the remnant of that nation will confess the blood-guiltiness which
is upon them. According to this word in Hosea, they are going to have
affliction, and when that great affliction comes they will seek His face, and
confess their sins, and express their trust in Jehovah. They acknowledge that
for two days they were torn and smitten by the judgments of the Lord,
afflicted, as predicted by their own prophets. A third day is coming when all
will be changed. These days are prophetic days. Several ancient Jewish
expositors mention the fact that these days stand each for a thousand years.
The two days of affliction and dispersion
would therefore stand for two
thousand years, and they are almost expired. The third day would mean the day
of the Lord, the thousand years of the kingdom to come.
Nor must we forget that our Lord
Jesus Christ, too, predicted the great dispersion of the nation, the fall of
Jerusalem, and that Gentiles were to rule over that city, till the times of the
Gentiles are fulfilled. (Luke 21:10-24).
NO GOVERNMENT, NO SACRIFICE, NO HOLY
PLACE
“For the children of Israel shall abide
many days without a king, and without a prince, and without a sacrifice, and
without an image, and without an ephod, and without teraphim” (Hosea 3:4). No
further comment is needed on this striking prediction. Their political and
religious condition for 1900 years corresponds to every word given through
Hosea the prophet.
PROPHECIES ABOUT OTHER NATIONS
Besides the many predictions
concerning the people Israel, the prophets have much to say about the nations
with whom Israel came in touch and whose history is bound up with the history
of the chosen people of God. Babylonia, Assyria, Egypt, Ammon, Moab, Tyre,
Sidon, Idumea, and others are mentioned in the Prophetic Word. Their ultimate
fate was predicted by Jehovah long before their downfall and overthrow
occurred. The Prophet Ezekiel was entrusted with many of the solemn messages announcing
the judgment of these nations. The reader will find these predictions in
chapters 25-37. The predictions concerning Ammon, Moab, Edom and the
Philistines are recorded in the twenty-fifth chapter. Tyrus and its fall is the
subject of chapters 26 to 28:19. A prophecy about Sidon is found in the
concluding verses of the twenty-eighth chapter. The prophecies concerning the
judgment and degradation of Egypt are given at greater length in chapters 29
and 30. Isaiah, Jeremiah, Daniel, Amos, Obadiah, Micah, Nahum and Habakkuk, all
contain prophecies concerning different nations foretelling what should happen
to them. A mass of evidence can be produced to show that all these predictions
came true. Many of them seemed to fail, but after centuries had passed, their
literal fulfillment, even to the minutest detail, had become history.
We must confine ourselves to a very
few of these predictions and their fulfillment. The siege and capture of the
powerful and extremely wealthy city of Tyrus by Nebuchadnezzar, king of
Babylon, is predicted in Ezekiel 26:7-11. It came literally to pass. One of the
proofs is to be found in a contract tablet in the British Museum dated at Tyrus
in the fortieth year of the king. The overthrow predicted by Ezekiel had come
to pass. The walls were broken down and the city was ruined. The noise of the
song ceased and the sound of the harps was no more heard. But not all that Ezekiel
predicted had been fulfilled by the Babylonian conqueror. The Divine prediction
states, “They shall lay thy stones and thy timber and thy dust in the midst of
the water” (verse 12).
Nebuchadnezzar had not done this.
History acquaints us with the fact that the Tyrians, before the destruction of
the city had come, had removed their treasures to an island about half a mile
from the shore. About 250 years later Alexander came against the island city.
The ruins of Tyre which Nebuchadnezzar had left standing were used by
Alexander. He constructed out of them with great ingenuity and perseverance a
dam from the mainland to the rock city in the sea. Thus literally it was
fulfilled, “They shall lay thy stones and thy timber and thy dust in the midst
of the water.” The sentence pronounced upon that proud city, for so long the
powerful
mistress of the sea, “Thou shalt be
built no more,” has been fully carried out.
Of still greater interest are the
prophecies which foretell the doom of Egypt. Ezekiel and Nahum mention the
Egyptian city No. (Ezekiel 30:14-16; Nahum 3:8). No is Thebes and was the
ancient capital of Egypt. The Egyptian name is No-Amon. It had a hundred gates,
as we learn from Homer, and was a city of marvelous beauty. It was surrounded
by walls twenty-four feet thick, and had a circumference of one mile and three quarters.
The Lord announced through Ezekiel that this great city should be rent asunder
and that its vast population should be cut off. Five hundred years later
Ptolemy Laltyrus, the grandfather of Cleopatra, after besieging the city
several years razed to the ground the previously ruined city. Every word given
through Ezekiel had come true. One could fill many pages
showing the literal fulfillment of
Ezekiel’s great predictions relating to Egypt. The decline and degradation
predicted has come true. The rivers and canals of Egypt have dried up. The land
has become desolate. The immense fisheries which yielded such a great income to
the rulers of Egypt are no longer in existence. Ezekiel 30:7 has found a
literal fulfillment. Egypt is a land of ruins and wasted cities. The
instruments whom God used in accomplishing this were strangers (Ezekiel 30:12)
like Cambyses, Amroo, Ochus and others. “There shall be no more a prince of the
land of Egypt” (Ezekiel 30:13). This too has been literally fulfilled. Ochus subdued
rebellious Egypt 350 B.C., and since that time no native prince has ruled in
Egypt. It is also written that Egypt should become the basest of the kingdoms,
“Neither shall it exalt itself any more above the nations; for I will diminish
them that they shall no more rule over the nations.” This degradation has fully
come to pass. Who would ever have thought that this magnificent country with
its vast resources, its wonderful commerce, its great prosperity, its luxuries,
the land of marvelous structures, could ever experience such a downfall!
Another significant fact is that in spite of the great humiliation and
degradation through which Egypt has passed for so many centuries, it is not to
experience a total extinction. In this respect her fate differs from that of
other nations, “They shall be there a base kingdom” (Ezekiel 29:14); this is
the condition of Egypt today. And other prophets announce the same fact. One of
the earliest prophets is Joel. He prophesied between 860 and 850 B.C. He
predicted at that early date, “Egypt shall be a desolation.” Isaiah also
foretells the awful judgment of this great land of ancient culture. In the
light of unfulfilled prophecy we discover the reason why God has not permitted
the complete extinction of Egypt. Egypt is yet to be lifted out of the dust and
is to receive a place of blessing only second to that of Israel (Isaiah
19:22-25). This will be fulfilled when our Lord comes again.
And what more could we say of
Idumea, Babylonia, Assyria and other lands. Moab and Ammon, the enemies of
Israel, once flourishing nations, have passed away and the numerous judgment
predictions have come true. (See Jeremiah 48-49). Edom is gone. “O thou that
dwellest in the clefts of the rock, that boldest the height of the hill, though
thou shouldest make thy nest as high as the eagle, I will bring thee down from
thence, saith Jehovah” (Jeremiah 49:16). “Thou shalt be desolate, O Mount Seir,
and all Idumea, even all of it” (Ezekiel 35:15).
It was an atheist who was first used
to report that during a journey of eight days he had found in the territory of
Idumea the ruins of thirty cities. Babylonia and Assyria, once the granaries of
Asia, the garden spots of that continent, enjoying a great civilization, are
now in desolation and mostly unproductive deserts. The predictions of Isaiah
and Jeremiah have been fulfilled. The judgments predicted to come upon Babylon
were also fulfilled long ago. “How utterly improbable it must have sounded to
the contemporaries of Isaiah and Jeremiah, that the great Babylon, this oldest
metropolis Of the world, founded by Nimrod, planned to be a city on the
Euphrates much larger than Paris of today, surrounded by walls four hundred
feet high, on the top of which four chariots, each drawn by four horses, could
be driven side by side; in the center a large, magnificent park an hour’s walk
in circumference, watered by machinery; in it the king’s twelve palaces, surrounding
the great temple of the sun-god with
its six hundred-foot tower and its gigantic golden statue — should be converted
into a heap of ruins in the midst of a desert! Who today would have any faith
in a similar prophecy against Berlin or London or Paris or New York?”
(Prof. Bettex).
THE BOOK OF DANIEL
The Book of Daniel, however,
supplies the most startling evidences of fulfilled prophecy. No other book has
been so much attacked as this great book. For about two thousand years wicked
men, heathen philosophers, and infidels have tried to break down its authority.
It has proven to be the anvil upon which the critics’ hammers have been broken
to pieces. The Book of Daniel has survived all attacks. It has been denied that
Daniel wrote the book during the Babylonian captivity. The critics claim that
it was written during the time of the Maccabees. Kuenen, Wellhausen, Canon Farrar,
Driver and others but repeat the statements of the assailant of Christianity of
the third century, the heathen Porphyry, who contended that the Book of Daniel
was a forgery. Such is the company in which the higher
critics are found. The Book of
Daniel has been completely vindicated. The prophet wrote the book and its
magnificent prophecies in Babylon. All doubt as to that has been forever
removed, and men who still repeat the infidel oppositions against the book,
oppositions of a past generation, mustbe branded as ignorant, or considered the
willful enemies of the Bible.
NEBUCHADNEZZAR’S GREAT DREAM
The great dream of Nebuchadnezzar is
recorded in the second chapter of the Book of Daniel. Nebuchadnezzar who had
been constituted by Jehovah a great monarch over the earth (Jeremiah 27:5-9)
desired to know the future. All his astrologers and soothsayers, his magicians
and mediums, could not do that. Their predictions left him still in doubt
(Daniel 2:29). God gave him then a dream which contained a most remarkable
revelation. The great man-image the king beheld is the symbol of the great
world empires Which were to follow the Babylonian empire. The image had a head
of gold; the chest and arms were of silver; the trunk and the thighs were of
brass; the two legs of iron, and the two feet were composed of iron mixed with
clay. The Lord made known through the prophet the meaning of this dream. Nebuchadnezzar
and the empire over which he ruled is symbolized by the golden head. An
inferior kingdom was to come after the Babylonian Empire; its symbol is silver.
This kingdom was to be followed by a third kingdom of brass to bear rule over
all the earth. The fourth kingdom was to be strong as iron and was to subdue
all things. Exactly three great world powers came after the Babylonian Empire,
the Medo-Persian, the Graeco- Macedonian and the Roman. Interesting it is to
learn, from the different metals of which the image was composed, the process
of deterioration which was to characterize the successive monarchies. The
fourth empire, the Roman world power, is seen in its historic division,
indicated by the two legs. The empire consisted of two parts, the East and West
Roman sections. Then the division of the Empire into kingdoms in which iron (monarchical
form of government) and the clay (the rule of the people) should be present is
also predicted. How all this has come to pass is too well known to need any
further demonstration. These empires have come and gone and the territory of
the old Roman Empire presents today the very condition as predicted in
Nebuchadnezzar’s dream. Monarchies and republics are in existence upon that
territory. The final division into ten kingdoms has not yet been accomplished.
The unfulfilled portion of this dream we do not follow here. The reader may
find this explained in the author’s exposition of Daniel.
DANIEL’S GREAT VISION OF THE WORLD
POWERS
In the seventh chapter Daniel
relates his first great vision. The four beasts he saw rising out of the sea,
the type of nations, are symbolical of the same world powers. The lion with
eagle’s wings is Babylonia. Jeremiah also pictured Nebuchadnezzar as a lion. “The
lion has come up from his thicket and the destroyer of the Gentiles is on his
way” (Jeremiah 4:7). Ezekiel speaks of him as a great eagle. (Ezekiel 17:3).
The Medo- Persian Empire is seen as a bear raised up on one side and having
three ribs in its mouth. The one side appeared stronger because this second
world empire had Persia for its stronger element. The three ribs the bear holds
as prey predict the conquests of that empire. Medo-Persia conquered exactly three
great provinces, Susiana, Lydia and Asia Minor. The leopard with four wings and
four heads is the picture of the Graeco-Macedonian Empire. The four wings
denote its swiftness and rapid advance so abundantly fulfilled in the conquests
of Alexander the Great. The four heads of the leopard predict the partition of
this empire into the kingdoms of Syria, Egypt, Macedonia and Asia Minor. The
fourth beast, the great nondescript, with its ten horns, and the little horn,
still to come, is the Roman Empire. These are wonderful things. Be it
remembered that the prophet received the vision when the Babylonian Empire
still existed. Here also the character of these empires typified by ferocious
beasts is revealed. The great nations of Christendom which occupy the ground of
the Roman Empire testify unconsciously to the truth of this great prophecy. The
emblems of these nations are not doves, little lambs or other harmless creatures.
They have chosen the lion, the bear, the unicorn, the eagle and the
double-headed eagle.
ALEXANDER THE GREAT PREDICTED
In the eighth chapter a new prophecy
is revealed through Daniel. Once more the Medo-Persian Empire is seen, this
time under the figure of a ram with two horns, one higher than the other, and
the higher one came up last. It foretells the composition of that empire. It
was composed of the Medes and the Persians; the Persians came in last and were
the strongest. It conquered in three directions. This corresponds to the bear
with the three ribs in the previous chapter. The he-goat which Daniel sees
coming from the west with a great rush is the type of the leopard empire, the
Graeco-Macedonian. The same swiftness as revealed in the leopard with four
wings is seen here again. The notable horn upon the he-goat, symbolizing the
Macedonian Empire, is Alexander the Great. Josephus tells us that Alexander was
greatly moved when the Jewish high priest Jaddua acquainted him with the
meaning of this prophecy written over two hundred years before. And how was it fulfilled,
what is predicted in Daniel 8:5-8? 334 B.C. the notable horn, Alexander, in
goat-like fashion, leaped across the Hellespont and fought successful battles,
then pushed on to the banks of the Indus and the Nile and from there to
Shushan. The great battles of the Granicus (334 B.C.), Issus (333 B.C.), and
Arbella (331 B.C.) were fought, and with irresistible force he stamped the
power of Persia and its king, Darius Codomannus, to the ground. He conquered
rapidly Syria, Phoenicia, Cyprus, Pyre, Gaza, Egypt, Babylonia, Persia. In 329
he conquered Bactria, crossed the Oxus and Jaxaitis and defeated the Scythians.
And thus he stamped upon the ram after having broken its horns. But when the
he-goat had waxed very great, the great horn was broken. This predicted the
early and sudden death of Alexander the Great. He died after a reign of 12
years and eight months, after a career of drunkenness and debauchery in 323
B.C. He died when he was but 32 years old. Then four notable ones sprang up in
the place of the broken horn. This too has been fulfilled, for the empire of
Alexander was divided into four parts. Four of the great generals of Alexander
made the division, namely, Cassander, Lysimachus, Seleucus and Ptolemy. The
four great divisions were Syria, Egypt, Macedonia, and Asia Minor.
ANTIOCHUS EPIPHANES
In verses 19 to 24 of the eighth
chapter of Daniel the coming of a wicked leader, to spring out of one of the
divisions of the Macedonian Empire and the vile work he was to do, is
predicted. He was to work great havoc in the pleasant land, that is, Israel’s
land.
History does not leave us in doubt
about the identity of this wicked king. He is the eighth king of the Seleucid
dynasty, who took the Syrian throne and is known by the name of Antiochus
Epiphanes, and bore also the name of Epimanes, i.e., “the Madman.” He was the
tyrant and oppressor of the Jews. His wicked deeds of oppression, blasphemy and
sacrilege are fully described in the Book of the Maccabees. Long before he ever
appeared Daniel saw him and his wicked work in his vision. And all this has
been fulfilled in Antiochus Epiphanes. When he had conquered Jerusalem he
sacrificed a sow upon the altar of burnt offerings and sprinkled its broth over
the entire building. He corrupted the youths of Jerusalem by introducing lewd
practices; the feast of tabernacles he changed into the feast of Bacchus. He
auctioned off the high-priest-hood. All kinds of infamies were perpetrated by
him and the most awful obscenity permitted and encouraged. All true worship was
forbidden, and idol worship introduced, especially that of Jupiter Olympus. The
whole city and land was devastated and some 100,000 pious Jews were massacred.
Such has been the remarkable fulfillment of this prophecy. Even the duration of
this time of trouble was revealed; and 2,300 days are mentioned. These 2,300
days cover about the period of time during which Antiochus Epiphanes did his
wicked deeds. The chronology of these 2,300 days is interesting. Judas
Maccabaeus cleansed (lit. justified) the sanctuary from the abomination about
December 25, 165 B.C. Antiochus died a miserable death two years later. Going
back 2,300 days from the time Judas the Maccabean cleansed the defiled temple,
brings us to 171 B.C. when we find the record of Antiochus’ interference with
the Jews.
Menelaus had bribed Antiochus to
make him high priest, robbed the temple and instituted the murder of the high
priest Onias III. The most wicked deeds in the defilement of the temple were
perpetrated by the leading general of Antiochus, Apollonius, in the year 168
B.C. We believe these 2,300 days are therefore literal days and have found
their literal fulfillment in the dreadful days of this wicked king from the
North. There is no other meaning attached to these days and the foolish
speculations that these days are years, etc., lack Scriptural foundation
altogether.
THE GREATEST OF ALL
The greatest prophecy in the Book of
Daniel is contained in the ninth chapter, the prophecy concerning the 70 weeks,
transmitted from heaven through Gabriel. (Daniel 9:24-27). To many readers of
the Book of Daniel it is not quite clear what the expression “seventy weeks”
means, and when it is stated that each week represents a period of seven years,
many Christians do not know why such is the case. A brief word of explanation may
therefore be in order. The literal translation of the term “seventy weeks” is
“seventy sevens.” Now this word “sevens” translated “weeks” may mean “days” and
it may mean “years.” What then is meant here,
seventy times seven days or seventy
times seven years? It is evident that the “sevens” mean year weeks, seven years
to each prophetic week. Daniel was occupied in reading the books and in prayer
with the seventy years of the Babylonian captivity. And now Gabriel is going to
reveal to him something which will take place in “seventy sevens,” which means
seventy times seven years. The proof that such is the case is furnished by the fulfillment
of the prophecy itself.
First we notice in the prophecy that
these 70 year-weeks are divided in three parts. Seven times seven (49 years)
are to go by till the commanded rebuilding and restoration of Jerusalem should
be accomplished. In the twentieth year of Artaxerxes the command was given to
rebuild Jerusalem. It was in the year 445 B.C., exactly 49 years after the wall
of Jerusalem and the city had been rebuilt. Then 62 weeks are given as the time
when Messiah should be cut off and have nothing. This gives us 434 years (62 times
7). Here is a prediction concerning the death of Christ. Has it been fulfilled?
Chronology shows that exactly 483 years after Artaxerxes gave the command to
restore Jerusalem (445 B. C.), 434 years after the city had been restored, the
death of our Lord Jesus Christ took place. To be more exact, on the day on
which our Lord Jesus Christ entered Jerusalem for the last time, the number of
years announced by Gabriel expired and the Lord was crucified that week. The
proof of it is perfect. But there is more to be said. As a result of the
cutting off of Messiah something else is prophesied. “And the people of the
prince that shall come shall destroy the city and the sanctuary.” The prince
that is to come (and is yet to come) is the little horn of Daniel 7. He arises
out of the Roman Empire. The people of the prince that shall come are therefore
the Roman people. They have fulfilled this prophecy by destroying the temple
and the city.
THE WARS OF THE PTOLEMIES AND
SELEUCIDAE
The greater part of the eleventh chapter
in Daniel has been historically fulfilled. It is an interesting study. So
accurate are the predictions that the enemies of the Bible have tried their
very best to show that Daniel did not write these prophecies several hundred
years before they occurred. But they have failed in their miserable attempts.
We place the startling evidence before our readers.
PROPHECY GIVEN B.C. 534 |
FULFILLMENT |
"And now
will I shew thee the truth. Behold,
there shall stand up yet three
kings in Persia; and the fourth shall
be far richer than they all: and by
his strength through his
riches he shall stir up all against the
realm of Grecia." (Verse 2.) |
See Ezra 4. 5-24.
The three kings were: Ahasuerus,
Artaxerxes and Darius, known in history as
Cambyses, Pseudo Smerdis, and Darius
Hystaspis (not Darius the Mede). The fourth
one was Xerxes, who, as history tells us, was immensely rich. The invasion of
Greece took place in 480 B.C. |
"And a
mighty king shall stand up, that shall
rule with great dominion, and do
according to his will."
(Verse 3.) |
The successors of
Xerxes are not mentioned. The
mighty king in this verse is the notable horn
seen by Daniel on the hegoat in chapter 8, Alexander the Great, 335 B.C. |
"And when he
shall stand up, his kingdom shall be
broken, and shall be divided
toward the four winds of heaven;
and not to his posterity, nor
according to his dominion which he
ruled: for his kingdom shall be
plucked up even for others
besides those." (Verse 4.) |
B.C. 323.
Alexander died young. The notable horn was
broken: His kingdom was divided into four
parts (four winds) after the battle of
Ipsus 301 B.C. His posterity did not receive
the kingdom, but his four generals,
Ptolemy, Lysimachus, Seleucus Nicator and
Cassander. Not one of these divisions reached
to the glory of Alexander's
dominion. |
"And the
king of the South shall be strong, and
one of his princes; and he shall be
strong above him, and have
dominion; his dominion shall be a great
dominion." (Verse 5.) |
Asia and Greece
are not followed but Syria and Egypt become
prominent, because the King of the North
from Syria, and the King of the South,
Egypt, were to come in touch with the Jews.
The holy land became involved with
both. The King of the South was Ptolemy emy
Lagus. One of his princes was Seleucus Nicator. He established a great dominion,
which extended to the Indus. |
"And in the
end of years they shall join
themselves together; for the king's
daughter of the South shall come to the
King of the North to make an
agreement; but she shall not
retain the power of the arm; neither
shall he stand, nor his arm: but
she shall be given up, and
they that brought her, and he that
begat her, and he that strengthened
her in these times."
(Verse 6.) |
Here is another
gap. This verse takes us to 250 B.C. The two
who make an alliance are the Kings of the
North (Syrian division of the Grecian
Empire) and of the South (Egypt). This
alliance was effected by the marriage of the
daughter of the King of the South, the
Egyptian Princess Berenice. daughter of Ptolemy
II, to Antiochus Theos, the King of the North. The agreement was that
Antiochus had to divorce his wife and make any child of Berenice his heir in
the kingdom. The agreement ended in calamity. When Ptolemy died Antiochus Theos
in 247 called back his former wife. Berenice and her young son were poisoned and
the first wife's son, Callinicus, was put on the throne as Seleucus II. |
"But out of
a branch of her roots shall one stand
up in his estate, which shall come
with an army, and shall enter
into the fortress of the King of the
North, and shall deal against
them, and shall prevail."
(Verse 7.) |
The one out of
her roots (Berenice, who had been
murdered) was her own brother, Ptolemy Euergetes,
who avenged her death. He conquered Syria. He dealt against Seleucus II, King
of the North, and slew the wife of Antiochus Theos, who had Berenice poisoned.
He seized the fortress, the port of Antioch. |
"And shall
also carry captives into Egypt their
gods, with their princes, and with
their precious vessels of silver
and gold; and he shall continue
more years than the King of the
North." (Verse 8.) |
Ptolemy Euergetes
did exactly as predicted. He returned with 4,000 talents of gold and 40,000
talents of silver and 2,500 idols and idolatrous vessels. Many of these
Cambyses had taken to Persia. |
"So the King
of the South shall come into his
kingdom, and shall return into his
own land." (Verse 9.) |
In 240 B.C.
Seleucus Callinicus the King of the North invaded
Egypt. He had to return defeated. His
fleet perished in a storm. |
(Literal
translation): "and the same [King of the
North] shall come into the
realm of the King of the South, but
shall return into his own
land." |
The sons of
Seleucus Callinicus were Seleucus III and
Antiochus the Great. Seleueus
(Ceraunos) III began war against Egyptian
Provinces in Asia Minor. He was unsuccessful. The
other son Antioch invaded Egypt and
passed through becausePtolemy Philopater did not oppose him. In218 B.C. Antiochus
continued his warfare and took the fortress Gaza. |
"But his
sons shall be stirred up, and shall
assemble a multitude of great forces; and
one shall certainly come,
and overflow, and pass through:
then shall he return, and be
stirred up, even to his
fortress." (Verse 10.) |
In 217 B.C.
Ptolemy aroused himself and fought Antiochus
the Great with an immense army. He
defeated Antiochus. The multitude was given into the hands of Ptolemy
Philopater. |
"And the
King of the South shall be moved with
choler, and shall come forth and
fight with him, even with the
King of the North: and he shall set
forth a great multitude but the
multitude shall be given into his
hand." (Verse 11.) |
The people of
Egypt rose up and the weakling Ptolemy
became courageous. His victory is again
referred to. It was won at Raphia. He might
have pressed his victory. But he did not make use of it but gave himself up to a
licentious life. Thus "he was not strengthened by it." |
"And when he
hath taken away the multitude,
his heart shall be lifted up, and he
shall cast down many ten
thousands: but he shall not be
strengthened by it." (Verse 12.) (Literal:
"And the multitude shall rise up and
his courage increase.") |
About 14 years
later, 203 B.C., Antiochus assembled a great
army, greater than the army which was
defeated at Raphia, and turned against
Egypt. Ptolemy Philopater had died and left
an infant son Ptolemy Epiphanes. |
"For the
King of the North shall return, and shall
set forth a multitude greater
than the former and shall
certainly come after certain years
with a great army and with much
riches." (Verse 13.) |
Antiochus had for
his ally Philip, King of Macedon. Also in
Egypt many rebels stood up. And then there were, as we read in Josephus,
wicked Jews, who helped Antiochus. These
"robbers of thy people" established the
vision. They helped along the very things
which had been predicted, as to trials for them. |
"And in
those times there shall many stand up
against the King of the South:
also the robbers of thy people shall
exalt themselves to establish the
vision; but they shall fall."
(Verse 14.) |
All this was
fulfilled in the severe struggles, which followed. |
"So the King
of the North shall come, and cast up
a mount, and take the most
fenced cities: and the arms of the
South shall not withstand,
neither his chosen people, neither
shall there be any strength to
withstand." (Verse 15.) |
The invasion of
the glorious land by Antiochus followed.
He subjected the whole land unto himself. He also was well disposed towards
the Jews because they sided with
Antiochus the Great against Ptolemy
Epiphanes. |
"But he that
cometh against him shall do
according to his own will, and none
shall stand before him: and he shall
stand in the glorious land,
which by his hand shall be
consumed." (Verse 16.) |
This brings us to
the years 198-195 B.C. Antiochus aimed
to get full possession of Egypt. An
agreement was made. In this treaty between
Antiochus and Ptolemy Epiphanes,
Cleopatra, daughter of Antiochus was
espoused to Ptolemy. Why is Cleopatra called "daughter of women?" Because she was very
young and was under the care of her mother and grandmother. The treaty
failed. |
"He shall
also set his face to enter with the strength
of his whole kingdom, and an
agreement shall be made with him;
thus shall he do: and he shall
give him the daughter of
women, corrupting her: but she
shall not stand on his side, neither be
for him." (Verse 17.) |
A few years later
Antiochus conquered isles on the coast of Asia Minor. |
"After this
shall he turn his face unto the isles, and shall take many: but a prince
[literally: Captain] for his own behalf shall cause the reproach offered by
him to cease; without his own reproach he shall cause it to turn upon
him." (Verse 18.) |
The captain
predicted is Scipio Asiaticus. Antiochus had
reproached the Romans by his acts and he
was defeated. This defeat took place at
Magnesia 190 B.C. |
"Then he
shall turn his face toward the fort
of his own land: but he shall
stumble and fall, and not be
found." (Verse 19.) |
Antiochus returns
to his own land. He came to a miserable end trying to plunder the temple of
Belus in Elymais, |
"Then shall
stand up in his estate a raiser of taxes
in the glory of the kingdom: but
within few days he shall be
destroyed, neither in anger, nor in
battle." (Verse 20.) |
This is Seleucus
Philopater B.C. 187-176. He was known as a
raiser of taxes. He had an evil reputation
with the Jews because he was such an exactor among them. His tax collector
Heliodorus poisoned him and so he was slain "neither in anger, nor in battle." |
"And in his
estate shall stand up a vile person, to
whom they shall not give the
honor of the kingdom: but he shall come in peaceably, and obtain the kingdom
by flatteries." (Verse21.) |
This vile person
is none other than Antiochus
Epiphanes. He had no claim on royal dignities,
being only a younger son of Antiochus the Great. He seized royal honors by
trickery and with flatteries. He is the little horn
of chapter 8. |
"And with
the arms of a flood shall they be
overflown from before him, and
shall be broken; yea, also the
prince cf the covenant."
(Verse 22.) |
He was successful
in defeating his enemies. The prince of the covenant may mean his nephew
Ptolemy Philometor. He also vanquished Philometor's generals. |
"And after
the league made with him he shall work
deceitfully: for he shall come up, and shall become strong with a small people."
(Verse 23.) |
He reigned friendship
to young Ptolemy but worked deceitfully. To allay suspicion he came against
Egypt with a small force but took Egypt as far as Memphis. |
"He shall
enter peaceably even upon the fattest
places of the province; and he
shall do that which his fathers
have not done, nor his father's
father; he shall scatter among
them the prey, and spoil, and
riches: yea, and he shall forecast
his devices against the strongholds,
even for a time." (Verse 24.) |
He took
possession of the fertile places in Egypt under the
pretense of peace. He took Pelusium and laid seige to the fortified places
Naucratis and Alexandria. |
"And he
shall stir up his power and his courage
against the King of the South with
a great army; and the King of
the South shall be stirred up to
battle with a very great and mighty
army; but he shall not stand:
for they shall forecast devices
against him." (Verse 25.) |
This King of the
South is Ptolemy Physcon, who was made king after Philometor had fallen into
the hands of Antiochus. He had a great army but did not succeed, because treason
had broken out in his own camp. |
"Yea, they
that feed of the portion of his meat shall
destroy him, and his army shall
overflow: and many shall fall down slain." (Verse 26.) |
Additional
actions of Antiochus and warfare, in which
he was successful, followed. |
"And both
these kings' hearts shall be to do mischief, and they shall speak lies at one
table; but it shall not prosper: for yet the end shall be at the time
appointed." (Verse 27.) |
The two kings are
Antiochus Epiphanes and his associate
Philometor. They made an alliance against Ptolemy Euergetes II, also called
Physcon. But they spoke lies against each other and did not succeed in their plans. |
"Then shall
he return into his land with great
riches; and his heart shall be
against the holy covenant; and he
shall do exploits, and
return to his own land."
(Verse 28.) |
In 168 B.C. he
returned from his expedition, and had great riches. Then he marched, through
Judea and did his awful deeds. A report had. come to his ears that the Jewish
people had reported him dead. In the first and
second book of the Maccabees we read
of his atrocities. Then he retired to
Antioch. |
"At the time
appointed he shall return, and come
toward the South; but it shall not be as the former, or as the latter."
(Verse 29.) |
He made still
another attempt against the South. However,
he had not the former success. |
"For the
ships of Chittim shall come against him;
therefore he shall be grieved,
and return, and have indignation
against the holy covenant: so
shall he do; he shall even return, and
have intelligence with them that
forsake the holy covenant."
(Verse 30.) |
The ships of
Chittim are the Roman fleet. When within a few
miles of Alexandria he heard that ships
had arrived. He went to salute them. They
delivered to him the letters of the
senate, in which he was commanded, on
pain of the displeasure of the Roman people,
to put an end to the war against his
nephews. Antiochus said, "he would go and
consult his friends;" on which Popilius,
one of the legates, took his staff, and
instantly drew a circle round Antiochus on the
sand, where he stood; and commanded him not to pass that circle, till he had
given a definite answer. As a grieved and defeated man he returned and then
he fell upon Judea once more to commit additional
wickedness. Apostate Jews sided with
him. |
"And arms
shall stand on his part and they shall
pollute the sanctuary of strength, and shall take away the daily sacrifice,
and they shall place the abomination that maketh desolate." (Verse 31.) |
This brings us to
the climax of the horrors under Antiochus
Epiphanes. The previous record of it is
contained in chapter 8. He sent Apollonius
with over 20,000 men to destroy
Jerusalem. Multitudes were slain, and women and
children led away as captives. He
issued a command that all people must
conform to the idolatry of Greece. A wicked
Grecian was sent to enforce the word
of Antiochus. All sacrifices ceased
and the God-given ceremonials of
Judaism came to an end. The temple was
polluted by the sacrifices of swine's flesh. The temple was dedicated to Jupiter
Olympius. Thus the prediction was fulfilled. |
"And such as
do wickedly against the covenant
shall he corrupt by flatteries: but
the people that do know their God
shall be strong, and do exploits,
"And they that understand among
the people shall instruct
many: yet they shall fall by the
sword, and by flame, by captivity, and
by spoil, many days. "Now
when they shall fall, they shall be
holpen with a little help: but many
shall cleave to them with
flatteries." (Verses 32- 34.). |
These verses
describe the condition among the Jewish people. There were two classes.Those
who did wickedly against the covenant, the apostate, and those who knew God,
a faithful remnant. The apostates sided with the enemy, and the people who knew
God were strong. This has reference to the noble Maccabees. There was also suffering
and persecution |
MANY MORE FULFILLED PROPHECIES
Many other fulfilled prophecies
might be quoted. In the last chapter of Daniel an interesting prediction is
made concerning the time of the end. “Many shall run to and fro, and knowledge
shall be increased.” Sir Isaac Newton, the discoverer of the law of
gravitation, wrote on Daniel and expressed his belief that some day people
would travel at the rate of fifty miles an hour. The French infidel Voltaire
many years later laughed at Newton’s statement and held it up to ridicule. The
time of the end is here and the prophecy of Daniel 12:4 has come true. In the
New Testament are also written prophecies which are now in process of
fulfillment. 1 Timothy 4:1,2; 2 Timothy 3:1-5; 4:1-3; 2 Peter 2; Jude’s
Epistle, and other Scriptures predict the present day apostasy.
UNFULFILLED PROPHECY
As stated before, there are many
unfulfilled prophecies in the Bible. The literal fulfillment of prophecies in
the past vouches for the literal fulfillment of every prophecy in the Word of
God. Some of them were uttered several thousand years ago. The world still
waits for their fulfillment. May we remember that God does not need to be in a
hurry. He knows indeed the end from the beginning. He takes His time in
accomplishing His eternal purposes. And may we, His people, who know and love
His Word, not neglect prophecy, for the Prophetic Word is the lamp which
shineth in a dark place.
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