Category Archives: Uncategorized

Divine guidance can save you much grief

“The Lord will guide you into all the truth” applicable to you. (John 16:13)

To live by the guidance of the Holy Spirit, and be led in all your most beneficial ways one must learn the discipline of ongoing listening for the direction of the Lord and acknowledge His methods of opening up our viewpoint to see the right way to walk. David won most of his battles because he always wanted to hear God’s view first (Psalm 27:7, 11)

We live in a world order which is becoming increasingly difficult to hear God speak to us through His Word, or the “still small voice” (Isaiah 30:21)

This is increasingly true when you are surrounded by excess talking and clamour while facing a choice when in need of information that may be yet unknown or purposely held back from you by men who feel superior in education, religion, or health care. For example, it was found out that many hysterectomies were unnecessary in the 60s yet many a doctor ran ahead with multiple surgeries even when it was known it was unnecessary. No one should hold back pertinent information because money per operation is a primary goal. I see this mindset continues today in some disciplines.

We must not trust every word of others or the feeling within ourselves, but cautiously and patiently try the matter, whether it be of God. Do not give ready heed to every news-bearer, for they know man’s weakness that it is prone to evil and deceptive in dialogue. It is supreme wisdom, not to be hasty in action, or stubborn in our own opinions. It is essential wisdom to not believe every word we hear. An obedient life, submissive to the Lord, makes a man wise toward God and gives him experience in many things. The more humility and obedience within and without to God’s will, the more knowledgeable will he be in all things, and the more shall his soul be at peace. 1

Amidst others of rank, where you cannot hear yourself think let alone hear God speak it is hard to make a rational decision. Montaigne noted in his essay on presumption: “occasions surprise me and move me contrary to my premeditation”. The smartest contemplative person can be derailed from original rational thinking in a few minutes of chaos under decisional pressure.

This is particularly true if we replace the guidance directly from God with an: if, then, else flowchart, which I am prone to do because I have been trained in writing computer code. I learned the hard way that this can be like rolling the bones or tossing the dice without rational thought versus the leading of God directing as we pray for guidance in His Word and discern what light He has on the subject at hand. Dreams even if frightening, where warnings can come in the wee hours can save you from a bad decision. If the Spirit of Christ leads in either of these two methods sit up and go to your journal and immediately write down the leading and ask what this means – it is vital to do this before it is lost. Carry your journal and ponder the guidance and take it to heart and change course if necessary.

As a Christian resist the temptation of trying to find things out only on your own.

When the founder of Buddhism was bidding his followers farewell, he said: “You must be your own light”. When Socrates was about to take that fatal cup one of his disciples mourned that he was leaving them orphans. When Jesus was about to ascend to heaven He said of the Holy Spirit, “if I go I will send him to you” (see John 14:18; 16:5-7,13; Luke 1:79; John 10:4)

Divine guidance is only available to Christians, who obey the directives of and rely on the Father in Heaven. Such obedience offers: Peaceful quietude (Psalm 23:2), good decisions (Psalm 25.9, 32:8), lifetime guidance (Psalm 48:14), wise counsel (Psalm 73:24), internal divine directions (Isaiah 30:21, John 16:13), lead amidst uncertainties (Isaiah 42:16,48:17).

Praise the Lord for His amazing grace. May He lead you into the paths of a peaceful life in all your decision making away from the chaos of mankind who can ruin your choices and bring regret for not taking the time to listen in the quiet hour with the Lord Jesus Christ in His sacred scriptures daily.

1 Thomas a Kempis, The Imitation of Christ, Glen Jackman modern edit

Humility: Exemplified by Jesus

‘I am among you as one who serves.’—Luke 22:27 NLT.

In the Gospel of John, we see Jesus frequently speaking of His relation to the Father, presenting the spiritual motives that guided Him. His consciousness of the power and the guidance of the Holy Spirit linking Him to his Father’s mind — echoed by how He acted kindly and gently among men — proved the clearest picture of humility ever lived among humankind.

Though He is the Son of God in heaven, as a man upon earth, He took the place of entire subordination, giving God the honour and the glory which is due to Him. And what He taught so often was made true of Himself:everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, and he who humbles himself will be exalted.’ (Luke 14:11; 18:14)

Listen to the words by which our Lord speaks of His relation to the Father — see how frequently He uses the words not, and nothing, of Himself. The not I, in which Paul expresses his relationship to Christ, is the very spirit of what Christ says of His relation to the Father: “The life I now live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.” (see Galatians 2:20) Jesus taught self-abnegation by the way He lived. Hover over these texts to see each one of His statements relating how the Father led Jesus as He sought to reconcile humanity to God: (John 5:19, 30, 41; 6:38; 7:16, 28; 8:42, 50; 14:10, 24)

The above scriptures reveal insight into Christ’s life and work. They tell us how it was that the Almighty God was able to work His mighty redemption work through Jesus. They show what mindset Christ’s enlightened consciousness viewed His dependence as a man, respectfully reliant as the Son upon the Father. They teach us about Christ’s essential nature and life as a man while His work of redemption was accomplished. He was nothing, that God might be all. Jesus resigned Himself, His will and His powers entirely for the Father to work in and through Him — as He offered us reconciliation, mercy and grace. Of His own power, His own will, and His own glory, of His whole mission with all His works and His teaching,— of all this He said, It is not I; I am nothing; I have given Myself to the Father to work; I am nothing, the Father is all.

This life of entire self-abnegation, absolute submission and dependence upon the Father’s will, Christ found to be one of perfect peace and joy. He lost nothing by giving all to God. God honoured His trust, and manifested all for Him, and then exalted Him to His right hand to administer the kingdom, beside Him, reflecting the majestic glory of this fact: When God reaches out to us to bring us to Himself, by seeing Jesus, we recognize that the Father is waiting in love, to bind you to Him in love. And because Christ had thus humbled Himself before God, and God was ever before Him, Jesus also found it possible to humble Himself before men, and to be the Servant of all. His humility was simply the surrender of Himself to God, to allow Him to do in Him what He pleased, whatever men around might say of Him, or do to Him. The primary purpose of this demonstration of humility was to draw all men to Himself and thereby to the Father.

It is in this state of mind, in this spirit and disposition, that the redemption of Christ has its virtue and potent effectiveness. It is to bring us to this disposition of self-abnegation that we are perceptive to and taking on the mind of Christ. This is the true self-denial to which our Saviour calls each of us: the acknowledgement that self has nothing good in it, except as an empty vessel which God must fill, and that any claim to be or do anything self-warranting may not for a moment be allowed. It is in this, above and before everything, in which the conformity to Jesus consists, the being and doing nothing of ourselves, that God may be all.

Here we have the root and nature of true humility. It is because this is not understood or sought after, that our humility, individually and in the church is so superficial, and lacks vitality. We must learn of Jesus, how He is meek and lowly of heart. He teaches us where true humility rises to find its strength—in the knowledge that it is God who works all in all, that our place is to yield to Him in perfect resignation and dependence, in full consent to be and to do nothing of ourselves.

Christ came to reveal and to impart to us, by example—a life which fully honours God, that came through death to sin and self. If we feel that this life is too high for us and beyond our reach, let this felt inability, drive us to seek it in Him; it is the indwelling Christ via His Spirit who will live in us, this meek and lowly life. Without abiding in Christ, we can do nothing useful in His kingdom. (John 15:5)

If we long for this, let us, above everything, seek the secret of how God works on this earthly plane among humanity. Every moment God works all in all; the mystery, of which, every child of God, is to be the witness — that we are nothing but a vessel, a conduit of lovingkindness, through which the living God can manifest the riches of His wisdom, power, and goodness.

The root of all virtue and grace, of all faith and acceptable worship, is that we know that we have nothing but what we receive from our Creator, and bow in most profound humility to wait upon God for it.

Christ’s life manifested a pure conscience, an existential humility witnessed by the very spirit, demeanour and tone of His whole life. Jesus was just as humble in His intercourse with men as with God. He felt Himself the Servant of God for the women and men whom God made and loved. As a natural consequence, He counted Himself the Servant of men, that through Him God might do His work of love. He never for a moment thought of seeking His honour or asserting His power to vindicate Himself. His whole spirit was that of a life yielded to God to work. 1

It is not until Christians study the humility of Jesus which he taught as the very essence of His redemption, as the very blessedness of the life of the Son of God, as the only true relation to the Father, that we will begin to understand the first and the chief of the marks of the Christ within us.

1 Glen Jackman’s summary edit of Andrew Murray’s thinking. From chapter three of the book Humility: The Beauty of Holiness New York; London; Glasgow: Fleming H. Revell; in the public domain.

You have an anointing of the Holy Spirit

‘But you have an anointing from the Holy One, and you all know’ (1 John 2:20) 

You have received the anointing from the Holy One.

Yahweh is the name of God as revealed to Moses as he was commanded by God to free the Israelites from Egyptian bondage. He also referred to himself as “I am” – “tell them ‘I am’ sent you”(Exodus 6:2 HCSB; 3:14 NLT). Jesus said, “before Abraham was, ‘I am’” (John 8:58). The apostle Paul referred to Jesus as the “rock that followed” or was with the Jews in the wilderness during the miraculous deliverance in the Exodus (1 Corinthians 10:4).  From the Exodus story, it is also evident that Yahweh is the one who gave the anointing though it was symbolically noted as a ritual process. The priests of the old covenant in Moses’ day were anointed when setting them apart for the service in the tabernacle. The oil used then was a metaphor for the anointing of the Holy Spirit, of the Trinitarian God, Yahweh: Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

Jesus told the parable of the ten virgins, five of whom were wise, having their lamps full of oil, ready and burning, waiting for the groom’s late arrival (Matthew 25:1-13). Only five were prepared to meet the bridegroom, the new covenant’s metaphoric term for Jesus Christ, who will return to earth to receive his bride, his church, sealed individually by the Holy Spirit (Ephesians 4:30, 1:13; 2 Corinthians 1:22), symbolic of a mindset born anew of the Spirit, to align entirely sworn allegiant to God. This carries from symbolism of the anointing oil of the ancient tabernacle priesthood to the day of Jesus, to the true antitypical meaning: the anointing of the Holy Spirit given to each brother and sister in Christ.

Holiness does not consist of specific righteous actions, though it may motivate ethical behaviour and good deeds. No, holiness is the unseen, yet the manifest presence of the Holy One resting on His anointed ones. Only gifted from God — issuing directly from Yahweh, the Holy One — is the anointing of the Holy Spirit received. 1 It is evidence of being born again into an abiding fellowship with Christ, resting unified to Christ, abiding in Him: with Yahweh, the Holy One — the Father and the Son and the conjoining Holy Spirit — as the Three-in-One God — now one with each Christian together in God’s family as One. (1 John 2:23-25; John 10:30; John 17:21)

And who receives it? Only the man or woman who has given himself entirely in mind, body and soul to be holy as God is holy. Only he who is wholly consecrated to the service of the Holy One, to the work of the ministering to sinners seeking their God, sharing the Gospel truth, offering reconciliation with God. Holiness is the energy that only lives as holy among those dedicated to Christ via holy living. (Leviticus 11:44-45, 20:26,1 Peter 1:16)

In the time of Moses, the anointing of the Holy One was for the priest, the servant of God Most High. It was given to conjoin in the intensity of a soul entirely committed, given up to God’s glory, God’s kingdom, God’s work, where that holiness becomes an existential reality. The anointing of the Spirit was given from the Father via Christ who breathed the Spirit on the apostles before His ascension to heaven: “he breathed on them and said, “Receive the Holy Spirit” (John 20:22).

Each member of the church is called to holy living, to work to guide others into God’s kingdom, and as such, are a royal priesthood. Christians are the antitypical reality of the anointing preparation of the old covenant priests referred to in the wilderness tabernacle. These men were the symbolic representatives as a type of today’s ministers of reconciliation to the Lord. Today, abiding in Christ we are the new priesthood, each one.

“You have an anointing from the Holy One, and you all know” (1 John 2:20) Yes, Oh Lord we know this truth, our calling and election is certain, we are your royal priests, we are set apart as your holy kingdom, your church, your reconciling connection to your redemptive calling others as your children. You are the Holy One, and we are your very own possession, your children. We are grateful to your Son’s redemptive calling to Himself via the Holy Spirit working among your minsiters; and concomitantly to you Father, as we abide in your anointing of the Holy Spirit, to join our souls supernaturally to you as One.

“You are royal priests, a holy nation, God’s very own possession. As a result, you can show others the goodness of God, for he called you out of the darkness into his wonderful light”. (1 Peter 2:9 NLT)

1 The Greek word for anointing would be rendered in Acts 10:38: ‘Jesus of Nazareth, whom God christed with the Holy Ghost and with power.’ In the Hebrew prophecy of Christ in Psalm 45: ‘God has messiahed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows’. Andrew Murray, Holy in Christ

Understanding Regeneration by the Spirit

“If you are not born again you cannot enter the kingdom of God” Jesus (John 3:3–8).

Regeneration enables being born again

The doctrine of Regeneration is a Calvinistic term used by the reformers inspired by John Calvin, early Puritans, and today among many Baptists, Presbyterians, and Reformed churches. It refers to a secret act of God in which he imparts new spiritual life to us. This is more often known by the biblical term used by Jesus: “being born again” of the Spirit’s motivating influence (John 3:3–8).

Regeneration Is the entire work of God

Though we play an active part in sanctification and perseverance; in the work of regeneration, we have no active role at all. Rather it is in entirety the work of God. John teaches that Christ calls people into His church at a specific time in their life to reconcile with God. He enables them with the power of the Spirit to become children of God (John 1:13). Those who are “born … of God” are not operating by “the will of man” to bring about this kind of birth.

Our passivity in regeneration is indicated in Scripture by referring to the occurrence as being “born” or being “born again” (James 1:18; 1 Peter 1:3; John 3:3–8). We did not choose to be made physically alive, and we did not choose to be born—it is something that happened to us; similarly, “these analogies in Scripture suggest that we are entirely passive in regeneration”. 1

The necessity of regeneration by the Spirit

Jesus noted that the entrance to the kingdom, is opened by the Spirit’s power causing this effective experience (John 3:3, 5); there is an equipping of a new heart and new motive to serve God which circumvents death (Ezek. 18:31). Those who do not receive a new heart will die spiritually.

The Bible never reveals one saved person without being born again. Civility, knowledge, tact, living by the golden rule or being externally religious will not achieve it. Nicodemus who was taught about being born again by Jesus was a teacher in Israel without objection (John 3:3–8). Paul, blameless according to the law, experienced conversion pivoting his viewpoint from the hateful murdering of Christians to preaching Jesus with persuasive power. He wasn’t motivated to preach the gospel until he met the resurrected Jesus on the road to Damascus. (Acts 9:4) He was on the way to arrest and persecute Christians.

No one can have true heartfelt communion with God without regeneration by the Spirit. Initially, before being born again we are at enmity with God (Romans 8:7). God, resides in unapproachable light and holiness (1 Timothy 6:16; 1 John 1:5) while the ungodly cannot be in His presence (Psa. 5:5–7). Therefore, in order for a person to have fellowship with God, he or she must be born again and led by the Spirit (Romans 8:14).

1 Wayne Grudem, Bible Doctrine – The Essential Teachings of the Christian Faith

Biblical Success Priciples 1.1

I succeed abundantly in business.

I confidently trust, lean on, and rely on Yahweh, that I will be supported when I declare His righteousness in His entire kingdom on earth among the nations; because He will not hide His face from me, as He listens to me when I cry out to Him, who alone is my help. (Psalm 22: 4, 5, 9, 22, 28-29; 30)

I joyfully dance in the Lord being established with strength and boundless prosperity. Psalm 30: 6, 7, 11; Psalm 122: 6-7 

I am calm and courageous speaking wisdom from an understanding heart, submitting godly thoughts to musical meditations expressing my inherent redemption as He guarantees to receive me into my inheritance of eternal life.  Psalm 37: 30-31; 40: 3, 9-10; 49: 3-5; 7-8; 15 

The Lord increases my family’s peace, protection, and firm prosperity increasing in proportion as we trustingly take refuge in Him; He makes our right and just behaviour shine like the noon-day sun in all effects of causation. Psalm 37: 4-7; 11, 19; 22-24; 25-26

I am committing my works unto Yahweh and my thoughts and plans are established and succeed. Proverbs 16: 2-3 

I order my thoughts, conduct, conversation, and actions in the will of Yahweh’s Word and his entire revealed will, and manage my decisions to not wander from his commandments; and I, therefore, am rewarded by inheriting all your promises. Psalm 119: 1-3; 5-7 

I am succeeding, increasing my business sales, selling continuously and vigorously in the marketplace, making entire penetration in my field of business expertise, because as a partaker of the divine nature, all my natural springs issue from you and you are able to make all grace abound toward me that I may have abundant provision in all good things. 2 Peter 1:4, Psalm 87:7, 2 Corinthians 9:8

God reveals my moment of timing with regard to my life purpose with all the plans clear before me as with Moses, including what I am to preach regarding His current truth. John 9: 3, 4, 22, 13-34; Jeremiah 29:11

God keeps His secrets and protects my business and life purposes from idea-theft of ungodly men. 1 Sam 21: 12-13

I trust Yahweh to give me Spirit led insights like David when he said “I knew it” regarding anyone who would tell one of my business secrets. 1 Samuel 22: 22; 23: 9-12

I am waiting to see what God is going to do for me in all my business ventures. 1 Samuel 22:3; Genesis 31: 10-16, 50: 18-21

As a sinner, I have an advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous. 1 John 1:9

I am a son of Yahweh attested to and confirmed by Jesus Christ. Psalms 82:6; John 10: 34-36; Romans 13: 1-2

Ask God’s Spirit to Guide: Turn problems into solutions

“When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth, for he will not speak on his own authority, but whatever he hears he will speak, and he will declare to you the things that are to come.” (John 16:13)

You think “problems” are roadblocks to achieving what you want when in reality they are pathways. One of the wisest Roman Caesar’s, Marcus Aurelius 1 — he was also a deeply insightful Stoic philosopher noted: “The impediment to action advances action. What stands in the way becomes the way.”

Facing a “problem” forces you think calmly, discern wisely, pray for guidance, to take action to resolve it. That action will inevitably lead you to continue to think differently, behave differently, and choose differently. The “problem” becomes a catalyst for you to actualize the life you always wanted. It pushes you from your comfort zone, that’s all. Facing a problem takes deliberate deep thinking, deep focus while praying trustfully for God’s direction.

Trust in the LORD with all your heart; do not depend on your own understanding. Seek his will in all you do, and he will show you which path to take. (Proverbs 3:5-6 NLT)

Write your problem down honestly. Get rest, pray and work on seeing the real obstacle, the bottlenecks, the restraints, the corroborating gaps that halt progress, that bind the problem to a fixed stalling point. Then disassemble the causative forces, one by one with all the attendant grace you can apply. Rest, meditate, maintain a sober clear mind, continue to face the problem until it disperses or is arrested to your mind under the Spirit’s control.

My child, listen to me and do as I say, and you will have a long, good life. I will teach you wisdom’s ways and lead you in straight paths. When you walk, you won’t be held back; when you run, you won’t stumble. Take hold of my instructions; don’t let them go. Guard them, for they are the key to life. (Proverbs 4: 10-13 NLT)

Jesus faced great challenges. Yet He said I must achieve my cause in the will of the Father. I must work while it is “Day”. “Night” is coming when no one can work. Problems can mean facing dark forces of temptation, stress-induced substance reliance, fears, political bullies, business worries, family troubles, marital discord, yet we must engage our heart and minds to overcome each problem we have, face them, and surmount them, or sidestep them.

Why bring Jesus into facing our problems? Because He said, “My Spirit will lead you into all truth”. Determining truth is conducive to all reason and good judgment; to all discerning judicial evaluation. Jesus also said very clearly, “without me you can do nothing” and “…the Advocate, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you all things”  (John 14:26 – Jesus teaching)

1 Marcus Aurelius was a man who was so open-minded he could see the power of God when Christian prayed for the rain to stop on his battlefield. He then exacted laws to protect Christians.

How deception finds a narrative in our life story

“How much longer will you waver, hobbling between two opinions? If the Lord is God, follow him!” (1 Kings 18:21)

Over the years, I have been amazed at how people will defend their faith, even if a belief/doctrine is not lining up with scripture.

Where doubt persists, one must be mindfully honest to allow the Holy Spirit sway to open up potential myopic misperceptions to see if any persistent conformity to a group has forged a mind-trap, keeping one stuck in an erroneous loop. With our Lord’s guidance and power, we can be delivered from false opinions, learn from the pain and move out of a false cultic paradigm, if it condones a teaching that has a harmful consequence (moral, intellectual, psychological or physical harm); especially if it hinders knowing Christ as our High Priest in a sanctifying, trusting relationship.

Intellectually, individual ethical freedom can exist only in truth outside of any collective mindset bound to deception. Once truth dawns, act vigorously to escape misconceived views of scriptural truth. Avoid creating a narrative as a defender of an errant faith. If you belong to and support a group with apparent false doctrine, you may find yourself narrativising that meaning into your existence.

We are told very clearly by Jesus that we can ask the Holy Spirit to lead us into all truth. We should never solely rely on a religious stack of doctrine without fully asking the Lord to confirm scriptural dogma.

When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth, for he will not speak on his own authority, but whatever he hears he will speak, and he will declare to you the things that are to come. (John 16:13)

If your life story continues to corrupt with the leaven of injustice due to influencing deception within any religious paradigm, ask five questions:

  1. Is my faith corroborating at a leadership or laity level to cover-up a mistaken history in doctrine (which often leads causatively to a lifestyle failure)?
  2. Is my faith supportive of leadership that holds to and promulgates a false doctrine which could influence harming others, or needs the intervention of civil justice?
  3. Is anything registering as psychological pain in my intellectual life which I had hoped was aiming at honesty and transparency?
  4. Am I procrastinating by not agreeing with a revealed truth?
  5. Can I honestly support the teaching of my church to the extent I would advocate teaching it to my children/grandchildren? (see Deuteronomy 6:7; 11:19)

If when a study compares scripture with scripture, reveals a false doctrine, especially in the context of the Atonement or High Priesthood of Christ, a sound mind will spiritually ascertain a shaking foundation constructed with rotted-out pillars of deception (1 Corinthians 3:12-14).

One must pivot to the primary Truth.

That means for some who have taught others, evangelised an entire set of beliefs in a family or taught or preached in more extensive fields of doctrinal influence inclusive of false doctrine, a radical personal reformation must occur. Pastoral and professorial careers—if resting on a false premise – must address their mistake. Ask: Do I hide or conjoin with the error of the group? Do I rise above my ego built on a collective narrative for many years? For some faiths, a doctrinal error has prevailed for centuries, and such reformation will take a will sanctified unto the Lord’s glory.

When faced, necessarily, with a shifting intellectual paradigm, where psychological, familial, and regulated faith habits are well-established, which could fall apart, then what’s next? Though worrying, it needn’t be terrifying! (Proverbs 3:6 NLT) You can find courage in Christ to think things through and act. For others, I think in terms of our Lord’s patience and grace because each of us as a repentant sinner is in need of mercy and redemption.

Demonstrate Grace, though you reject biblical error.

I understand that most churches have one or two doctrinal discrepancies that seem to be either ambiguous or questionable, perhaps not erroneous. In many such cases, we may not know the absolute truth if it is not clear, or there are two or more views. Insofar as you can hold your view academically speaking, and not be viewed as an insurgent, and can happily enjoy your congregation, praising the Lord with them, and if as a teacher you can teach comparative doctrine therein with other academically-minded brothers and sisters, then you may be able to freely and comfortably worship in this context.

However, to obstinately stand against a revealed truth (regarding clearly presented Christian truth) for any period is not merely spiritual procrastination. It is beyond an inner psychological struggle of loyalty that generally sincere people may exhibit but may not be held responsible before the Lord. There are many that compromise a doctrinal truth, though quietly disagree among the like-minded, for fear of dividing the flock. For leaders, in some cases, there may be fear of losing a pension, or later in life’s journey, ruining many good memories of working with beloved friends in the ministry, while teaching the best lessons of the gospel to the beloved laity. Personal decisions understandably must be made as you rely on the Lord to lead for the higher good.

To the simpler folk, superceding love trumps doctrine equating to personal inter-relating love to one another, with whom one has travelled on their spiritual journey. For example, I have met several people within the Catholic church who are offended by the news of priests cultically molesting children and women as if it was an ordained right. Yet they are deeply narrativised amidst their church congregation. In these cases, I need to understand the parable of the wheat and the tares that Jesus taught realizing there are very innocent people who love the Lord and will remain stuck in a faith they have been traditionally bound to over the years. We are told by Jesus that the righteous in this context will be saved by the angles at his second advent. (Matthew 13:36-43).

I know many people who worship and love Christ our mutual Lord, who do not care to or are unenabled to venture into any in-depth theological comparison backed by the Bible. There may be a lack of personal devotion, or they are not reading the Word of God through year by year, or it is not their calling to discern scriptural absolutes. For these folks, I relax in the grace that our Lord provides for those misled into a scriptural error by the leadership of their congregation, insofar as the fly in the ointment remains a stench. Such a failure to speak to or correct the problem if possible is wrong to a gifted, reasoning mind.

I usually do not get involved in commenting on a specific religion unless it has affected my family directly, or the doctrine is seriously flawed to the extent it borders on societal injustice. As far as the Catholic priests as mentioned above, active congregants agree: priests should be allowed to marry, because marriage is never prohibited by the Word of God, except in random cases such as Jeremiah whom God called to begin to rebuke the evils of Israel and was directly told not to marry. Paul chose to remain unmarried as he shifted many away from the old covenant mindset to the new in Christ.

Many U.S. Catholics say they want to see the church make significant changes. For example, six-in-ten say they think the church should allow priests to marry and allow women to become priests. 1

God knows our thoughts even before we speak. I know a devout and dutiful Catholic woman who we met walking in the park. We chat often, and I sense her sincerity and love for the Lord. I know she is in Christ. I call her sister. She comes to pray in the park and ask the Lord to help her through many problems, including asking for comforting solace for an ailing lonely Catholic priest whom she visits regularly in the hospital. Add to this; she personally helps the shut-ins and poor where she can. I gently asked her about the news of the priests harming innocent children and women, as they took advantage of their assumed power over them. Then the narrative changed to complete disgust, and horror as she was quite aware of the harm done to others (ruined lives, suicides etc.). Yet I did not push my agenda for truth based on scripture alone, because she herself noted that in her mind, priests should be allowed to marry. She further noted that she has spoken up at church and to others, and made enemies, which to me should be a serious discomforting alarm: that you are being viewed as an insurgent, standing against, yes, in this case, a doctrinal causative to a great degree of sexual promiscuity — often a direct precursor to sexual frustration causing physical abuses within the church. Sexual frustration has caused serial and mass murders — killing sprees — it’s that serious!

My view is that where harm is being done where the law of the land should or does firmly act when harm is done to others, we need to hear God’s view on the need for justice. Moreover, we need to use this as a pivoting inner conviction of the Holy Spirit to part ways, to walk away from the continuum of dogma that is to a great degree causing the problem:

No one calls for justice; no one pleads a case with integrity. They rely on empty arguments, they utter lies; they conceive trouble and give birth to evil. (Isaiah 59:4-5 NIV)

When you see and personally acknowledge harmful error.

There is no fix in aligning the conscience with a mix of false prophecy, false priesthoods, or blatant lying, which is to place yourself at enmity with any Spirit-directed, revealed scriptural teaching.

If we presently promulgate known error, within an old failed doctrinal construct, when our will chooses to stay and justify a mistake, then self-deception whether consciously or subconsciously is admittedly our preferred story.

People are creatures of habit, and they do what they enjoy, and then justify and reinforce narratives of disobedience into faith-life accounts. God disciplines such folly in many ways. Procrastinating in error as perseverant self-discipline after the facts are in, is a sin. Opinions energised by the lusts of cultic egotism, hedonism, and paganism which defy the revealed will of God’s truth found in scripture alone, must be deconstructed, lest we hobble with the masses aboard a hell-bound train to judgement (Isaiah 3:9-10; 11).

Decca Records, Cover of Savoy Brown’s Hellbound Train

1 7 facts about American Catholics | Pew Research Center, Sept 4, 2018

Compliment this article with The Holy Spirit reveals the Truth of the Gospel.

The Old and New Covenant Distinctions

Post 2: New Covenant Series first published March 2017

The new covenant (NC) was the term given by Jeremiah to define a new arrangement coming on the horizon of time. This covenant between God and human beings in which the law would be written in their hearts rather than on tablets of stone (Jer 31:31–33) would transform how God would be perceived by mankind.

The term New Covenant relates to the Greek term καινὴ διαθήκη (kainē diathēkē) which can also be translated “new testament.” The early Christians believed that the promise of a new covenant/testament was fulfilled in Christ (see 2 Cor. 3:6; Heb. 8:8, 13; 9:15; 12:24), which gave rise to the designation of their scriptures as the “New Testament.” 1

Jesus himself is represented as speaking of a new covenant in his words at the Last Supper (Luke 22:20; 1 Cor. 11:25) 2 The word “new” is repeated in the parallel accounts of that meal in Matt. 26:26–29; Mark 14:22–25, though the word “covenant” is missing. The letter to the Hebrews expresses the NC (Hebrews 8:8; 9:15) as does the apostle Paul (1 Corinthians 11:25; 2 Corinthians 3:6)

A “covenant” is an arrangement between two parties involving mutual obligations. In ancient times, nations would enter into covenants – agreements – with each other—a stronger nation would promise to protect the weaker nation, while the weaker promised some service to the stronger.

In the Bible, the covenant, which is diathēkē in Greek, is the arrangement that establishes the relationship between God and His people. The “old covenant” stipulated a relationship with God based on keeping God’s law. This covenant failed because the people failed to keep God’s law, outlined in the moral ten commandments and hundreds of other laws given by Moses.

In contrast to written laws, the new covenant is based on what God has promised to do in the hearts of believers. This is expressed clearly in the book of Jeremiah:

“Behold, days are coming,” declares the Lord, “when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah, not like the covenant which I made with their fathers in the day I took them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt, My covenant which they broke, although I was a husband to them,” declares the Lord. “But this is the covenant which I will make with the house of Israel after those days,” declares the Lord, “I will put My law within them, and on their heart I will write it; and I will be their God, and they shall be My people.” (Jer. 31:31–33)

The quotation of Jeremiah 31:31–34 in Hebrews 8:8–12 is the longest Old Testament quotation found in the New Testament. This quotation explained that the new covenant would one day supersede the old covenant–   “not like the covenant which I made with their fathers” and it was prophesied to occur in the future: “after those days”.

The theme of the new covenant dominates the book of Hebrews, which was written to encourage faltering Christians by demonstrating the superiority of the Christian faith over older Jewish beliefs and practices closely bound to the law prescribed by Moses.

The writer compares the new covenant to a person’s “will” throughout the book of Hebrews, tying the two different meanings of the word diathēkē—“covenant” and “will”—together. Just as the stipulations of a will go into effect when a person dies, so Christ died to initiate the new covenant—the covenant that frees us from bondage to the law of God, or the “old covenant.”

Jesus saw the Lord’s Supper as instituting an entirely different, and therefore, a new covenant. The covenant was sealed by His sacrificial death, and the cup of the Lord’s Supper symbolises the blood of Christ’s sacrifice. In Luke 22:20 we see Jesus during His last supper with the disciples: “And in the same way He took the cup after they had eaten, saying, ‘This cup which is poured out for you is the new covenant in My blood’”. The apostle Paul wrote in 1 Cor 11:25: “In the same way He took the cup also after supper, saying, ‘This cup is the new covenant in My blood; do this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of Me’” 3

Every time we gather to celebrate the Lord’s Supper, we are celebrating the new covenant—the wonderful truth that Christ died to save us from our sins and give us new life. 4 The new covenant involves forgiveness of sin, spiritual transformation, and the fulfilment of God’s promises to Israel.

The Promises to Israel

Forgiveness of sins In the Old Testament, the prophetic books of Jeremiah and Ezekiel indicate that the new covenant involves ultimate forgiveness and cleansing (Jer 31:34; Ezek 36:25), and they express this in a number of ways. Jeremiah emphasises the fulfilment of God’s guarantees to Abraham (Jer 31:31–37), while Ezekiel focuses on the fulfilment of God’s relationship with His people (Ezek 36:28).

In Jeremiah, the new covenant is differentiated from the Mosaic covenant (Jer 31:32) and characterised by internal transformation (Jer 31:33–34). 

Transformative relationship promised Ezekiel affirms several additional characteristics about God’s initiative to transform and heal Israel, and eventually, mankind’s relationship to Himself via a divine intervention. He would put His Spirit within the mind of mankind, cleanse and renew their view of God through opening their spiritual viewpoint/eyes to enable perception of Him. His Holy Spirit will actually “cause you to walk” in obedience to Him. (Ezek 36:22–36). 

Old Testament Presentation

Covenants in the Old Testament are of two types. What came to be known as the new covenant is a synthesis of both types: 1. Promise or grant covenants, in which God makes a series of guarantees (i.e., Abrahamic and Davidic); and 2. Administrative or treaty covenants, which govern human response and obedience (i.e., Mosaic). 5

The Abrahamic covenant guarantees promises for Abraham’s offspring to become a great nation, live in the promised land, and bring about blessing for all families of the earth (see Gen 12:1–3; 15:1–21). 

Several passages related to the Mosaic and Davidic covenants appear to anticipate the need for what will become known as the new covenant – and will finally fulfil the promises made to Abraham. 

The Mosaic covenant mediated the fulfilment of those blessings regarding Israel’s obedience and disobedience with many written laws for Israel to follow and obey. Moses also hoped that Israel would be influenced by the Holy Spirit (Num 11:29). In Deuteronomy 30:1–10 Moses describes Israel’s future exile, stating that God must circumcise – meaning renew the spiritually hardened hearts of Israel in its restoration (Deut 30:6). 

The Davidic covenant stipulated that the lineage of King David would provide a king to accomplish Israel’s purpose to bless the world. David’s son Solomon proclaims that God will forgive the people’s sin when they are in exile and vindicate them (1 Kings 8:46–50). 

The Prophets foretell the coming new covenant

The prophetic books of Isaiah and Joel further elaborate on these ideas. Joel envisions that, in the latter days, God will pour out the Holy Spirit upon Israel (Joel 2:28–29). This will result in Israel’s salvation on the Day of Yahweh (Joel 2:30–32). 

When discussing God’s ability to save, Isaiah also promises an outpouring of the Holy Spirit, which provides great spiritual renewal (Isa 44:3). This takes place in an eschatological age brought about by the saving work of the Servant (Isa 59:21 ) Through this renewal; the Abrahamic promises would be fulfilled (Joel 3:1–21; Isa 54:1–55:13).

In Jeremiah, the concept of Israel’s spiritual renewal is described as a futurist “new covenant” (Jer 31:31), in contradistinction to the Mosaic covenant (Jer 31:32). 

The new covenant secures God’s promises and blessings for Israel because it transforms the people’s hearts (Jer 31:33–34). The transforming work of the Spirit produces a nation that knows Yahweh (Jer 31:34; 33:3). This leads to the fulfilment of the Abrahamic promises for Israel, which will be a nation sanctified to Yahweh as He intended (Jer 33:3–26). 

Ezekiel presents the Spirit’s new covenant work in terms of new life (Ezek 36:22–28; 11:19–21), promising that God will “remove the heart of stone” from the Israelites and “give them a heart of flesh” (Ezek 11:19; 36:26). 

The Spirit’s work provides a new inner being, one that is truly living. In Ezekiel 36, the description of the “new” (חָדָשׁ, chadash) covenant, does not merely stem from its distinction from the old covenant. It also reflects its connection with God’s new creation in the hearts of mankind which is achieved via the Holy Spirit indwelling those faithful to Jesus Christ, His divine Son in the final expansion of Abraham’s kingdom which is also the kingdom of Yahweh (our Father God).

New Testament Presentation

The nature of the new covenant’s fulfilment in the New Testament era is a topic of debate. There are three main arguments: 

 1. The new covenant is fully fulfilled in the current era. According to this view, several observations demand that the new covenant must be active: Jesus inaugurated the new covenant by His death (Luke 22:20); Paul states he is the minister of the new covenant (2 Cor 3:6); and the author of Hebrews applies the term to current believers (Heb 8:13; 9:15). I will seek to prove that this is the accurate argument. 

 2. The new covenant is not yet fulfilled. The New Testament does not mention Israel’s experience of all the Abrahamic promises; consequently, none of the new covenant has been fulfilled. Within this view, some contend that two new covenants exist—one for the church, and one for Israel. 6 This view as well as the third view, sustains the Dispensationalism view that Israel will yet be saved and be grafted into the church of Jesus Christ. We will see as the study develops, why this is not scriptural as we look at the entire contour of the covenant transitions.

 3. The new covenant is preliminarily or partially fulfilled. The present spiritual realities and unfulfilled promises to Israel are in tension. Although parts of the new covenant have been inaugurated in Christ, certain elements are awaiting Israel’s restoration (see, e.g., Rom 11:11–31). In the current era, the spiritual aspects of the new covenant operate in a preliminary fashion, awaiting their full and final completion in the future. 7

In the New Testament, Jesus is presented as the promised Messiah who inaugurates the new covenant by His sacrificial death (Luke 22:20; 1 Cor 11:25). Moreover, Jesus indicates that His death and resurrection leads to the ministry of the Holy Spirit (John 14:26; 16:7–14; Acts 1:6–8), which was envisioned by the prophets as a feature of the new covenant. The Spirit’s work brings transformation along the lines of new creation and new birth (John 3:5–6).

Related articles:

Jesus Reformed the Old Covenant

Christ: High Priest of a New Covenant

Chou, A. (2016). New Covenant. In J. D. Barry, D. Bomar, D. R. Brown, R. Klippenstein, D. Mangum, C. Sinclair Wolcott, W. Widder (Eds.), The Lexham Bible Dictionary. Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press.

Powell, M. A. (Ed.). (2011). new covenant. In The HarperCollins Bible Dictionary (Revised and Updated) (Third Edition, p. 698). New York: HarperCollins.

NASB quoted, recognised as the most literal translation.

Carpenter, E. E., & Comfort, P. W. (2000). In Holman Treasury of Key Bible words: 200 Greek and 200 Hebrew words defined and explained (p. 340). Nashville, TN: Broadman & Holman Publishers.

(McComiskey, Covenants, 14–20; see Grisanti, “Davidic Covenant,” 236)

Chafer, Systematic Theology, 190

7 Thorsell, “Spirit,” 41–43

Unpacking the 2300-Day Prophecy

Theological Thesis of Daniel 8

As we look at the period of 2300 days, it is worth noting that this period is referenced with regard to the scriptural use of numeric periods in time such as 3, 7, 10, 12, 14, 23, 50, 70, 1,000, and in this case 2300 as a multiple of 23. God uses significant numbers in relation to the significance of time:

The figure twenty-three occurs in 1 Enoch 90:5 NRSV: “And I saw until that twenty-three had undertaken the pasturing”. Of the seventy shepherds who have oversight of the Jews during the Gentile domination, twenty-three have this responsibility for the early Hellenistic period. By implication, another group of twenty-three are responsible during the Persian period (Porter, Metaphors, 44).  1

Jeremiah noted that he had preached a strong warning to Israel and Judah and other nations, for 23 long years, though few listened, which would end in the exile to Babylon. Twenty-three seems to be a numeric referenced in relation to God’s disciplinary time-frames, in combination with his overseeing mercy mixed with judgement. We see this here as a time when God is posed to discipline his people yet works to warn and advise his people of the coming troubles with a duration of preached prophetic warnings about coming discipline:

“For twenty-three years, from the thirteenth year of Josiah the son of Amon, king of Judah, to this day, the word of the LORD has come to me, and I have spoken persistently to you, but you have not listened.” (Jeremiah 25:3)

The first sixty-nine of the seventy weeks of years from the exile to the reign of Antiochus IV Epiphanes (Dan 9:24–27) might also be seen as three times twenty-three.

The 2,300 days may, then, suggest a fixed “significant” chronological period in the region of six or seven years with regard to a particular struggle God’s people were enduring under disciplines imposed by their Roman enemies in Judah. 2

Interpretive caution regarding conjoining chapters Daniel 8 and 9

While we will be looking only at a prophecy of Daniel found in Daniel chapter 8, a little caution is due. Some commentators conjoin the 70 weeks of Daniel 9 which clearly refers to the period ending with the first advent of Christ, with the shorter 2300-day (evenings and mornings) prophecy which we mention here because they are both in Daniel.

The 70 weeks is another study with a completely different revelation regarding a much further period of time — the period stretching to the first advent of Christ, his crucifixion and resurrection:

“Seventy weeks have been decreed for your people and your holy city, to finish the transgression, to make an end of sin, to make atonement for iniquity, to bring in everlasting righteousness, to seal up vision and prophecy and to anoint the Most Holy place”. (Daniel 9: 24) 

The 2300-Day prophecy articulates: 2300 Mornings and Evenings 

Good commentators refer to the 2300 mornings and evenings prophecy as the “2300-day prophecy” while a very few interpreters increase the timeline to mean 2300 years, one day for a year. We will soon see why this does not apply to the 2300-day prophecy.

The sanctuary context in the paradigm of the morning and evening sacrifices – present real actions relative to a real sanctuary of the Jewish people which occurred on actual days, twice daily, morning and evening.  3

The first half of chapter 8 concludes with a discussion between two celestial creatures about “how long” will the sanctuary and its ritual be disrupted? While the one celestial being directs his question to the other, it is notable that the answer is addressed not to the celestial being, but rather to Daniel (Daniel 8:14): “It will take 2,300 evenings and mornings; then the sanctuary will be re-consecrated.” The phrase “How long” echoes a frequent lament in the Psalms regarding troubling events occurring among the people of God, especially during the Babylonian Captivity. (cf. Psalms 6:3; 13:1–2; 35:17).

Dr Longman notes:

The interpretation of this chronological statement by the angel regarding 2300 evenings and mornings has encountered much disagreement about the interpretation of the symbolism of the chapter. Literally, the phrase translates “evening, morning—two thousand, three hundred.” Does this mean 2300 days, reflecting the language of Genesis 1 “there was evening, and there was morning”—defining the creation days? 4

This seems to make the most sense in the context of the prophecy which presents a horrifying picture of the sanctuary and its holy place as being desecrated: “How long will the vision about the regular sacrifice apply, while the transgression causes horror, so as to allow both the holy place and the host to be trampled?” He said to me, “For 2,300 evenings and mornings; then the holy place will be properly restored.” (Daniel 8:13-14 NASB)

Others think it may mean 1150 days, with the reference to evening and morning being to the daily sacrifices? In other words, were there 1150 morning sacrifices and 1150 evening sacrifices, totalling 2300 sacrifices but 1150 days? I would argue this refers to entire days in reference to the 2300 number when you think like this: each of the 2300 days having both a morning and evening sacrifice.

The Hebrew scholar Dr E. Goldingay asserts:

Why should 2,300 evenings and mornings be taken to denote 1,150 days? An evening and morning make one day (Gen 1:5–31; the order of evening and morning there explains that here). The morning and evening whole offering were seen as one unit rather than as two independent ones which could then naturally be counted separately, noting especially Ezra 3:3–5. The natural way to understand the phrase is as denoting 2,300 days. 5

Gabriel interprets the animal symbolism given earlier in the chapter in a precise manner. Unlike chapter 7, where the animals are said to be “four kingdoms,” here they are identified with particular and well-known political entities. The ram with the two horns represents the “kings of Media and Persia” (Daniel 8:20). In the vision itself, one horn grew larger than the other —  a reference to the Persian part of this empire soon swallowed up the superior Median part which assumed dominance.

Further, the goat with the single horn that speedily devastated the ram is “Greece,” the single horn being its first king—Alexander the Great. Alexander speedily achieved domination from Italy to India. Then he died suddenly at age 33 in 323 B.C., leaving behind two young sons, Alexander and Herakles, both boys being murdered. Then as history goes, the world was divvied up between Alexander’s powerful generals, the Diadochi – the “four prominent horns” (Daniel 8:8, 22). The focus goes immediately to one particular horn. Scholars almost universally agree that the horn that grew out of one of the four is the second century B.C. Seleucid ruler, Antiochus IV Epiphanes – this terrifying king is clearly depicted in the intertestamental writings like the Maccabees.

Longman defines the reign of Antiochus IV Epiphanes:

He was a “master of intrigue” (Daniel 8:23). He managed to push his nephew out of the way and gain the throne. He grew large through military success, pushing his influence into Egypt as well as east into Persian, Parthia, and Armenia, not to speak of his domination of Palestine. Antiochus IV, however, established himself as a “completely wicked” and “stern-faced king” (Daniel 8:23) through his incredible intrusion and disruption of the Jewish ritual. Jewish religion and practice stood in the way of his policy of Hellenization, and among other atrocities, he ordered the cessation of temple sacrifice in 167 B.C. and profaned the temple by introducing a holy object sacred to the god Zeus, to which he sacrificed a pig, abhorrent to the Jewish religion. This holy object has been suggested to be a meteorite that became a cult object that the Jews referred to as “an abomination that causes desolation” (Daniel 9:27). 6

J. Edlin conveys the same logic regarding the suppression of Antiochus IV. He believes that “In the midst of these circumstances, the book of Daniel could infuse courage into Jewish resistance. Daniel’s refusal to compromise his religious convictions, his survey of the coming and going of nations, and his predictions of God’s final victory would provide needed perspective and encouragement for the Maccabean rebels”. He notes also:

In 167 B.C., Antiochus IV suppressed the practices of Judaism, pillaged the Jerusalem temple and rededicated it to Zeus, and martyred those who did not comply with his commands. According to 2 Macc 6:5–6 NRSV: “The altar was covered with abominable offerings that were forbidden by the laws. People could neither keep the Sabbath, nor observe the festivals of their ancestors, nor so much as confess themselves to be Jews.” Such events provoked a full-scale revolt, a daring guerrilla war led by Judas Maccabeus and his family of Hasmonean descendants. The odds in favour of the Seleucids were overwhelming. 7

J.E. Goldengay, a renowned Daniel scholar is in agreement that indeed we must view the culprit in Daniel 8 as none other than Antiochus and his timing in history:

Presumably, the holy ones are discussing the vision’s meaning. The seer only catches the end of their conversation; cf. the allusive nature of the vision/audition in Zech 1:7–17. While they may be assumed to be members of the heavenly/earthly army who are themselves discomfited by Antiochus’s actions, perhaps their “how long” (Daniel 12:6) stems simply from their concern for afflicted Jews, as in Zech 1:7–17 (which underlies Dan 8). 8

Goldengay, asserts that the “how long” connects with that vision, and the pleas expressed in the lament psalms concerning the devastation of the land and the defiling of the sanctuary (Ps 74:9–10; 79:5; 80:5; 89:47; 6:4; 13:2; 90:13; 94:3; also Isa 6:11; Jer 12:4; 2 Esd 6:59 NRSV). The cry of the holy ones takes up the cry of afflicted Israel.

The revered historian, Josephus advised that Daniel 8 refers to the defilement of the sanctuary by Antiochus IV again confirming the culprit in Daniel 8 — again stating his reputation as a historian as Antiochus and his timing in history:

This is the title 2 Macc 6:2 NRSV gives the god to whom Antiochus dedicated the Jerusalem temple. According to 1 Macc 1:54 NRSV, the abomination was erected on the altar of sacrifice, and this has usually suggested it was an image of Zeus (and of Antiochus, according to Porphyry). 1 Macc 1:59 NRSV, however, speaks of there being a (pagan) altar erected on the altar of sacrifice (cf. Josephus, Ant. 12.5.4 [12.253]). This implies rather that the setting up of the abomination consists in the rebuilding of the altar for it to serve a different cult (as in Judges 6:25–26). 9   

Antiochus IV’s historic period only reckons with the 2300 literal days, not the 2300 years interpretation, thus destroying the period’s ending of 1844 – and its concomitant idea of Christ waiting in an anteroom until then to go into the presence of His father – quite a preposterous misuse of scripture.

 The idea of the end-time in Daniel explained

The use of the term “End”, when set in its context tells us whether the “End” refers to the end of a particular period of time or to the future final eschatological “end of time” of the last days. The notion of a period characterized by wrath is one of the aspects of Daniel 8 that reflects Zechariah 1:12, where the exile is a period of wrath. The context here indicates that reference to wrath does not denote that God is over-extending his time of punishing Israel for their sin: although their sin was the original cause of the exile. The ongoing period of wrath is one in which they are continuing to be treated harshly rather than compassionately because of the hostility of their enemies rather than because of their own sin.

In a parallel way 1 Macc 1:64 NRSV speaks of Antiochus’s persecution as the coming of very great wrath on Israel (cf. 2 Kgs 3:27). There, too, Israel’s transgressions contributed to what happened (1 Macc 1:11–15 NRSV; 1 Macc 1: 43 NRSV; 1 Macc 1:52–53 NRSV) but 1 Maccabees hardly implies that Antiochus’s persecution is simply God’s punishment of Israel’s sin. Neither in Dan 8 is it likely that the seer views Israel’s experience as God’s punishment for their sin. Dan 11:30 may even mean that it is not God’s wrath that is (solely) in mind). 10

Both the seventy years of exile, which Daniel 9 sees as extending to the Antiochene period, and the Antiochene period, in particular, are periods of wrath in the sense of oppression and suffering. The time of wrath referred to in Daniel 8:19 might be either of these, but the link with Zechariah 1 and the fact that the vision begins with the Persian era suggest that the whole period from the exile to Antiochus is the period of wrath denoted here, though extended unmercifully by an evil perpetrator Antiochus IV’s abuses beyond Yahweh’s punishment of exile.

Both the seventy years of exile, which Dan 9 sees as extending to the Antiochene period, and the Antiochene period, in particular, are however periods of wrath in the sense of oppression and suffering. Compare Zech 1:14-17 especially: “Cry out, Thus says the Lord of hosts: I am exceedingly jealous for Jerusalem and for Zion. And I am exceedingly angry with the nations that are at ease; for while I was angry but a little, they furthered the disaster. 11

The time of wrath referred to in Daniel 8:19 may well explain the havoc Antiochus was unmercifully overextending on the Jews exilic judgements. It is noteworthy that in Zechariah ch. 1 the vision begins with the Persian era suggesting that the whole period from the exile to Antiochus is the period of extended wrath denoted here.

Evidently “the time of the end” is the period leading up to the End of – setting it in context — the period in which the audience of these visions themselves live. This also fits Daniel 8:17–19: the phrase denotes the final act of that historical drama which will come to its actual end with Antiochus’s fall and the sanctuary’s restoration. Daniel is not thinking of the absolute eschatological final and absolute End for all events when human history comes to a close. 12

In fact, further human history on earth is presupposed by talk of the restoration of the sanctuary, as it was by talk of a new kingdom in Daniel 2:44; 7:14, 18, 27.

Summary view of Daniel 8

In Daniel 8:8 the goat became exceedingly great. Alexander the Great’s kingdom extended all the way to India, exceeding any kingdom before it in size (approx. 1.5 million square miles/3,885,000 square km). There came up four conspicuous horns. After the death of Alexander the Great in 323 B.C., his two sons initially took over the empire, but ultimately, after serious internal struggles, four of his generals divided his kingdom into four parts (cf. v. 22 and 7:6). Further in Daniel 8:8 the goat became exceedingly great. Alexander the Great’s kingdom extended all the way to India, exceeding any kingdom before it in size (approx. 1.5 million square miles/3,885,000 square km).

There came up four conspicuous horns. After the death of Alexander the Great in 323 B.C., his two sons initially took over the empire, but ultimately, after serious internal struggles, four of his generals divided his kingdom into four parts (cf. v. 22 and 7:6). In Daniel 8:9–10 a little horn grows out of one of the four horns and expands his realm. Scholars are almost unanimous in recognizing this little horn as the eighth ruler of the Seleucid dynasty, Antiochus IV Epiphanes (ruled 175–164 B.C.; see notes on vv. 23 and 25). The glorious land most likely refers to Palestine as God’s primary centre of operations and the location of his people. The little horn, Antiochus Epiphanes, persecuted the faithful Jews and profaned the temple (168 B.C.; see 8:23). He prefigures the man of lawlessness, the final Antichrist, the great opponent of God’s people (2 Thess. 2:3–4, 7–12; Rev. 12:4).

In Daniel 8:12–14 we see that because of renewed transgression on the part of God’s people, the saints and the temple sacrifices were handed over into the hands of Antiochus IV, but only for a limited period: 2,300 evenings and mornings, or a little over six years (perhaps signifying the period from 170 B.C., the death of Onias III, the high priest, to December 14, 164, when Judas Maccabeus cleansed and rededicated the temple; cf. 1 Macc. 4:52 NRSV).

In the end, the little horn would be judged and the sanctuary restored to its rightful state. Unlike the less precise “time, times, and half a time” of Dan. 7:25, this period is measured in days, suggesting that God has a precise calendar for the times of his people’s suffering, even though it is utterly inscrutable to human wisdom. 13

Compliment your study of The 2300-Day Prophecy with a biblical new testament study: Christ: High Priest of a New Covenant.

1 Goldingay, J. E. (1998). Daniel (Vol. 30, p. 213). Dallas: Word, Incorporated.

2 Ibid

3 Year for a day

4 Longman, T., III. (1999). Daniel (pp. 204–205). Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House.

5 Goldingay, J. E. (1998). Daniel (Vol. 30, p. 213). Dallas: Word, Incorporated.

6 Longman, T., III. (1999). Daniel (pp. 206–207). Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House.

7 Edlin, J. (2009). Daniel: A Commentary in the Wesleyan Tradition (pp. 30–31). Kansas City, MO: Beacon Hill Press of Kansas City.

8 Goldingay, J. E. (1998). Daniel (Vol. 30, pp. 211–212). Dallas: Word, Incorporated.

9 Josephus’s quotation from the Phoenician historian Dius in C.Ap. 1.17 [C.Ap. 113].

10 Goldingay, J. E. (1998). Daniel (Vol. 30, p. 215). Dallas: Word, Incorporated.

11 Ibid

12 Crossway Bibles. (2008). The ESV Study Bible (p. 1603). Wheaton, IL: Crossway Bibles.

13  Ibid