Dreams and Destiny (2 of 10)
Series: Daniel - The Man, The Myth and The Message
Bead Whitt
Daniel 2
We're in Daniel, chapter two tonight. Thank you for being here. What a great crowd on a Sunday night. We're in Daniel, chapter two. If you were not here last week, we had a great attendance last Sunday night, especially for Super Bowl Sunday night. We began a series of studies here in this tremendous Old Testament book and we're picking back up in it tonight.
Daniel chapter two. We've entitled this simple series of studies, Daniel the Man, the Myth and the Message. Tonight let me give you a little bit of an overview if you were not here last week and then we can jump into Daniel, chapter two. The very first question you might ask is alright, who wrote the book of Daniel? Well, it may come as a real shock to you, but Daniel wrote the book of Daniel. It's named after its writer, and Daniel's book is a product and a record of his time in Babylonian captivity. Daniel was taken into exile as a young man somewhere after 605 BC. Daniel and his three friends underwent Babylonian brainwashing, if you will. Remember the re-education process we talked about last week? They got a new home, they got a new diet, they got a new education and they got new names, and so Daniel got a new name. It is interesting, Daniel's name was transferred to Belteshazzar, but we still know Daniel by Daniel. The other three guys we know by their Babylonian names, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego.
Daniel lived in Babylon throughout the 70 years of Babylonian captivity. He rose to become one of only three administrators over all of the provincial governors. His faithfulness to God in a foreign, hostile, pagan land makes him stand out as an absolute stellar example of moral purity and fidelity like Joseph. I mentioned this last week. Like Joseph, there's nothing said negative about Daniel's character, his purity, his integrity, or anything like that. So Daniel wrote the book of Daniel.
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Series: Daniel - The Man, The Myth and The Message
Bead Whitt
Daniel 2
We're in Daniel, chapter two tonight. Thank you for being here. What a great crowd on a Sunday night. We're in Daniel, chapter two. If you were not here last week, we had a great attendance last Sunday night, especially for Super Bowl Sunday night. We began a series of studies here in this tremendous Old Testament book and we're picking back up in it tonight.
Daniel chapter two. We've entitled this simple series of studies, Daniel the Man, the Myth and the Message. Tonight let me give you a little bit of an overview if you were not here last week and then we can jump into Daniel, chapter two. The very first question you might ask is alright, who wrote the book of Daniel? Well, it may come as a real shock to you, but Daniel wrote the book of Daniel. It's named after its writer, and Daniel's book is a product and a record of his time in Babylonian captivity. Daniel was taken into exile as a young man somewhere after 605 BC. Daniel and his three friends underwent Babylonian brainwashing, if you will. Remember the re-education process we talked about last week? They got a new home, they got a new diet, they got a new education and they got new names, and so Daniel got a new name. It is interesting, Daniel's name was transferred to Belteshazzar, but we still know Daniel by Daniel. The other three guys we know by their Babylonian names, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego.
Daniel lived in Babylon throughout the 70 years of Babylonian captivity. He rose to become one of only three administrators over all of the provincial governors. His faithfulness to God in a foreign, hostile, pagan land makes him stand out as an absolute stellar example of moral purity and fidelity like Joseph. I mentioned this last week. Like Joseph, there's nothing said negative about Daniel's character, his purity, his integrity, or anything like that. So Daniel wrote the book of Daniel.
...
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