Tuesday, December 11, 2012

17. DANIEL'S SEVENTY WEEKS

17. DANIEL'S SEVENTY WEEKS


            Daniel shut up the words and sealed the book, “until the time of the end,” (12:4, 9). That “time of the end” as seen by Daniel was fulfilled when Jerusalem was destroyed and the Jews dispersed in 70 AD. Thus we find that in the Book of Revelation, chapter 5, there is a scroll, (or book), “sealed with seven seals,” the “weeks” or “sevens” of Daniel.[1] I submit that this is that same book which Daniel sealed “until the time of the end.” The “end of the age” had come upon the earthly city of Jerusalem and the earthly sanctuary, when John was given the vision. This destruction is described by John under the symbol of the Great Whore, Babylon the Great, after which the true Holy City appears, coming down from God out of heaven, the New Jerusalem.
            Some dispensationalists and pre-millennialists say that Daniel 9:24-27 “doesn’t tell us that the seventy weeks were fulfilled, because when the Jews refused their Messiah, God stopped the clock, breached his promise,” (as in Numbers 14:34).[2] 
            To accuse God of “breach of promise” is to accuse Him of lying! This idea is totally foreign to the concept of the covenant-keeping God of the Bible. Numbers 23:19 says:
God [is] not a man, that he should lie; neither the son of man, that he should repent: hath he said, and shall he not do [it]? Or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good?
Indeed, the passage in Numbers 14:33-34 shows clearly that when God says “forty years” He means just that, for in Numbers 26:63-65 it is recorded that this promise was literally fulfilled. He is a God of faithfulness, (Deut. 32:4). He does not change, (Mal. 3:6; James 1:17). He keeps His covenant to “all generations,” (Psalm 33:11; 45:17; 100:5; 119:90, and many other references). Psalm 105:8:
He hath remembered his covenant for ever, the word [which] he commanded to a thousand generations.
            The word translated “breach of promise” is Hebrew tenuw’ah, from nuw’, meaning “my opposition,” or, as translated in Job 33:10, “occasion for hostility,” (BDB ). The Lord was saying that they should bear their iniquity for forty years that they might know His “opposition” to their rebellion, the “occasion for His hostility,” not that He failed to keep His word!
            He had promised to bring them out of Egypt in 400 years, (Gen. 15:13), but had not promised to bring them in to Canaan in 400 years. He had indeed brought them out of Egypt after 400 years of oppression as recorded in Exodus 12:40-41. (The full time of their sojourn in Egypt was 430 years, but the time of their oppression was 400 years of that period. The first thirty years was no doubt the time that the Pharaoh friendly to Joseph reigned. See also Acts 7:6.)
            Another incident in which the Lord specified a certain number of years is found in Jeremiah 25:11-12; 29:10. We know that this prophecy was fulfilled as recorded in Daniel 9:2. Daniel knew when the time had come for the Babylonian captivity to end because he had read in the Book of Jeremiah that it was to be seventy years. He did not think that God would call a “time out“ for an indefinite period before they were brought out of this captivity.
            It must therefore be understood that when the Lord gave Daniel the prophecy of the “end” which would come in 490 years plus a time, times and half a time, those who believed in God and knew the covenant were expecting both the Messiah and the “end” as foretold by Daniel’s prophecy. Simeon and Anna knew it was time for the Messiah, (Luke 2:25-34). The Samaritans knew that it was time for the Messiah, (John 4:25, 29-30). Andrew knew it was time for the Messiah, (John 1:40-41), and Philip also knew, (John 1:45). Indeed, Christ Himself plainly taught that the “end” foreseen by Daniel was to come within the life span of the generation to whom He was speaking, (Matt. 24:34; Mark 13:30; Luke 21:32). The early Church expected this “end,” (for example: Heb. 9:26; 1 Pet. 4:7; 1 Cor. 7:29).
            The passage in Daniel chapter 9 is about an “end,” (vv. 24, “end of sin,” v. 26, “end of sanctuary,” v. 27, “the decreed end is poured out”). Daniel chapters 10 and 11 are about events leading up to this “end,” and refer to the history between Daniels time and the time of John the Revelator.[3]
Daniel 12:7d: And when the shattering of the power of the holy people comes to an end all these things would be accomplished, (RSV).
            This passage in Daniel is referred to in Revelation 10:5-7. Indeed, the Angel appears to be the same in both passages:
5  And the angel which I saw stand upon the sea and upon the earth lifted up his hand to heaven, 6  And sware by him that liveth for ever and ever, who created heaven, and the things that therein are, and the earth, and the things that therein are, and the sea, and the things which are therein, that there should be time no longer: 7  But in the days of the voice of the seventh angel, when he shall begin to sound, the mystery of God should be finished, as he hath declared to his servants the prophets.
            The phrase in 10:6: “…that there should be time no longer,” literally means: ‘“The time is up” or “There shall be no more delay.” This refers to the “time” spoken of by Daniel; the “time was up.”
            All of these things” came to pass when Jerusalem was destroyed along with the Temple in 70 AD: There was an “end of sin” and transgression for fleshly Israel, because from this point on there was no other Israel than Christ, the only living legitimate heir.[4] Christ’s death “atoned for iniquity and brought in everlasting righteousness”; in Christ’s Body, “a most holy (place) was anointed,” the Church; there was an “end of the sanctuary,” because the physical Temple was destroyed.
            The “end” which Daniel foresaw was also “to seal up the vision and prophecy.” In this passage the words “seal up” is the Hebrew chatham, defined as:  “…to seal, affix one’s seal, in attestation… as for example in Nehemiah 10:1-27, where the men attested to or ratified the covenant by setting their seal to it,” (BDB “seal”). In other words, Daniel’s prophecy would be proven by its fulfillment. This sense of attesting or ratifying is also used in the New Testament in John 3:33; 1 Corinthians. 9:2; 2 Timothy 2:19. It indicates the stamp of authenticity.
            The vision and prophecy” were attested to, or proven, by the coming of Christ, His finished work of redemption, the preaching of the Gospel at that time to the whole Jewish world as well as to some of the Gentiles, the formation of the New Israel of God in Christ’s Body the Church, the subsequent destruction of the fleshly nation and the earthly city of Jerusalem. God’s prophets had foretold all of these things. Now they were attested to, and ratified by the fulfillment of that which had been foretold. Therefore, Daniel’s “appointed times” were fulfilled, “accomplished” – both the blessedness of the righteous who believed and the tribulation of those who refused to believe.
            Jesus Himself, in answer to the question concerning the “end of the age,” (Matt. 24:1-28), interpreted Daniel’s prophecy as coming to pass when Jerusalem and the Temple would be destroyed. Therefore, God’s “unfinished business with Israel” spoken of by Daniel became “finished business” in 70 AD as described in the Book of Revelation.
            Dispensationalists and pre-millennialists say that Joel 2:1-2 and Zephaniah 1:17-18 have never yet been fulfilled but speak of the yet future time of great tribulation.[5] Joel 2:28-32a, (which is to occur after the events of the preceding verses), are quoted in Acts 2:16-21 as having been fulfilled on the Day of Pentecost. Since Acts 2:16-21 interprets Joel 2:28-32 as having been fulfilled, there should be no further question as to the fact of its fulfillment. The blessings are to “the remnant whom the Lord shall call”; i.e., the Church, (Joel 2:32. See also Rom. 10:13). The great tribulation for the unbelievers, the wicked, which came to pass in the destruction of the Jewish nation, was an example to the whole world. All of these things were written for our learning, (Rom. 15:4).
            The immediate reference of Zephaniah 1:17-18 is to the destruction by Nebuchadnezzar which followed soon after the original prophecy was given, as described by the Book of Lamentations 2:21; 4:13-14. As a general reference, it can be applied to the later destruction under Titus, as described by Josephus in his Wars of the Jews, as well as to any nation who forgets God, (Psalm 9:17). As an eschatological reference, it can be applied to the end of the world in the future.
            Since the word that is translated “earth” may also be translated as “land,” the prophecy can therefore be accurately applied to the destruction of “all the land,” as when the land of Israel was destroyed, or “all the earth,” as in the future. Likewise the term “all the inhabitants of the land” can equally be translated “all the inhabitants of the earth.” (The twelve tribes are sometimes called “nations” Genesis 35:11; Exodus 19:6; Acts 2:5. The Roman Empire is called “all the world” in Luke 2:1.)
            The dispensational and pre-millennial view of Daniel’s 70 weeks is:  “…when the Jews refused their Messiah, God stopped the clock, called “time out“, so to speak….breached His promise, (as in Numbers 14:34)…. “Time in” hasn’t been called yet.”[6]
            Eusebius says: “After the Saviour’s passion, and the cries with which the Jewish mob clamoured for the reprieve of the bandit and murderer and begged that the Author of Life should be removed from them, disaster befell the entire nation. There is no need to add anything to the historical records. But it would be right to mention, too, certain facts which bring home the beneficence of all-gracious Providence, which for forty years after their crime against Christ delayed their destruction,” (Eusebius, 3.7.3).
            There was indeed a space of time of 40 years, (as in Numbers 14:34), after the rejection of the Messiah, (about 30 AD), to the destruction of the nation, (about 70 AD). That this period of time was considered analogous to the 40-year wilderness experience is confirmed by Hebrews 3:7-4:11 and 1 Corinthians. 10:1-11. This was the period of time in which the gospel was preached throughout the Roman Empire to all the Jews, Colossians 1:23. This space of time, however, was not a “breach of promise” but was a demonstration of God’s mercy.
            In fact, the “forty years of the Messiah“ was a tradition amongst the Jews, as attested in their writings. Lightfoot quotes R. Eliezer from Sanhedrin:
The days of the Messiah are forty years, according as it is said, “Forty years…shall I be grieved with this generation.” The Gloss is, “Because it is …(in the future tense) it is a sign the prophecy is concerning the time to come.” It is ingenuously done, however, of these “Jews”, that they parallel that faithless generation that was in the days of the Messiah with that perverse and rebellious generation that had been in the wilderness: for they will, both of them prove a loathing and offence to God for the space of forty years. And as those forty years in the wilderness were numbered according to the forty days in which the land had been searching [Num. xiv.34]; so also may those forty years of the Messiah be numbered according to the forty days wherein he was conversant amongst mankind after his resurrection from the dead.[7]
            The angel proclaims that this “delay” is over, Revelation 10:5-7, (RSV):
And the angel whom I saw standing on sea and land lifted up his right hand to heaven and swore by him who lives for ever and ever, who created heaven and what is in it, the earth and what is in it, and the sea and what is in it, that there should be no more delay, but in the days of the trumpet call to be sounded by the seventh angel, the mystery of God, as he announced to his servants the prophets, should be fulfilled.
            The passage in Numbers 14 speaks of the long-suffering of God by waiting forty years while the doubting generation died. This is referred to in Hebrews 3:7-19 and is applied to the contemporary audience: “Today!” There is a serious problem, however, with the interpretation that “God stopped the clock for a “time out“ which hasn’t been called back in yet,” (after 2,000 years!)
            The time spoken of by Daniel was an “appointed time” (Dan. 8:19; 11:27, 29, 35, etc.) This “appointed time” ended the “time of the end” (Dan. 8:17, 35, etc.) This meant that a specific date was set in the future. It is the Hebrew word mow’ed, meaning “an appointed time, place, meeting or congregation.”[8]
            This is the word that is used for setting an appointed time for meetings at an appointed place; for example the appointed time for keeping the feast of unleavened bread, (Exod. 34:18). It would have been quite confusing if a “time out“ was called without everyone knowing when, or for how long, the “time out” was. If “time out” could be called, how could there have been a meeting? The concept of a “time out” for an “appointed time” is self-contradictory.
            When Daniel was studying the Book  of Jeremiah, (Dan. 9:2), who had prophesied a set time of seventy years, (Jer. 29:10), he did not think that God had called “time out“ or was using some secret method of calculating the seventy years, but rather he knew that the “appointed time” for restoration was near.


[1] In the Hebrew the words for 'week' and 'seven' are the same root and are closely related to the word for 'oath.'
[2] This view is commonly held and taught. One example of this teaching is the tape series ‘Latest Word on the Last Days’ taught by Pastor Paul Dodson at the Reigning Life Assembly Church in Spencer, Oklahoma, summer 1994.
[3] Lightfoot, commenting on Acts 2:17, notes that: ‘We have elsewhere observed that by the last days is to be understood the last days of Jerusalem and the Jewish economy, viz. when the...end of the Jewish world drew near. And there would be the less doubt as to this matter if we would frame a right notion of ...'that great and terrible day of the Lord;' that is, the day of his vengeance upon that place and nation,’ (CNT vol.4, p. 30).
[4] See my Commentary at 7:4 ‘Israel of God.’
[5] Again I refer to Pastor Dodson's, Latest Word series for a specific example of a widespread teaching.
[6] Again, I use Pastor Dodson's Latest Word series as an example of this teaching. He cites a source which attempts to count the 490 years on the basis of a solar year. The chronology of the seventy weeks used by Pastor Dodson's source is erroneous because it does not understand the Old Testament calendar. Their year was a moon year of 354 days. Their months were determined by observation of the appearance of the new moon, about 29 1/2 days. However, an accurate calculation of the times predicted by Daniel will indeed come to the events of Christ.
[7] Lightfoot, (CNT, vol. 4, pp. 7-8), quoting Sanhedrin fol. 99.1. Lightfoot also records concerning Rabbi Jochanan Ben Zaccai that it was said: ‘Forty years before the destruction of the city, when the gates of the temple flew open of their own accord, Rabban Jochanan Ben Zaccai said, 'O temple, temple, why dost thou disturb thyself? I know thy end, that thou shalt be destroyed; for so the prophet Zachary hath spoken concerning thee, Open thy doors, O Lebanon, that the fire may devour thy cedars,'‘ (CNT vol. 4, p. 44).
   This would have been at the time of Christ's crucifixion, perhaps when the veil was rent. From this it is clear that the tradition of the forty years of grace was strong amongst both the Jews of the Pharisaic religion as well as the Christians.
[8] See WS at 1:3: ‘Time.’
This lesson is from my book Revelation In Context, pages 80-84. Revelation In Context is available locally at the Living Word Bookstore in Shawnee, Oklahoma. It is also available online at www.Amazon.com and www.xulonpress.com. Free downloads are available at www.revelationincontext.sermon.net.

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