THE PROPHECY OF DANIEL

         DANIEL, whose name signifies THE JUDGMENT OF GOD, was of
         the royal blood of the kings of Juda: and one of those that
         were first of all carried away into captivity. He was so
         renowned for wisdom and knowledge, that it became a proverb
         among the Babylonians, AS WISE AS DANIEL (Ezech. 28.3). And
         his holiness was so great from his very childhood, that at
         the time when he was as yet but a young man, he is joined
         by the SPIRIT of GOD with NOE and JOB, as three persons
         most eminent for virtue and sanctity, Ezech. 14. He is not
         commonly numbered by the Hebrews among THE PROPHETS:
         because he lived at court, and in high station in the
         world: but if we consider his many clear predictions of
         things to come, we shall find that no one better deserves
         the name and title of A PROPHET: which also has been given
         him by the SON of GOD himself, Matt. 24, Mark 13., Luke 21.

         Daniel Chapter 1

         Daniel and his companions are taken into the palace of the
         king of Babylon: they abstain from his meat and wine, and
         succeed better with pulse and water. Their excellence and
         wisdom.

         1:1. In the third year of the reign of Joakim, king of Juda,
         Nabuchodonosor, king of Babylon, came to Jerusalem, and
         beseiged it.

         1:2. And the Lord delivered into his hands Joakim, the king
         of Juda, and part of the vessels of the house of God: and he
         carried them away into the land of Sennaar, to the house of
         his god, and the vessels he brought into the treasure house
         of his god.

         His god... Bel or Belus, the principal idol of the
         Chaldeans.

         1:3. And the king spoke to Asphenez, the master of the
         eunuchs, that he should bring in some of the children of
         Israel, and of the king's seed, and of the princes,

         1:4. Children in whom there was no blemish, well favoured,
         and skilful in all wisdom, acute in knowledge, and
         instructed in science, and such as might stand in the king's
         palace, that he might teach them the learning, and tongue of
         the Chaldeans.

         1:5. And the king appointed them a daily provision, of his
         own meat, and of the wine of which he drank himself, that
         being nourished three years, afterwards they might stand
         before the king.

         1:6. Now there was among them of the children of Juda,
         Daniel, Ananias, Misael, and Azarias.

         1:7. And the master of the eunuchs gave them names: to
         Daniel, Baltassar: to Ananias, Sidrach: to Misael, Misach:
         and to Azarias, Abdenago.

         1:8. But Daniel purposed in his heart that he would not be
         defiled with the king's table, nor with the wine which he
         drank: and he requested the master of the eunuchs that he
         might not be defiled.

         Be defiled, etc... Viz., either by eating meat forbidden
         by the law, or which had before been offered to idols.

         1:9. And God gave to Daniel grace and mercy in the sight of
         the prince of the eunuchs.

         1:10. And the prince of the eunuchs said to Daniel: I fear
         my lord, the king, who hath appointed you meat and drink:
         who if he should see your faces leaner than those of the
         other youths, your equals, you shall endanger my head to the
         king.

         1:11. And Daniel said to Malasar, whom the prince of the
         eunuchs had appointed over Daniel, Ananias, Misael, and
         Azarias:

         1:12. Try, I beseech thee, thy servants for ten days, and
         let pulse be given us to eat, and water to drink:

         Pulse... That is, pease, beans, and such like.

         1:13. And look upon our faces, and the faces of the children
         that eat of the king's meat: and as thou shalt see, deal
         with thy servants.

         1:14. And when he had heard these words, he tried them for
         ten days.

         1:15. And after ten days, their faces appeared fairer and
         fatter than all the children that ate of the king's meat.

         1:16. So Malasar took their portions, and the wine that they
         should drink: and he gave them pulse.

         1:17. And to these children God gave knowledge, and
         understanding in every book, and wisdom: but to Daniel the
         understanding also of all visions and dreams.

         1:18. And when the days were ended, after which the king had
         ordered they should be brought in: the prince of the eunuchs
         brought them in before Nabuchodonosor.

         1:19. And when the king had spoken to them, there were not
         found among them all such as Daniel, Ananias, Misael, and
         Azarias: and they stood in the king's presence.

         1:20. And in all matters of wisdom and understanding, that
         the king enquired of them, he found them ten times better
         than all the diviners, and wise men, that were in all his
         kingdom.

         1:21. And Daniel continued even to the first year of king
         Cyrus.

         Daniel Chapter 2

         Daniel, by divine revelation, declares the dream of
         Nabuchodonosor, and the interpretation of it. He is highly
         honoured by the king.

         2:1. In the second year of the reign of Nabuchodonosor,
         Nabuchodonosor had a dream, and his spirit was terrified,
         and his dream went out of his mind.

         The second year... Viz., from the death of his father
         Nabopolassar; for he had reigned before as partner with
         his father in the empire.

         2:2. Then the king commanded to call together the diviners
         and the wise men, and the magicians, and the Chaldeans: to
         declare to the king his dreams: so they came and stood
         before the king.

         The Chaldeeans... That is, the astrologers, that pretended
         to divine by stars.

         2:3. And the king said to them: I saw a dream: and being
         troubled in mind I know not what I saw.

         2:4. And the Chaldeans answered the king in Syriac: O king,
         live for ever: tell to thy servants thy dream, and we will
         declare the interpretation thereof.

         2:5. And the king, answering, said to the Chaldeans: The
         thing is gone out of my mind: unless you tell me the dream,
         and the meaning thereof, you shall be put to death, and your
         houses shall be confiscated.

         2:6. but if you tell the dream, and the meaning of it, you
         shall receive of me rewards, and gifts, and great honour:
         therefore, tell me the dream, and the interpretation
         thereof.

         2:7. They answered again and said: Let the king tell his
         servants the dream, and we will declare the interpretation
         of it.

         2:8. The king answered and said: I know for certain, that
         you seek to gain time, since you know that the thing is gone
         from me.

         2:9. If, therefore, you tell me not the dream, there is one
         sentence concerning you, that you have also framed a lying
         interpretation, and full of deceit, to speak before me till
         the time pass away. Tell me, therefore, the dream, that I
         may know that you also give a true interpretation thereof.

         2:10. Then the Chaldeans answered before the king, and said:
         There is no man upon earth, that can accomplish thy word, O
         king; neither doth any king, though great and mighty, ask
         such a thing of any diviner, or wise man, or Chaldean.

         2:11. For the thing that thou asketh, O king, is difficult:
         nor can any one be found that can shew it before the king,
         except the gods, whose conversation is not with men.

         2:12. Upon hearing this, the king in fury, and in great
         wrath, commanded that all the wise men of Babylon should be
         put to death.

         2:13. And the decree being gone forth, the wise men were
         slain: and Daniel and his companions were sought for, to be
         put to death.

         2:14. Then Daniel inquired concerning the law and the
         sentence, of Arioch, the general of the king's army, who was
         gone forth to kill the wise men of Babylon.

         2:15. And he asked him that had received the orders of the
         king, why so cruel a sentence was gone forth from the face
         of the king. And when Arioch had told the matter to Daniel,

         2:16. Daniel went in, and desired of the king, that he would
         give him time to resolve the question, and declare it to the
         king.

         2:17. And he went into his house, and told the matter to
         Ananias, and Misael, and Azarias, his companions:

         2:18. To the end that they should ask mercy at the face of
         the God of heaven, concerning this secret, and that Daniel
         and his companions might not perish with the rest of the
         wise men of Babylon.

         2:19. Then was the mystery revealed to Daniel by a vision in
         the night: and Daniel blessed the God of heaven,

         2:20. And speaking, he said: Blessed be the name of the Lord
         from eternity and for evermore: for wisdom and fortitude are
         his.

         2:21. And he changeth times and ages: taketh away kingdoms,
         and establisheth them: giveth wisdom to the wise, and
         knowledge to them that have understanding:

         2:22. He revealeth deep and hidden things, and knoweth what
         is in darkness: and light is with him.

         2:23. To thee, O God of our fathers, I give thanks, and I
         praise thee: because thou hast given me wisdom and strength:
         and now thou hast shewn me what we desired of thee, for thou
         hast made known to us the king's discourse.

         2:24. After this Daniel went in to Arioch, to whom the king
         had given orders to destroy the wise men of Babylon, and he
         spoke thus to him: Destroy not the wise men of Babylon:
         bring me in before the king, and I will tell the solution to
         the king.

         2:25. Then Arioch in haste brought in Daniel to the king,
         and said to him: I have found a man of the children of the
         captivity of Juda, that will resolve the question to the
         king.

         2:26. The king answered, and said to Daniel, whose name was
         Baltassar: Thinkest thou indeed that thou canst tell me the
         dream that I saw, and the interpretation thereof?

         2:27. And Daniel made answer before the king, and said: The
         secret that the king desireth to know, none of the wise men,
         or the philosophers, or the diviners, or the soothsayers,
         can declare to the king.

         2:28. But there is a God in heaven that revealeth mysteries,
         who hath shewn to thee, O king Nabuchodonosor, what is to
         come to pass in the latter times. Thy dream, and the visions
         of thy head upon thy bed, are these:

         2:29. Thou, O king, didst begin to think in thy bed, what
         should come to pass hereafter: and he that revealeth
         mysteries shewed thee what shall come to pass.

         2:30. To me also this secret is revealed, not by any wisdom
         that I have more than all men alive: but that the
         interpretation might be made manifest to the king, and thou
         mightest know the thought of thy mind.

         2:31. Thou, O king, sawest, and behold there was as it were
         a great statue: this statue, which was great and high, tall
         of stature, stood before thee, and the look thereof was
         terrible.

         2:32. The head of this statue was of fine gold, but the
         breast and the arms of silver, and the belly and the thighs
         of brass.

         2:33. And the legs of iron, the feet part of iron and part of
         clay.

         2:34. Thus thou sawest, till a stone was cut out of a
         mountain without hands: and it struck the statue upon the
         feet thereof that were of iron and clay, and broke them in
         pieces.

         2:35. Then was the iron, the clay, the brass, the silver,
         and the gold broken to pieces together, and became like the
         chaff of a summer's threshing floor, and they were carried
         away by the wind: and there was no place found for them: but
         the stone that struck the statue became a great mountain,
         and filled the whole earth.

         2:36. This is the dream: we will also tell the
         interpretation thereof before thee, O king.

         2:37. Thou art a king of kings: and the God of heaven hath
         given thee a kingdom, and strength, and power, and glory:

         2:38. And all places wherein the children of men, and the
         beasts of the field do dwell: he hath also given the birds
         of the air into thy hand, and hath put all things under thy
         power: thou, therefore, art the head of gold.

         2:39. And after thee shall rise up another kingdom, inferior
         to thee, of silver: and another third kingdom of brass,
         which shall rule over all the world.

         Another kingdom... Viz., that of the Medes and Persians.
         Ibid. Third kingdom... Viz., that of Alexander the Great.

         2:40. And the fourth kingdom shall be as iron. As iron
         breaketh into pieces, and subdueth all things, so shall that
         break, and destroy all these.

         The fourth kingdom, etc... Some understand this of the
         successors of Alexander, the kings of Syria and Egypt,
         others of the Roman empire, and its civil wars.

         2:41. And whereas thou sawest the feet, and the toes, part
         of potter's clay, and part of iron: the kingdom shall be
         divided, but yet it shall take its origin from the iron,
         according as thou sawest the iron mixed with the miry clay.

         2:42. And as the toes of the feet were part of iron, and
         part of clay: the kingdom shall be partly strong, and partly
         broken.

         2:43. And whereas thou sawest the iron mixed with miry clay,
         they shall be mingled indeed together with the seed of man,
         but they shall not stick fast one to another, as iron cannot
         be mixed with clay.

         2:44. But in the days of those kingdoms, the God of heaven
         will set up a kingdom that shall never by destroyed, and his
         kingdom shall not be delivered up to another people: and it
         shall break in pieces, and shall consume all these kingdoms:
         and itself shall stand for ever.

         A kingdom... Viz., the kingdom of Christ in the Catholic
         Church which cannot be destroyed.

         2:45. According as thou sawest, that the stone was cut out
         of the mountain without hands, and broke in pieces the clay
         and the iron, and the brass, and the silver, and the gold,
         the great God hath shewn the king what shall come to pass
         hereafter, and the dream is true, and the interpretation
         thereof is faithful.

         2:46. Then king Nabuchodonosor fell on his face, and
         worshipped Daniel, and commanded that they should offer in
         sacrifice to him victims and incense.

         2:47. And the king spoke to Daniel, and said: Verily, your
         God is the God of gods, and Lord of kings, and a revealer of
         hidden things: seeing thou couldst discover this secret.

         2:48. Then the king advanced Daniel to a high station, and
         gave him many and great gifts: and he made him governor over
         all the provinces of Babylon: and chief of the magistrates
         over all the wise men of Babylon.

         2:49. And Daniel requested of the king, and he appointed
         Sidrach, Misach, and Abdenago, over the works of the
         province of Babylon: but Daniel himself was in the king's
         palace.

         Daniel Chapter 3

         Nabuchodonosor set up a golden statue; which he commands
         all to adore: the three children for refusing to do it are
         cast into the fiery furnace; but are not hurt by the
         flames. Their prayer and canticle of praise.

         3:1. King Nabuchodonosor made a statue of gold, of sixty
         cubits high, and six cubits broad, and he set it up in the
         plain of Dura, of the province of Babylon.

         3:2. Then Nabuchodonosor, the king, sent to call together
         the nobles, the magistrates, and the judges, the captains,
         the rulers, and governors, and all the chief men of the
         provinces, to come to the dedication of the statue which
         king Nabuchodonosor had set up.

         3:3. Then the nobles, the magistrates, and the judges, the
         captains, and rulers, and the great men that were placed in
         authority, and all the princes of the provinces, were
         gathered together to come to the dedication of the statue,
         which king Nabuchodonosor had set up. And they stood before
         the statue which king Nabuchodonosor had set up.

         3:4. Then a herald cried with a strong voice: To you it is
         commanded, O nations, tribes and languages:

         3:5. That in the hour that you shall hear the sound of the
         trumpet, and of the flute, and of the harp, of the sackbut,
         and of the psaltery, and of the symphony, and of all kind of
         music, ye fall down and adore the golden statue which king
         Nabuchodonosor hath set up.

         3:6. But if any man shall not fall down and adore, he shall
         the same hour be cast into a furnace of burning fire.

         3:7. Upon this, therefore, at the time when all the people
         heard the sound of the trumpet, the flute, and the harp, of
         the sackbut, and the psaltery, of the symphony, and of all
         kind of music, all the nations, tribes, and languages fell
         down and adored the golden statue which king Nabuchodonosor
         had set up.

         3:8. And presently at that very time some Chaldeans came and
         accused the Jews,

         3:9. And said to king Nabuchodonosor: O king, live for ever:

         3:10. Thou, O king, hast made a decree, that every man that
         shall hear the sound of the trumpet, the flute, and the
         harp, of the sackbut, and the psaltery, of the symphony, and
         of all kind of music, shall prostrate himself, and adore the
         golden statue:

         3:11. And that if any man shall not fall down and adore, he
         should be cast into a furnace of burning fire.

         3:12. Now there are certain Jews, whom thou hast set over
         the works of the province of Babylon, Sidrach, Misach, and
         Abdenago: these men, O king, have slighted thy decree: they
         worship not thy gods, nor do they adore the golden statue
         which thou hast set up.

         3:13. Then Nabuchodonosor in fury, and in wrath, commanded
         that Sidrach, Misach, ad Abdenago should be brought: who
         immediately were brought before the king.

         3:14. And Nabuchodonosor, the king, spoke to them, and said:
         Is it true, O Sidrach, Misach, and Abdenago, that you do not
         worship my gods, nor adore the golden statue that I have set
         up?

         3:15. Now, therefore, if you be ready, at what hour soever,
         you shall hear the sound of the trumpet, flute, harp,
         sackbut, and psaltery, and symphony, and of all kind of
         music, prostrate yourselves, and adore the statue which I
         have made: but if you do not adore, you shall be cast the
         same hour into the furnace of burning fire: and who is the
         God that shall deliver you out of my hand?

         3:16. Sidrach, Misach, and Abdenago, answered, and said to
         king Nabuchodonosor: We have no occasion to answer thee
         concerning this matter.

         3:17. For behold our God, whom we worship, is able to save
         us from the furnace of burning fire, and to deliver us out
         of thy hands, O king.

         3:18. But if he will not, be it known to thee, O king, that
         we will not worship thy gods, nor adore the golden statue
         which thou hast set up.

         3:19. Then was Nabuchodonosor filled with fury: and the
         countenance of his face was changed against Sidrach, Misach,
         and Abdenago, and he commanded that the furnace should be
         heated seven times more than it had been accustomed to be
         heated.

         3:20. And he commanded the strongest men that were in his
         army, to bind the feet of Sidrach, Misach, and Abdenago, and
         to cast them into the furnace of burning fire.

         3:21. And immediately these men were bound, and were cast
         into the furnace of burning fire, with their coats, and
         their caps, and their shoes, and their garments.

         3:22. For the king's commandment was urgent, and the furnace
         was heated exceedingly. And the flame of the fire slew those
         men that had cast in Sidrach, Misach, and Abdenago.

         3:23. But these three men, that is, Sidrach, Misach, and
         Abdenago, fell down bound in the midst of the furnace of
         burning fire.

         3:24. And they walked in the midst of the flame, praising
         God, and blessing the Lord.

         And they walked, etc... Here St. Jerome takes notice, that
         from this verse, to ver. 91, was not in the Hebrew in his
         time. But as it was in all the Greek Bibles, (which were
         originally translated from the Hebrew,) it is more than
         probable that it had been formerly in the Hebrew or rather
         in the Chaldaic, in which the book of Daniel was written.
         But this is certain: that it is, and has been of old,
         received by the church, and read as canonical scripture in
         her liturgy, and divine offices.

         3:25. Then Azarias standing up, prayed in this manner, and
         opening his mouth in the midst of the fire, he said:

         3:26. Blessed art thou, O Lord, the God of our fathers, and
         thy name is worthy of praise, and glorious for ever:

         3:27. For thou art just in all that thou hast done to us,
         and all thy works are true, and thy ways right, and all thy
         judgments true.

         3:28. For thou hast executed true judgments in all the
         things that thou hast brought upon us, and upon Jerusalem,
         the holy city of our fathers: for according to truth and
         judgment, thou hast brought all these things upon us for our
         sins.

         3:29. For we have sinned, and committed iniquity, departing
         from thee: and we have trespassed in all things:

         3:30. And we have not hearkened to thy commandments, nor
         have we observed nor done as thou hadst commanded us, that
         it might go well with us.

         3:31. Wherefore, all that thou hast brought upon us, and
         every thing that thou hast done to us, thou hast done in
         true judgment:

         3:32. And thou hast delivered us into the hands of our
         enemies that are unjust, and most wicked, and prevaricators,
         and to a king unjust, and most wicked beyond all that are
         upon the earth.

         3:33. And now we cannot open our mouths: we are become a
         shame, and a reproach to thy servants, and to them that
         worship thee.

         3:34. Deliver us not up for ever, we beseech thee, for thy
         name's sake, and abolish not thy covenant.

         3:35. And take not away thy mercy from us, for the sake of
         Abraham, thy beloved, and Isaac, thy servant, and Israel,
         thy holy one:

         3:36. To whom thou hast spoken, promising that thou wouldst
         multiply their seed as the stars of heaven, and as the sand
         that is on the sea shore.

         3:37. For we, O Lord, are diminished more than any nation,
         and are brought low in all the earth this day for our sins.

         3:38. Neither is there at this time prince, or leader, or
         prophet, or holocaust, or sacrifice, or oblation, or
         incense, or place of first fruits before thee,

         3:39. That we may find thy mercy: nevertheless, in a
         contrite heart and humble spirit let us be accepted.

         3:40. As in holocausts of rams, and bullocks, and as in
         thousands of fat lambs: so let our sacrifice be made in thy
         sight this day, that it may please thee: for there is no
         confusion to them that trust in thee.

         3:41. And now we follow thee with all our heart, and we fear
         thee, and seek thy face.

         3:42. Put us not to confusion, but deal with us according to
         thy meekness, and according to the multitude of thy mercies.

         3:43. And deliver us, according to thy wonderful works, and
         give glory to thy name, O Lord:

         3:44. And let all them be confounded that shew evils to thy
         servants, let them be confounded in all thy might, and let
         their strength be broken:

         3:45. And let them know that thou art the Lord, the only
         God, and glorious over all the world.

         3:46. Now the king's servants that had cast them in, ceased
         not to heat the furnace with brimstone and tow, and pitch,
         and dry sticks,

         3:47. And the flame mounted up above the furnace nine and
         forth cubits:

         3:48. And it broke forth, and burnt such of the Chaldeans as
         it found near the furnace.

         3:49. But the angel of the Lord went down with Azarias and
         his companions into the furnace: and he drove the flame of
         the fire out of the furnace,

         3:50. And made the midst of the furnace like the blowing of
         a wind bringing dew, and the fire touched them not at all,
         nor troubled them, nor did them any harm.

         3:51. Then these three, as with one mouth, praised and
         glorified and blessed God, in the furnace, saying:

         3:52. Blessed art thou, O Lord, the God of our fathers; and
         worthy to be praised, and glorified, and exalted above all
         for ever: and blessed is the holy name of thy glory: and
         worthy to be praised and exalted above all, in all ages.

         3:53. Blessed art thou in the holy temple of thy glory: and
         exceedingly to be praised and exalted above all for ever.

         3:55. Blessed art thou that beholdest the depths, and
         sittest upon the cherubims: and worthy to be praised and
         exalted above all for ever.

         3:56. Blessed art thou in the firmament of heaven: and
         worthy of praise, and glorious for ever.

         3:57. All ye works of the Lord, bless the Lord: praise and
         exalt him above all for ever.

         3:58. O ye angels of the Lord, bless the Lord: praise and
         exalt him above all for ever.

         3:59. O ye heavens, bless the Lord: praise and exalt him
         above all for ever.

         3:60. O all ye waters that are above the heavens, bless the
         Lord: praise and exalt him above all for ever.

         3:61. O all ye powers of the Lord, bless the Lord: praise
         and exalt him above all for ever.

         3:62. O ye sun and moon, bless the Lord: praise and exalt
         him above all for ever.

         3:63. O ye stars of heaven, bless the Lord: praise and exalt
         him above all for ever.

         3:64. O every shower and dew, bless ye the Lord: praise and
         exalt him above all for ever.

         3:65. O all ye spirits of God, bless the Lord: praise and
         exalt him above all for ever.

         3:66. O ye fire and heat, bless the Lord: praise and exalt
         him above all for ever.

         3:67. O ye cold and heat, bless the Lord, praise and exalt
         him above all for ever.

         3:68. O ye dews and hoar frost, bless the Lord: praise and
         exalt him above all for ever.

         3:69. O ye frost and cold, bless the Lord: praise and exalt
         him above all for ever.

         3:70. O ye ice and snow, bless the Lord: praise and exalt
         him above all for ever.

         3:71. O ye nights and days, bless the Lord: praise and exalt
         him above all for ever.

         3:72. O ye light and darkness, bless the Lord: praise and
         exalt him above all for ever.

         3:73. O ye lightnings and clouds, bless the Lord: praise and
         exalt him above all for ever.

         3:74. O let the earth bless the Lord: let it praise and
         exalt him above all for ever.

         3:76. O all ye things that spring up in the earth, bless the
         Lord: praise and exalt him above all for ever.

         3:77. O ye fountains, bless the Lord: praise and exalt him
         above all for ever.

         3:78. O ye seas and rivers, bless the Lord: praise and exalt
         him above all for ever.

         3:79. O ye whales, and all that move in the waters, bless
         the Lord: praise and exalt him above all for ever.

         3:80. O all ye fowls of the air, bless the Lord: praise and
         exalt him above all for ever.

         3:81. O all ye beasts and cattle, bless the Lord: praise and
         exalt him above all for ever.

         3:82. O ye sons of men, bless the Lord: praise and exalt him
         above all for ever.

         3:83. O let Israel bless the Lord: let them praise and exalt
         him above all for ever.

         3:84. O ye priests of the Lord, bless the Lord: praise and
         exalt him above all for ever.

         3:85. O ye servants of the Lord, bless the Lord: praise and
         exalt him above all for ever.

         3:86. O ye spirits and souls of the just, bless the Lord:
         praise and exalt him above all for ever.

         3:87. O ye holy and humble of heart, bless the Lord: praise
         and exalt him above all for ever.

         3:88. O Ananias, Azarias, Misael, bless ye the Lord: praise
         and exalt him above all for ever. For he hath delivered us
         from hell, ad saved us out of the hand of death, and
         delivered us out of the midst of the burning flame, and
         saved us out of the midst of the fire.

         3:89. O give thanks to the Lord, because he is good: because
         his mercy endureth for ever and ever.

         3:90. O all ye religious, bless the Lord, the God of gods:
         praise him, and give him thanks, because his mercy endureth
         for ever and ever.

         3:91. Then Nabuchodonosor, the king, was astonished, and
         rose up in haste, and said to his nobles: Did we not cast
         three men bound into the midst of the fire? They answered
         the king, and said: True, O king.

         3:92. He answered, and said: Behold, I see four men loose,
         and walking in the midst of the fire, and there is no hurt
         in them, and the form of the fourth is like the son of God.

         3:93. Then Nabuchodonosor came to the door of the burning
         fiery furnace, and said: Sidrach, Misach, and Abdenago, ye
         servants of the most high God, go ye forth, and come. And
         immediately Sidrach, Misach, and Abdenago, went out from
         the midst of the fire.

         3:94. And the nobles, and the magistrates, and the judges,
         and the great men of the king, being gathered together,
         considered these men, that the fire had no power on their
         bodies, and that not a hair of their head had been singed,
         nor their garments altered, nor the smell of the fire had
         passed on them.

         3:95. Then Nabuchodonosor breaking forth, said: Blessed be
         the God of them, to wit, of Sidrach, Misach, and Abdenago,
         who hath sent his angel, and delivered his servants that
         believed in him: and they changed the king's word, and
         delivered up their bodies, that they might not serve nor
         adore any god except their own God.

         3:96. By me, therefore, this decree is made: That every
         people, tribe, and tongue, which shall speak blasphemy
         against the God of Sidrach, Misach, and Abdenago, shall be
         destroyed, and their houses laid waste: for there is no
         other God that can save in this manner.

         3:97. Then the king promoted Sidrach, Misach, and Abdenago,
         in the province of Babylon.

         3:98. Nabuchodonosor, the king, to all peoples, nations, and
         tongues, that dwell in all the earth, peace be multiplied
         unto you.

         Nabuchodonosor, etc... These last three verses are a kind
         of preface to the following chapter, which is written in
         the style of an epistle from the king.

         3:99. The most high God hath wrought signs and wonders
         towards me. It hath seemed good to me, therefore, to publish

         3:100. His signs, because they are great: and his wonders,
         because they are mighty: and his kingdom is an everlasting
         kingdom, and his power to all generations.

         Daniel Chapter 4

         Nabuchodonosor's dream, by which the judgments of God are
         denounced against him for his pride, is interpreted by
         Daniel, and verified by the event.

         4:1. I, Nabuchodonosor, was at rest in my house, and
         flourishing in my palace:

         4:2. I saw a dream that affrighted me: and my thoughts in my
         bed, and the visions of my head, troubled me.

         4:3. Then I set forth a decree, that all the wise men of
         Babylon should be brought in before me, and that they should
         shew me the interpretation of the dream.

         4:4. Then came in the diviners, the wise men, the Chaldeans,
         and the soothsayers, and I told the dream before them: but
         they did not shew me the interpretation thereof.

         4:5. Till their colleague, Daniel, came in before me, whose
         name is Baltassar, according to the name of my god, who hath
         in him the spirit of the holy gods: and I told the dream
         before him.

         Baltassar, according to the name of my god... He says
         this, because the name of Baltassar, or Belteshazzar, is
         derived from the name of Bel, the chief god of the
         Babylonians.

         4:6. Baltassar, prince of the diviners, because I know that
         thou hast in thee the spirit of the holy gods, and that no
         secret is impossible to thee, tell me the visions of my
         dreams that I have seen, and the interpretation of them?

         4:7. This was the vision of my head in my bed: I saw, and
         behold a tree in the midst of the earth, and the height
         thereof was exceeding great.

         4:8. The tree was great and strong, and the height thereof
         reached unto heaven: the sight thereof was even to the ends
         of all the earth.

         4:9. Its leaves were most beautiful, and its fruit exceeding
         much: and in it was food for all: under it dwelt cattle and
         beasts, and in the branches thereof the fowls of the air had
         their abode: and all flesh did eat of it.

         4:10. I saw in the vision of my head upon my bed, and behold
         a watcher, and a holy one came down from heaven.

         A watcher... A vigilant angel, perhaps the guardian of
         Israel.

         4:11. He cried aloud, and said thus: Cut down the tree, and
         chop off the branches thereof: shake off its leaves, and
         scatter its fruits: let the beasts fly away that are under
         it, and the birds from its branches.

         4:12. Nevertheless, leave the stump of its roots in the
         earth, and let it be tied with a band of iron and of brass,
         among the grass, that is without, and let it be wet with the
         dew of heaven, and let its protion be with the wild beasts
         in the grass of the earth.

         4:13. Let his heart be changed from man's, and let a beast's
         heart be given him: and let seven times pass over him.

         Let his heart be changed, etc... It does not appear by
         scripture that Nabuchodonosor was changed from human
         shape; much less that he was changed into an ox; but only
         that he lost his reason, and became mad; and in this
         condition remained abroad in the company of beasts, eating
         grass like an ox, till his hair grew in such manner as to
         resemble the feathers of eagles, and his nails to be like
         birds' claws.

         4:14. This is the decree by the sentence of the watchers,
         and the word and demand of the holy ones: till the living
         know, that the most High ruleth in the kingdom of men: and
         he will give it to whomsoever it shall please him, and he
         will appoint the basest man over it.

         4:15. I, king Nabuchodonosor, saw this dream: thou,
         therefore, O Baltassar, tell me quickly the interpretation:
         for all the wise men of my kingdom are not able to declare
         the meaning of it to me: but thou art able, because the
         spirit of the holy gods is in thee.

         4:16. Then Daniel, whose name was Baltassar, began silently
         to think within himself for about one hour: and his thought
         troubled him. But the king answering, said: Baltassar, let
         not the dream and the interpretation thereof trouble thee.
         Baltassar answered, and said: My lord, the dream be to them
         that hate thee, and the interpretation thereof to thy
         enemies.

         4:17. The tree which thou sawest, which was high and strong,
         whose height reached to the skies, and the sight thereof
         into all the earth:

         4:18. And the branches thereof were most beautiful, and its
         fruit exceeding much, and in it was food for all, under
         which the beasts of the field dwelt, and the birds of the
         air had their abode in its branches.

         4:19. It is thou, O king, who art grown great, and become
         mighty: for thy greatness hath grown, and hath reached to
         heaven, and thy power unto the ends of the earth.

         4:20. And whereas the king saw a watcher, and a holy one
         come down from heaven, and say: Cut down the tree, and
         destroy it, but leave the stump of the roots thereof in the
         earth, and let it be bound with iron and brass, among the
         grass without, and let it be sprinkled with the dew of
         heaven, and let his feeding be with the wild beasts, till
         seven times pass over him.

         4:21. This is the interpretation of the sentence of the most
         High, which is come upon my lord, the king.

         4:22. They shall cast thee out from among men, and thy
         dwelling shall be with cattle, and with wild beasts, and
         thou shalt eat grass, as an ox, and shalt be wet with the
         dew of heaven: and seven times shall pass over thee, till
         thou know that the most High ruleth over the kingdom of men,
         and giveth it to whomsoever he will.

         4:23. But whereas he commanded, that the stump of the roots
         thereof, that is, of the tree, should be left: thy kingdom
         shall remain to thee, after thou shalt have known that power
         is from heaven.

         4:24. Wherefore, O king, let my counsel be acceptable to
         thee, and redeem thou thy sins with alms, and thy iniquities
         with works of mercy to the poor: perhaps he will forgive thy
         offences.

         4:25. All these things came upon king Nabuchodonosor.

         4:26. At the end of twelve months he was walking in the
         palace of Babylon.

         4:27. And the king answered, and said: Is not this the great
         Babylon, which I have built, to be the seat of the kingdom,
         by the strength of my power, and in the glory of my
         excellence?

         4:28. And while the word was yet in the king's mouth, a
         voice came down from heaven: To thee, O king Nabuchodonosor,
         it is said: Thy kingdom shall pass from thee.

         4:29. And they shall cast thee out from among men, and thy
         dwelling shall be with cattle and wild beasts: thou shalt
         eat grass like an ox, and seven times shall pass over thee,
         till thou know that the most High ruleth in the kingdom of
         men, and giveth it to whomsoever he will.

         4:30. The same hour the word was fulfilled upon
         Nabuchodonosor, and he was driven away from among men, and
         did eat grass, like an ox, and his body was wet with the dew
         of heaven: till his hairs grew like the feathers of eagles,
         and his nails like birds' claws.

         4:31. Now at the end of the days, I, Nabuchodonosor, lifted
         up my eyes to heaven, and my sense was restored to me: and
         I blessed the most High, and I praised and glorified him
         that liveth for ever: for his power is an everlasting power,
         and his kingdom is to all generations.

         4:32. And all the inhabitants of the earth are reputed as
         nothing before him: for he doth according to his will, as
         well with the powers of heaven, as among the inhabitants of
         the earth: and there is none that can resist his hand, and
         say to him: Why hast thou done it?

         4:33. At the same time my sense returned to me, and I came
         to the honour and glory of my kingdom: and my shape returned
         to me: and my nobles, and my magistrates, sought for me, and
         I was restored to my kingdom: and greater majesty was added
         to me.

         4:34. Therefore I, Nabuchodonosor, do now praise, and
         magnify, and glorify the King of heaven: because all his
         works are true, and his ways judgments, and them that walk
         in pride he is able to abase.

         I, Nabuchodonosor, do now, etc... From this place some
         commentators infer that this king became a true convert,
         and dying not long after, was probably saved.

         Daniel Chapter 5

         Baltasar's profane banquet: his sentence is denounced by a
         handwriting on the wall, which Daniel reads and interprets.

         5:1. Baltasar, the king, made a great feast for a thousand
         of his nobles: and every one drank according to his age.

         Baltasar... He is believed to be the same as Nabonydus,
         the last of the Chaldean kings, grandson to Nabuchodonosor.
         He is called his son, ver. 2, 11, etc., according to the
         style of the scriptures, because he was a descendant from
         him.

         5:2. And being now drunk, he commanded that they should
         bring the vessels of gold and silver, which Nabuchodonosor,
         his father, had brought away out of the temple, that was in
         Jerusalem, that the king and his nobles, and his wives, and
         his concubines, might drink in them.

         5:3. Then were the golden and silver vessels brought, which
         he had brought away out of the temple that was in Jeursalem:
         and the king and his nobles, his wives, and his concubines,
         drank in them.

         5:4. They drank wine, and praised their gods of gold, and of
         silver, of brass, of iron, and of wood, and of stone.

         5:5. In the same hour there appeared fingers, as it were of
         the hand of a man, writing over against the candlestick,
         upon the surface of the wall of the king's palace: and the
         king beheld the joints of the hand that wrote.

         5:6. Then was the king's countenance changed, and his
         thoughts troubled him: and the joints of his loins were
         loosed, and his knees struck one against the other.

         5:7. And the king cried out aloud to bring in the wise men,
         the Chaldeans, and the soothsayers. And the king spoke, and
         said to the wise men of Babylon: Whosoever shall read this
         writing, and shall make known to me the interpretation
         thereof, shall be clothed with purple, and shall have a
         golden chain on his neck, and shall be the third man in my
         kingdom.

         5:8. Then came in all the king's wise men, but they could
         neither read the writing, nor declare the interpretation to
         the king.

         5:9. Wherewith king Baltasar was much troubled, and his
         countenance was changed: and his nobles also were troubled.

         5:10. Then the queen, on occasion of what had happened to
         the king, and his nobles, came into the banquet-house: and
         she spoke, and said: O king, live for ever: let not thy
         thoughts trouble thee, neither let thy countenance be
         changed.

         The queen... Not the wife, but the mother of the king.

         5:11. There is a man in thy kingdom that hath the spirit of
         the holy gods in him: and in the days of thy father
         knowledge and wisdom were found in him: for king
         Nabuchodonosor, thy father, appointed him prince of the wise
         men, enchanters, Chaldeans, and soothsayers, thy father, I
         say, O king:

         5:12. Because a greater spirit, and knowledge, and
         understanding, and interpretation of dreams, and shewing of
         secrets, and resolving of difficult things, were found in
         him, that is, in Daniel: whom the king named Baltassar. Now,
         therefore, let Daniel be called for, and he will tell the
         interpretation.

         5:13. Then Daniel was brought in before the king. And the
         king spoke, and said to him: Art thou Daniel, of the
         children of the captivity of Juda, whom my father, the king,
         brought out of Judea?

         5:14. I have heard of thee, that thou hast the spirit of the
         gods, and excellent knowledge, and understanding, and wisdom
         are found in thee.

         5:15. And now the wise men, the magicians, have come in
         before me, to read this writing, and shew me the
         interpretation thereof; and they could not declare to me the
         meaning of this writing.

         5:16. But I have heard of thee, that thou canst interpret
         obscure things, and resolve difficult things: now if thou
         art able to read the writing, and to shew me the
         interpretation thereof, thou shalt be clothed with purple,
         and shalt have a chain of gold about thy neck, and shalt be
         the third prince in my kingdom.

         5:17. To which Daniel made answer, and said before the king:
         thy rewards be to thyself, and the gifts of thy house give
         to another: but the writing I will read to thee, O king, and
         shew thee the interpretation thereof.

         5:18. O king, the most high God gave to Nabuchodonosor, thy
         father, a kingdom, and greatness, and glory, and honour.

         5:19. And for the greatness that he gave to him, all people,
         tribes, and languages trembled, and were afraid of him: whom
         he would, he slew: and whom he would, he destroyed: and whom
         he would, he set up: and whom he would, he brought down.

         5:20. But when his heart was lifted up, and his spirit
         hardened unto pride, he was put down from the throne of his
         kingdom, and his glory was taken away.

         5:21. And he was driven out from the the sons of men, and
         his heart was made like the beasts, and his dwelling was
         with the wild asses, and he did eat grass like an ox, and
         his body was wet with the dew of heaven: till he knew that
         the most High ruled in the kingdom of men, and that he will
         set over it whomsoever it shall please him.

         5:22. Thou also, his son, O Baltasar, hast not humbled thy
         heart, whereas thou knewest all these things:

         5:23. But hast lifted thyself up against the Lord of heaven:
         and the vessels of his house have been brought before thee:
         and thou, and thy nobles, and thy wives, and thy concubines,
         have drunk wine in them: and thou hast praised the gods of
         silver, and of gold, and of brass, of iron, and of wood, and
         of stone, that neither see, nor hear, nor feel: but the God
         who hath thy breath in his hand, and all thy ways, thou hast
         not glorified.

         5:24. Wherefore, he hath sent the part of the hand which
         hath written this that is set down.

         5:25. And this is the writing that is written: MANE, THECEL,
         PHARES.

         5:26. And this is the interpretation of the word. MANE: God
         hath numbered thy kingdom, and hath finished it.

         5:27. THECEL: thou art weighed in the balance, and art found
         wanting.

         5:28. PHARES: thy kingdom is divided, and is given to the
         Medes and Persians.

         5:29. Then by the king's command, Daniel was clothed with
         purple, and a chain of gold was put about his neck: and it
         was proclaimed of him that he had power as the third man in
         the kingdom.

         5:30. The same night Baltasar, the Chaldean king, was
         slain.

         5:31. And Darius, the Mede, succeeded to the kingdom, being
         threescore and two years old.

         Darius... He is called Cyaxares by the historians; and was
         the son of Astyages, and uncle to Cyrus.

         Daniel Chapter 6

         Daniel is promoted by Darius: his enemies procure a law
         forbidding prayer; for the transgression of this law Daniel
         is cast into the lions' den: but miraculously delivered.

         6:1. It seemed good to Darius, and he appointed over the
         kingdom a hundred and twenty governors, to be over his whole
         kingdom.

         6:2. And three princes over them of whom Daniel was one:
         that the governors might give an account to them, and the
         king might have no trouble.

         6:3. And Daniel excelled all the princes, and governors:
         because a greater spirit of God was in him.

         6:4. And the king thought to set him over all the kingdom;
         whereupon the princes, and the governors, sought to find
         occasion against Daniel, with regard to the king: and they
         could find no cause, nor suspicion, because he was faithful,
         and no fault, nor suspicion was found in him.

         6:5. Then these men said: We shall not find any occasion
         against this Daniel, unless perhaps concerning the law of
         his God.

         6:6. Then the princes, and the governors, craftily suggested
         to the king, and spoke thus unto him: King Darius, live for
         ever:

         6:7. All the princes of the kingdom, the magistrates, and
         governors, the senators, and judges, have consulted
         together, that an imperial decree, and an edict be
         published: That whosoever shall ask any petition of any god,
         or man, for thirty days, but of thee, O king, shall be cast
         into the den of the lions.

         6:8. Now, therefore, O king, confirm the sentence, and sign
         the decree: that what is decreed by the Medes and Persians
         may not be altered, nor any man be allowed to transgress it.

         6:9. So king Darius set forth the decree, and established
         it.

         6:10. Now, when Daniel knew this, that is to say, that the
         law was made, he went into his house: and opening the
         windows in his upper chamber towards Jerusalem, he knelt
         down three times a day, and adored and gave thanks before
         his God, as he had been accustomed to do before.

         6:11. Wherefore those men carefully watching him, found
         Daniel praying and making supplication to his God.

         6:12. And they came and spoke to the king concerning the
         edict: O king, hast thou not decreed, that every man that
         should make a request to any of the gods, or men, for thirty
         days, but to thyself, O king, should be cast into the den of
         the lions? And the king answered them, saying: The word is
         true, according to the decree of the Medes and Persians,
         which it is not lawful to violate.

         6:13. Then they answered, and said before the king: Daniel,
         who is of the children of the captivity of Juda, hath not
         regarded thy law, nor the decree that thou hast made: but
         three times a day he maketh his prayer.

         6:14. Now when the king had heard these words, he was very
         much grieved, and in behalf of Daniel he set his heart to
         deliver him, and even till sunset he laboured to save him.

         6:15. But those men perceiving the king's design, said to
         him: Know thou, O king, that the law of the Medes and
         Persians is, that no decree which the king hath made, may be
         altered.

         6:16. Then the king commanded, and they brought Daniel, and
         cast him into the den of the lions. And the king said to
         Daniel: Thy God, whom thou always servest, he will deliver
         thee.

         6:17. And a stone was brought, and laid upon the mouth of
         the den: which the king sealed with his own ring, and with
         the ring of his nobles, that nothing should be done against
         Daniel.

         6:18. And the king went away to his house, and laid himself
         down without taking supper, and meat was not set before him,
         and even sleep departed from him.

         6:19. Then the king rising very early in the morning, went
         in haste to the lions' den:

         6:20. And coming near to the den, cried with a lamentable
         voice to Daniel, and said to him: Daniel, servant of the
         living God, hath thy God, whom thou servest always, been
         able, thinkest thou, to deliver thee from the lions?

         6:21. And Daniel answering the king, said: O king, live for
         ever:

         6:22. My God hath sent his angel, and hath shut up the
         mouths of the lions, and they have not hurt me: forasmuch as
         before him justice hath been found in me: yea, and before
         thee, O king, I have done no offence.

         6:23. Then was the king exceeding glad for him, and he
         commanded that Daniel should be taken out of the den: and
         Daniel was taken out of the den, and no hurt was found in
         him, because he believed in his God.

         6:24. And by the king's commandment, those men were brought
         that had accused Daniel: and they were cast into the lions'
         den, they and their children, and their wives: and they did
         not reach the bottom of the den, before the lions caught
         them, and broke all their bones in pieces.

         6:25. Then king Darius wrote to all people, tribes, and
         languages, dwelling in the whole earth: PEACE be multiplied
         unto you.

         6:26. It is decreed by me, that in all my empire and my
         kingdom, all men dread and fear the God of Daniel. For he is
         the living and eternal God for ever: and his kingdom shall
         not be destroyed, and his power shall be for ever.

         6:27. He is the deliverer, and saviour, doing signs and
         wonders in heaven, and in earth: who hath delivered Daniel
         out of the lions' den.

         6:28. Now Daniel continued unto the reign of Darius, and the
         reign of Cyrus, the Persian.

         Daniel Chapter 7

         Daniel's vision of the four beasts, signifying four
         kingdoms: of God sitting on his throne: and of the opposite
         kingdoms of Christ and Antichrist.

         7:1. In the first year of Baltasar, king of Babylon, Daniel
         saw a dream: and the vision of his head was upon his bed:
         and writing the dream, he comprehended it in a few words:
         and relating the sum of it in short, he said:

         7:2. I saw in my vision by night, and behold the four winds
         of the heavens strove upon the great sea.

         7:3. And four great beasts, different one from another, came
         up out of the sea.

         Four great beasts... Viz., the Chaldean, Persian, Grecian,
         and Roman empires. But some rather choose to understand
         the fourth beast of the successors of Alexander the Great,
         more especially of them that reigned in Asia and Syria.

         7:4. The first was like a lioness, and had the wings of an
         eagle: I beheld till her wings were plucked off, and she was
         lifted up from the earth, and stood upon her feet as a man,
         and the heart of a man was given to her.

         7:5. And behold another beast, like a bear, stood up on one
         side: and there were three rows in the mouth thereof, and in
         the teeth thereof, and thus they said to it: Arise, devour
         much flesh.

         7:6. After this I beheld, and lo, another like a leopard,
         and it had upon it four wings, as of a fowl, and the beast
         had four heads, and power was given to it.

         7:7. After this I beheld in the vision of the night, and lo,
         a fourth beast, terrible and wonderful, and exceeding
         strong, it had great iron teeth, eating and breaking in
         pieces, and treading down the rest with his feet: and it was
         unlike to the other beasts which I had seen before it, and
         had ten horns.

         Ten horns... That is, ten kingdoms, (as Apoc. 17.12,)
         among which the empire of the fourth beast shall be
         parcelled. Or ten kings of the number of the successors of
         Alexander; as figures of such as shall be about the time
         of Antichrist.

         7:8. I considered the horns, and behold another little horn
         sprung out of the midst of them: and three of the first
         horns were plucked up at the presence thereof: and behold
         eyes like the eyes of a man were in this horn, and a mouth
         speaking great things.

         Another little horn... This is commonly understood of
         Antichrist. It may also be applied to that great
         persecutor Antiochus Epiphanes, as a figure of Antichrist.

         7:9. I beheld till thrones were placed, and the ancient of
         days sat: his garment was white as snow, and the hair of his
         head like clean wool: his throne like flames of fire: the
         wheels of it like a burning fire.

         7:10. A swift stream of fire issued forth from before him:
         thousands of thousands ministered to him, and ten thousand
         times a hundred thousand stood before him: the judgment sat,
         and the books were opened.

         7:11. I beheld, because of the voice of the great words
         which that horn spoke: and I saw that the beast was slain,
         and the body thereof was destroyed, and given to the fire to
         be burnt:

         7:12. And that the power of the other beasts was taken away:
         and that times of life were appointed them for a time, and a
         time.

         7:13. I beheld, therefore, in the vision of the night, and
         lo, one like the Son of man came with the clouds of heaven,
         and he came even to the ancient of days: and they presented
         him before him.

         7:14. And he gave him power, and glory, and a kingdom: and
         all peoples, tribes, and tongues shall serve him: his power
         is an everlasting power that shall not be taken away: and
         his kingdom that shall not be destroyed.

         7:15. My spirit trembled; I, Daniel, was affrighted at these
         things, and the visions of my head troubled me.

         7:16. I went near to one of them that stood by, and asked
         the truth of him concerning all these things, and he told me
         the interpretation of the words, and instructed me:

         7:17. These four great beasts, are four kingdoms, which
         shall arise out of the earth.

         7:18. But the saints of the most high God shall take the
         kingdom: and they shall possess the kingdom for ever and
         ever.

         7:19. After this I would diligently learn concerning the
         fourth beast, which was very different from all, and
         exceeding terrible: his teeth and claws were of iron: he
         devoured and broke in pieces, and the rest he stamped upon
         with his feet:

         7:20. And concerning the ten horns that he had on his head:
         and concerning the other that came up, before which three
         horns fell: and of that horn that had eyes, and a mouth
         speaking great things, and was greater than the rest.

         7:21. I beheld, and lo, that horn made war against the
         saints, and prevailed over them,

         7:22. Till the ancient of days came and gave judgment to the
         saints of the most High, and the time came, and the saints
         obtained the kingdom.

         7:23. And thus he said: The fourth beast shall be the fourth
         kingdom upon earth, which shall be greater than all the
         kingdoms, and shall devour the whole earth, and shall tread
         it down, and break it in pieces.

         7:24. And the ten horns of the same kingdom, shall be ten
         kings: and another shall rise up after them, and he shall be
         mightier than the former, and he shall bring down three
         kings.

         7:25. And he shall speak words against the High One, and
         shall crush the saints of the most High: and he shall think
         himself able to change times and laws, and they shall be
         delivered into his hand until a time, and times, and half a
         time.

         A time, and times, and half a time... That is, three years
         and a half; which is supposed to be the length of the
         duration of the persecution of Antichrist.

         7:26. And a judgment shall sit, that his power may be taken
         away, and be broken in pieces, and perish even to the end.

         7:27. And that the kingdom, and power, and the greatness of
         the kingdom, under the whole heaven, may be given to the
         people of the saints of the most High: whose kingdom is an
         everlasting kingdom, and all kings shall serve him, and
         shall obey him.

         7:28. Hitherto is the end of the word. I, Daniel, was much
         troubled with my thoughts, and my countenance was changed in
         me: but I kept the word in my heart.

         Daniel Chapter 8

         Daniel's vision of the ram and the he goat interpreted by
         the angel Gabriel.

         8:1. In the third year of the reign of king Baltasar, a
         vision appeared to me. I, Daniel, after what I had seen in
         the beginning,

         8:2. Saw in my vision when I was in the castle of Susa,
         which is in the province of Elam: and I saw in the vision
         that I was over the gate of Ulai.

         8:3. And I lifted up my eyes, and saw: and behold a ram
         stood before the water, having two high horns, and one
         higher than the other, and growing up. Afterward

         A ram... The empire of the Medes and Persians.

         8:4. I saw the ram pushing with his horns against the west,
         and against the north, and against the south: and no beasts
         could withstand him, nor be delivered out of his hand: and
         he did according to his own will, and became great.

         8:5. And I understood: and behold a he goat came from the
         west on the face of the whole earth, and he touched not the
         ground, and the he goat had a notable horn between his eyes.

         A he goat... The empire of the Greeks, or Macedonians.
         Ibid. He touched not the ground... He conquered all
         before him, with so much rapidity, that he seemed rather
         to fly, than to walk upon the earth.-Ibid. A notable
         horn... Alexander the Great.

         8:6. And he went up to the ram that had the horns, which I
         had seen standing before the gate, and he ran towards him in
         the force of his strength.

         8:7. And when he was come near the ram, he was enraged
         against him, and struck the ram: and broke his two horns,
         and the ram cound not withstand him: and when he had cast
         him down on the ground, he stamped upon him, and none could
         deliver the ram out of his hand.

         8:8. And the he goat became exceeding great: and when he was
         grown, the great horn was broken, and there came up four
         horns under it towards the four winds of heaven.

         Four horns... Seleucus, Antigonus, Philip, and Ptolemeus,
         the successors of Alexander, who divided his empire among
         them.

         8:9. And out of one of them came forth a little horn: and it
         became great against the south, and against the east, and
         against the strength.

         A little horn... Antiochus Epiphanes, a descendant of
         Seleucus. He grew against the south, and the east, by his
         victories over the kings of Egypt and Armenia: and against
         the strength, that is, against Jerusalem and the people of
         God.

         8:10. And it was magnified even unto the strength of heaven:
         and it threw down of the strength, and of the stars, and
         trod upon them.

         Unto the strength of heaven... or, against the strength of
         heaven. So are here called the army of the Jews, the
         people of God.

         8:11. And it was magnified even to the prince of the
         strength: and it took away from him the continual sacrifice,
         and cast down the place of his sanctuary.

         8:12. And strength was given him against the continual
         sacrifice, because of sins: and truth shall be cast down on
         the ground, and he shall do and shall prosper.

         8:13. And I heard one of the saints speaking, and one saint
         said to another I know not to whom, that was speaking: How
         long shall be the vision, concerning the continual
         sacrifice, and the sin of the desolation that is made: and
         the sanctuary, and the strength be trodden under foot?

         8:14. And he said to him: Unto evening and morning two
         thousand three hundred days: and the sanctuary shall be
         cleansed.

         Unto evening and morning two thousand three hundred
         days... That is, six years and almost four months: which
         was the whole time from the beginning of the persecution
         of Antiochus till his death.

         8:15. And it came to pass when I, Daniel, saw the vision,
         and sought the meaning, that behold there stood before me as
         it were the appearance of a man.

         8:16. And I heard the voice of a man between Ulai: and he
         called, and said: Gabriel, make this man to understand the
         vision.

         8:17. And he came, and stood near where I stood: and when he
         was come, I fell on my face, trembling, and he said to me:
         Understand, O son of man, for in the time of the end the
         vision shall be fulfilled.

         8:18. And when he spoke to me, I fell flat on the ground:
         and he touched me, and set me upright.

         8:19. And he said to me: I will shew thee what things are to
         come to pass in the end of the malediction: for the time
         hath its end.

         8:20. The ram, which thou sawest with horns, is the king of
         the Medes and Persians.

         8:21. And the he goat, is the king of the Greeks, and the
         great horn that was between his eyes, the same is the first
         king.

         8:22. But whereas when that was borken, there arose up four
         for it, four kings shall rise up of his nation, but not with
         his strength.

         8:23. And after their reign, when iniquities shall be grown
         up, there shall arise a king of a shameless face, and
         understanding dark sentences.

         8:24. And his power shall be strengthened, but not by his
         own force: and he shall lay all things waste, and shall
         prosper, and do more than can be believed. And he shall
         destroy the mighty, and the people of the saints,

         8:25. According to his will, and craft shall be successful
         in his hand: and his heart shall be puffed up, and in the
         abundance of all things he shall kill many: and he shall
         rise up aginst the prince of princes, and shall be broken
         without hand.

         8:26. And the vision of the evening and the morning, which
         was told, is true: thou, therefore, seal up the vision,
         because it shall come to pass after many days.

         8:27. And I, Daniel, languished, and was sick for some days:
         and when I was risen up, I did the king's business, and I
         was astonished at the vision, and there was none that could
         interpret it.

         Daniel Chapter 9

         Daniel's confession and prayer: Gabriel informs him
         concerning the seventy weeks to the coming of Christ.

         9:1. In the first year of Darius, the son of Assuerus, of
         the seed of the Medes, who reigned over the kingdom of the
         Chaldeans:

         9:2. The first year of his reign I, Daniel, understood by
         books the number of the years, concerning which the word of
         the Lord came to Jeremias, the prophet, that seventy years
         should be accomplished of the desolation of Jerusalem.

         9:3. And I set my face to the Lord, my God, to pray and make
         supplication with fasting, and sackcloth, and ashes.

         9:4. And I prayed to the Lord, my God, and I made my
         confession, and said: I beseech thee, O Lord God, great and
         terrible, who keepest the covenant, and mercy to them that
         love thee, and keep thy commandments.

         9:5. We have sinned, we have committed iniquity, we have
         done wickedly, and have revolted: and we have gone aside
         from thy commandments, and thy judgments.

         9:6. We have not hearkened to thy servants, the prophets,
         that have spoken in thy name to our kings, to our princes,
         to our fathers, and to all the people of the land.

         9:7. To thee, O Lord, justice: but to us confusion of face,
         as at this day to the men of Juda, and to the inhabitants of
         Jerusalem, and to all Israel, to them that are near, and to
         them that are far off, in all the countries whither thou
         hast driven them, for their iniquities, by which they have
         sinned against thee.

         9:8. O Lord, to us belongeth confusion of face, to our
         princes, and to our fathers, that have sinned.

         9:9. But to thee, the Lord our God, mercy and forgiveness,
         for we have departed from thee:

         9:10. And we have not hearkened to the voice of the Lord,
         our God, to walk in his law, which he set before us by his
         servants, the prophets.

         9:11. And all Israel have transgressed thy law, and have
         turned away from hearing thy voice, and the malediction, and
         the curse, which is written in the book of Moses, the
         servant of God, is fallen upon us, because we have sinned
         against him.

         9:12. And he hath confirmed his words which he spoke against
         us, and against our princes that judged us, that he would
         bring in upon us a great evil, such as never was under all
         the heaven, according to that which hath been done in
         Jerusalem.

         9:13. As it is written in the law of Moses, all this evil is
         come upon us: and we entreated not thy face, O Lord our God,
         that we might turn from our iniquities, and think on thy
         truth.

         9:14. And the Lord hath watched upon the evil, and hath
         brought it upon us: the Lord, our God, is just in all his
         works which he hath done: for we have not hearkened to his
         voice.

         9:15. And now, O Lord, our God, who hast brought forth thy
         people out of the land of Egypt, with a strong hand, and
         hast made thee a name as at this day: we have sinned, we
         have committed iniquity,

         9:16. O Lord, against all thy justice: let thy wrath and thy
         indignation be turned away, I beseech thee, from thy city,
         Jerusalem, and from thy holy mountain. For by reason of our
         sins, and the iniquities of our fathers, Jerusalem, and thy
         people, are a reproach to all that are round about us.

         9:17. Now, therefore, O our God, hear the supplication of
         thy servant, and his prayers: and shew thy face upon thy
         sanctuary, which is desolate, for thy own sake.

         9:18. Incline, O my God, thy ear, and hear: open thy eyes,
         and see our desolation, and the city upon which thy name is
         called: for it is not for our justifications that we present
         our prayers before thy face, but for the multitude of thy
         tender mercies.

         9:19. O Lord, hear: O Lord, be appeased: hearken, and do:
         delay not, for thy own sake, O my God: because thy name is
         invocated upon thy city, and upon thy people.

         9:20. Now while I was yet speaking, and praying, and
         confessing my sins, and the sins of my people of Israel, and
         presenting my supplications in the sight of my God, for the
         holy mountain of my God:

         9:21. As I was yet speaking in prayer, behold the man,
         Gabriel, whom I had seen in the vision at the beginning,
         flying swiftly, touched me at the time of the evening
         sacrifice.

         The man Gabriel... The angel Gabriel in the shape of a
         man.

         9:22. And he instructed me, and spoke to me, and said: O
         Daniel, I am now come forth to teach thee, and that thou
         mightest understand.

         9:23. From the beginning of thy prayers the word came forth:
         and I am come to shew it to thee, because thou art a man of
         desires: therefore, do thou mark the word, and understand
         the vision.

         Man of desires... that is, ardently praying for the Jews
         then in captivity.

         9:24. Seventy weeks are shortened upon thy people, and upon
         thy holy city, that transgression may be finished, and sin
         may have an end, and iniquity may be abolished; and
         everlasting justice may be brought; and vision and prophecy
         may be fulfilled; and the Saint of saints may be anointed.

         Seventy weeks... Viz., of years, (or seventy times seven,
         that is, 490 years,) are shortened; that is, fixed and
         determined, so that the time shall be no longer.

         9:25. Know thou, therefore, and take notice: that from the
         going forth of the word, to build up Jerusalem again, unto
         Christ, the prince, there shall be seven weeks, and
         sixty-two weeks: and the street shall be built again, and
         the walls, in straitness of times.

         From the going forth of the word, etc... That is, from the
         twentieth year of king Artaxerxes, when by his commandment
         Nehemias rebuilt the walls of Jerusalem, 2 Esd. 2. From
         which time, according to the best chronology, there were
         just sixty-nine weeks of years, that is, 483 years to the
         baptism of Christ, when he first began to preach and
         execute the office of Messias.-Ibid. In straitness of
         times... angustia temporum: which may allude both to the
         difficulties and opposition they met with in building: and
         to the shortness of the time in which they finished the
         wall, viz., fifty-two days.

         9:26. And after sixty-two weeks Christ shall be slain: and
         the people that shall deny him shall not be his. And a
         people, with their leader, that shall come, shall destroy
         the city, and the sanctuary: and the end thereof shall be
         waste, and after the end of the war the appointed
         desolation.

         A people with their leader... The Romans under Titus.

         9:27. And he shall confirm the covenant with many, in one
         week: and in the half of the week the victim and the
         sacrifice shall fail: and there shall be in the temple the
         abomination of desolation: and the desolation shall continue
         even to the consummation, and to the end.

         In the half of the week... or, in the middle of the week,
         etc. Because Christ preached three years and a half: and
         then by his sacrifice upon the cross abolished all the
         sacrifices of the law.-Ibid. The abomination of
         desolation... Some understand this of the profanation of
         the temple by the crimes of the Jews, and by the bloody
         faction of the zealots. Others of the bringing in thither
         the ensigns and standard of the pagan Romans. Others, in
         fine, distinguish three different times of desolation:
         viz., that under Antiochus; that when the temple was
         destroyed by the Romans; and the last near the end of the
         world under Antichrist. To all which, as they suppose,
         this prophecy may have a relation.

         Daniel Chapter 10

         Daniel having humbled himself by fasting and penance seeth
         a vision, with which he is much terrified; but he is
         comforted by an angel.

         10:1. In the third year of Cyrus, king of the Persians, a
         word was revealed to Daniel, surnamed Baltassar, and a true
         word, and great strength: and he understood the word: for
         there is need of understanding in a vision.

         10:2. In those days I, Daniel, mourned the days of three
         weeks.

         10:3. I ate no desirable bread, and neither flesh, nor wine,
         entered into my mouth, neither was I anointed with ointment:
         till the days of three weeks were accomplished.

         10:4. And in the four and twentieth day of the first month,
         I was by the great river, which is the Tigris.

         10:5. And I lifted up my eyes, and I saw: and behold a man
         clothed in linen, and his loins were girded with the finest
         gold:

         10:6. And his body was like the chrysolite, and his face as
         the appearance of lightning, and his eyes as a burning lamp:
         and his arms, and all downward even to the feet, like in
         appearance to glittering brass: and the voice of his word
         like the voice of a multitude.

         10:7. And I, Daniel alone, saw the vision: for the men that
         were with me saw it not: but an exceeding great terror fell
         upon them, and they fled away, and hid themselves.

         10:8. And I, being left alone, saw this great vision: and
         there remained no strength in me, and the appearance of my
         countenance was changed in me, and I fainted away, and
         retained no strength.

         10:9. And I heard the voice of his words: and when I heard I
         lay in a consternation upon my face, and my face was close
         to the ground.

         10:10. And behold a hand touched me, and lifted me up upon
         my knees, and upon the joints of my hands.

         10:11. And he said to me: Daniel, thou man of desires,
         understand the words that I speak to thee, and stand
         upright: for I am sent now to thee. And when he had said
         this word to me, I stood trembling.

         10:12. And he said to me: Fear not, Daniel: for from the
         first day that thou didst set thy heart to understand, to
         afflict thyself in the sight of thy God, thy words have been
         heard: and I am come for thy words.

         10:13. But the prince of the kingdom of the Persians
         resisted me one and twenty days: and behold Michael, one of
         the chief princes, came to help me, and I remained there by
         the king of the Persians.

         The prince, etc... That is, the angel guardian of Persia:
         who according to his office, seeking the spiritual good of
         the Persians was desirous that many of the Jews should
         remain among them.

         10:14. But I am come to teach thee what things shall befall
         thy people in the latter days, for as yet the vision is for
         days.

         10:15. And when he was speaking such words to me, I cast
         down my countenance to the ground, and held my peace.

         10:16. And behold as it were the likeness of a son of man
         touched my lips: then I opened my mouth and spoke, and said
         to him that stood before me: O my lord, at the sight of thee
         my joints are loosed, and no strength hath remained in me.

         10:17. And how can the servant of my lord speak with my
         lord? for no strength remaineth in me; moreover, my breath
         is stopped.

         10:18. Therefore, he that looked like a man, touched me
         again, and strengthened me.

         10:19. And he said: Fear not, O man of desires, peace be to
         thee: take courage, and be strong. And when he spoke to me,
         I grew strong, and I said: Speak, O my lord, for thou hast
         strengthened me.

         10:20. And he said: Dost thou know wherefore I am come to
         thee? And now I will return, to fight against the prince of
         the Persians. When I went forth, there appeared the prince
         of the Greeks coming.

         10:21. But I will tell thee what is set down in the
         scripture of truth: and none is my helper in all these
         things, but Michael your prince.

         Michael your prince... The guardian general of the church
         of God.

         Daniel Chapter 11

         The angel declares to Daniel many things to come, with
         regard to the Persian and Grecian kings: more especially
         with regard to Antiochus as a figure of Antichrist.

         11:1. And from the first year of Darius, the Mede, I stood
         up, that he might be strengthened, and confirmed.

         11:2. And now I will shew thee the truth. Behold, there
         shall stand yet three kings in Persia, and the fourth shall
         be enriched exceedingly above them all: and when he shall be
         grown mighty by his riches, he shall stir up all against the
         kingdom of Greece.

         Three kings... Viz., Cambyses, Smerdes Magus, and Darius,
         the son of Hystaspes.-Ibid. The fourth... Xerxes.

         11:3. But there shall rise up a strong king, and shall rule
         with great power: and he shall do what he pleaseth.

         A strong king... Alexander.

         11:4. And when he shall come to his height, his kingdom
         shall be broken, and it shall be divided towards the four
         winds of the heaven: but not to his posterity, nor according
         to his pwoer with wheich he ruled. For his kingdom shall be
         rent in peices, even for strangers, besides these.

         11:5. And the king of the south shall be strengthened, and
         one of his princes shall prevail over him, and he shall rule
         with great power: for his dominions shall be great.

         The king of the south... Ptolemeus the son of Lagus, king
         of Egypt, which lies south of Jerusalem.-Ibid. One of his
         princes... that is, one of Alexander's princes, shall
         prevail over him: that is, shall be stronger than the king
         of Egypt. He speaks of Seleucus Nicator, king of Asia and
         Syria, whose successors are here called the kings of the
         north, because their dominions lay to the north in respect
         to Jerusalem.

         11:6. And after the end of years they shall be in league
         together: and the daughter of the king of the south shall
         come to the king of the north to make friendship, but she
         shall not obtain the strength of the arm, neither shall her
         seed stand: and she shall be given up, and her young men
         that brought her, and they that strengthened her in these
         times.

         The daughter of the king of the south... Viz., Berenice,
         daughter of Ptolemeus Philadelphus, given in marriage to
         Antiochus Theos, grandson of Seleucus.

         11:7. And a plant of the bud of her roots shall stand up:
         and he shall come with an army, and shall enter into the
         province of the king of the north: and he shall abuse them,
         and shall prevail.

         A plant, etc... Ptolemeus Evergetes, the son of
         Philadelphus.

         11:8. And he shall also carry away captive into Egypt their
         gods, and their graven things, and their precious vessels of
         gold and silver: he shall prevail aginst the king of the
         north.

         The king of the north... Seleucus Callinicus.

         11:9. And the king of the south shall enter into the
         kingdom, and shall return to his own land.

         11:10. And his sons shall be provoked, and they shall
         assemble a multitude of great forces: and he shall come with
         haste like a flood: and he shall return, and be stirred up,
         and he shall join battle with his force.

         His sons... Seleucus Ceraunius, and Antiochus the Great,
         the sons of Callinicus.-Ibid. He shall come... Viz.,
         Antiochus the Great.

         11:11. And the king of the south being provoked, shall go
         forth, and shall fight against the king of the north, and
         shall prepare an exceeding great multitude, and a multitude
         shall be given into his hands.

         The king of the south... Ptolemeus Philopator, son of
         Evergetes.

         11:12. And he shall take a multitude, and his heart shall be
         lifted up, and he shall cast down many thousands: but he
         shall not prevail.

         11:13. For the king of the north shall return, and shall
         prepare a multitude much greater than before: and in the end
         of times, and years, he shall come in haste with a great
         army, and much riches.

         11:14. And in those times many shall rise up against the
         king of the south, and the children of prevaricators of thy
         people shall lift up themselves to fulfil the vision, and
         they shall fall.

         11:15. And the king of the north shall come, and shall cast
         up a mount, and shall take the best fenced citits: and the
         arms of the south shall not withstand, and his chosen ones
         shall rise up to resist, and they shall not have strength.

         11:16. And he shall come upon him, and do according to his
         pleasure, and there shall be none to stand against his face:
         and he shall stand in the glorious land, and it shall be
         consumed by his hand.

         He shall come upon him... Viz., Antiochus shall come upon
         the king of the south.-Ibid. The glorious land... Judea.

         11:17. And he shall set his face to come to possess all his
         kingdom, and he shall make upright conditions with him: and
         he shall give him a daughter of women, to overthrow it: and
         she shall not stand, neither shall she be for him.

         All his kingdom... Viz., all the kingdom of Ptolemeus
         Epiphanes, son of Philopator.-Ibid. A daughter of women...
         That is, a most beautiful woman, viz., his daughter
         Cleopatra.-Ibid. To overthrow it... Viz., the kingdom of
         Epiphanes: but his policy shall not succeed; for Cleopatra
         shall take more to heart the interest of her husband, than
         that of her father.

         11:18. And he shall turn his face to the islands, and shall
         take many: and he shall cause the prince of his reproach to
         cease, and his reproach shall be turned upon him.

         The prince of his reproach... Seipio the Roman general,
         called the prince of his reproach, because he overthrew
         Antiochus, and obliged him to submit to very dishonourable
         terms, before he would cease from the war.

         11:19. And he shall turn his face to the empire of his own
         land, and he shall stumble, and fall, ans shall not be
         found.

         11:20. And there shall stand up in his place one most vile,
         and unworthy of kingly honour: and in a few days he shall be
         destroyed, not in rage nor in battle.

         One most vile... Seleucus Philopator, who sent Heliodorus
         to plunder the temple: and was shortly after slain by the
         same Heliodorus.

         11:21. And there shall stand up in his place one despised,
         and the kingly honour shall not be given him: and he shall
         come privately, and shall obtain the kingdom by fraud.

         One despised... Viz., Antiochus Epiphanes, who at first
         was despised and not received for king. What is here said
         of this prince, is accommodated by St. Jerome and others
         to Antichrist; of whom this Antiochus was a figure.

         11:22. And the arms of the fighter shall be overcome before
         his face, and shall be broken: yea, also the prince of the
         covenant.

         Of the fighter... That is, of them that shall oppose him,
         and shall fight against him.-Ibid. The prince of the
         covenant... or, of the league. The chief of them that
         conspired against him: or the king of Egypt his most
         powerful adversary.

         11:23. And after friendships, he will deal deceitfully with
         him: and he shall go up, and shall overcome with a small
         people.

         11:24. And he shall enter into rich and plentiful cities:
         and he shall do that which his fathers never did, nor his
         fathers' fathers: he shall scatter their spoils, and their
         prey, and their riches, and shall forecast devices against
         the best fenced places: and this until a time.

         11:25. And his strength, and his heart, shall be stirred up
         aginst the king of the south, with a great army: and the
         king of the south shall be stirred up to battle with many
         and very strong succours: and they shall not stand, for they
         shall form designs against him.

         The king... Ptolemeus Philometor.

         11:26. And they that eat bread with him, shall destroy him,
         and his army shall be overthrown: and many shall fall down
         slain.

         11:27. And the heart of the two kings shall be to do evil,
         and they shall speak lies at one table, and they shall not
         prosper: because as yet the end is unto another time.

         11:28. And he shall return into his land with much riches:
         and his heart shall be aginst the holy covenant, and he
         shall succeed, and shall return into his own land.

         11:29. At the time appointed he shall return, and he shall
         come to the south, but the latter time shall not be like the
         former.

         11:30. And the galleys and the Romans shall come upon him,
         and he shall be struck, and shall return, and shall have
         indignation against thecovenant of the sanctuary, and he
         shall succeed: and he shall returnm, and shall devise
         against them that haave forsaken the covenant of the
         sanctuary.

         The galleys and the Romans... Popilius, and the other
         Roman ambassadors, who came in galleys, and obliged him to
         depart from Egypt.

         11:31. And arms shall stand on his part, and they shall
         defile the sanctuary of strength, and shall take away the
         continual sacrifice: and they shall place there the
         abomination unto desolation.

         They shall place there the abomination, etc... The idol of
         Jupiter Olympius, which Antiochus ordered to be set up in
         the sanctuary of the temple: which is here called the
         sanctuary of strength, from the Almighty that was
         worshipped there.

         11:32. And such as deal wickedly against the covenant shall
         deceitfully dissemble: but the people that know their God
         shall prevail and succeed.

         11:33. And they that are learned among the people shall
         teach many: and they shall fall by the sword, and by fire,
         and by captivity, and by spoil for many days.

         11:34. And when they shall have fallen, they shall be
         relieved with a small help: and many shall be joined to them
         deceitfully.

         11:35. And some of thelearned shall fall, that they may be
         tried, and may be chosen, and made white, even to the
         appointed time: because yet there shall be another time.

         11:36. And the king shall do according to his will, and he
         shall be lifted up, and shall magnify himself against every
         god: and he shall speak great things against the God of
         gods, and shall prosper, till the wrath be accomplished. For
         the determination is made.

         11:37. And he shall make no account of the God of his
         fathers: and he shall follow the lust of women, and he shall
         not regard any gods: for he shall rise up against all
         things.

         11:38. But he shall worship the god Maozim, in his place:
         and a god whom his fathers knew not, he shall worship with
         gold, and silver, and precious stones, and things of great
         price.

         The god Maozim... That is, the god of forces or strong
         holds.

         11:39. And he shall do this to fortify Maozim with a strange
         god, whom he hath acknowledged, and he shall increase glory,
         and shall give them power over many, and shall divide the
         land gratis.

         And he shall increase glory, etc... He shall bestow
         honours, riches and lands, upon them that shall worship
         his god.

         11:40. And at the time prefixed the king of the south shall
         fight against him, and the king of the north shall come
         against him like a tempest, with chariots, andwith horsemen,
         and with a great navy, and he shall enter into the
         countries, and shall destroy, and pass through.

         11:41. And he shal enter into the glorious land, ansd many
         shall fall: and these only shakll be saved out of his hand,
         Edom, and Moab, and the principality of the children of
         Ammon.

         11:42. And he shall lay his hand upon the lands: and the
         land of Egypt shall not escape.

         11:43. And he shall have power over the treasures of gold,
         and of silver, and all the precious things of Egypt: and he
         shall pass through Lybia, and Ethiopia.

         11:44. And tidings out of the east, and out of the north,
         shall trouble him: and he shall come with a great multitude
         to destroy and slay many.

         11:45. And he shall fix his tabernacle, Apadno, between the
         seas, upon a glorious and holy mountain: and he shall come
         even to the top thereof, and none shall help him.

         Apadno... Some take it for the proper name of a place:
         others, from the Hebrew, translate it his palace.

         Daniel Chapter 12

         Michael shall stand up for the people of God: with other
         things relating to Antichrist, and the end of the world.

         12:1. But at that time shall Michael rise up, the great
         prince, who standeth for the children of thy people: and a
         time shall come, such as never was from the time that
         nations began, even until that time. And at that time shall
         thy people be saved, every one that shall be found written
         in the book.

         12:2. And many of those that sleep in the dust of the earth,
         shall awake: some unto life everlasting, and others unto
         reproach, to see it always.

         12:3. But they that are learned, shall shine as the
         brightness of the firmament: and they that instruct many to
         justice, as stars for all eternity.

         Learned... Viz., in the law of God and true wisdom, which
         consists in knowing and loving God.

         12:4. But thou, O Daniel, shut up the words, and seal the
         book, even to the time appointed: many shall pass over, and
         knowledge shall be manifold.

         12:5. And I, Daniel, looked, and behold as it were two
         others stood: one on this side upon the bank of the river,
         and another on that side, on the other bank of the river.

         12:6. And I said to the man that was clothed in linen, that
         stood upon the waters of the river: How long shall it be to
         the end of these wonders?

         12:7. And I heard the man that was clothed in linen, that
         stood upon the waters of the river, when he had lifted up
         his right hand, and his left hand to heaven, and had sworn
         by him that liveth for ever, that it should be unto a time,
         and times, and half a time. And when the scattering of the
         band of the holy people shall be accomplished, all these
         things shall be finished.

         12:8. And I heard, and understood not. And I said: O my
         lord, what shall be after these things?

         12:9. And he said: Go, Daniel, because the words are shut
         up, and sealed until the appointed time.

         12:10. Many shall be chosen, and made white, and shall be
         tried as fire: and the wicked shall deal wickedly, and none
         of the wicked shall understand, but the learned shall
         understand.

         12:11. And from the time when the continual sacrifice shall
         be taken away, and the abomination unto desolation shall be
         set up, there shall be a thousand two hundred ninety days.

         12:12. Blessed is he that waitedth, and cometh unto a
         thousand three hundred thirty-five days.

         12:13. But go thou thy ways until the time appointed: and
         thou shalt rest, and stand in thy lot unto the end of the
         days.

         Daniel Chapter 13

         The history of Susanna and the two elders.

         This history of Susanna, in all the ancient Greek and
         Latin Bibles, was placed in the beginning of the book of
         Daniel: till St. Jerome, in his translation, detached it
         from thence; because he did not find it in the Hebrew:
         which is also the case of the history of Bel and the
         Dragon. But both the one and the other are received by the
         Catholic Church: and were from the very beginning a part
         of the Christian Bible.

         13:1. Now there was a man that dwelt in Babylon, and his
         name was Joakim:

         13:2. And he took a wife, whose name was Susanna, the
         daughter of Helcias, a bery beautiful woman, and one that
         feared God.

         13:3. For her parents being just, had instructed their
         daughter according to the law of Moses.

         13:4. Now Joakim was very rich, and had an orchard near his
         house: and the Jews resorted to him, because he was the most
         honourable of them all.

         13:5. And there were two of the ancients of the people
         appointed judges that year, of whom the Lord said: That
         iniquity came out from Babylon, from the ancient judges,
         that seemed to govern the people.

         13:6. These men frequented the house of Joakim, and all that
         hand any maters of judgment came to them.

         13:7. And when the people departed away at noon, Susanna
         went in, and walked in her husband's orchard.

         13:8. And the old men saw her going in every day, and
         walking: and they were inflamed with lust towards her:

         13:9. And they perverted their own mind, and turned away
         their eyes, that they might not look unto heaven, nor
         remember just judgments.

         13:10. So they were both wounded with the love of her, yet
         they did not make known their grief one to the other.

         13:11. For they were ashamed to declare to one another their
         lust, being desirous to have to do with her:

         13:12. And they watched carefully every day to see her. And
         one said to the other:

         13:13. Let us now go home, for it is dinner time. So going
         out, they departed one from another.

         13:14. And turning back again, they came both to the same
         place: and asking one another the cause, they acknowledged
         their lust: and then they agreed together upon a time, when
         they might find her alone.

         13:15. And it fell out, as they watched a fit day, she went
         in on a time, as yesterday and the day before, with two
         maids only, and was desirous to wash herself in the orchard:
         for it was hot weather.

         13:16. And there was nobody there, but the two old men that
         had hid themselves, and were beholding her.

         13:17. So she said to the maids: Bring me oil, and washing
         balls, and shut the doors of the orchard, that I may wash
         me.

         13:18. And they did as she bade them: and they shut the
         doors of the orchard, and went out by a back door to fetch
         what she had commanded them, and they knew not that the
         elders were hid within.

         13:19. Now when the maids were gone forth, the two elders
         arose, and ran to her, and said:

         13:20. Behold the doors of the orchard are shut, and nobody
         seeth us, and we are in love with thee: wherefore consent to
         us, and lie with us.

         13:21. But if thou wilt not, we will bear witness against
         thee, that a young man was with thee, and therefore thou
         didst send away thy maids form thee.

         13:22. Susanna sighed, and said: I am straitened on every
         side: for if I do this thing, it is death to me: and if I do
         it not, I shall not escape your hands.

         13:23. But it is better for me to fall into your hands
         without doing it, than to sin in the sight of the Lord.

         13:24. With that Susanna cried out with a loud voice: and
         the elders also cried out against her.

         13:25. And one of them ran to the door of the orchard, and
         opened it.

         13:26. So when the servants of the house heard the cry in
         the orchard, they rushed in by the back door, to see what
         was the matter.

         13:27. But after the old men had spoken, the servants were
         greatly ashamed: for never had there been any such word said
         of Susanna. And on the next day,

         13:28. When the people were come to Joakim, her husband, the
         two elders also came full of wicked device against Susanna,
         to put her to death.

         13:29. And they said before the people: Send to Susanna,
         daughter of Helcias, the wife of Joakim. And presently they
         sent.

         13:30. And she came with her parents, and children and all
         her kindred.

         13:31. Now Susanna was exceeding delicate, and beautiful to
         behold.

         13:32. But those wicked men commanded that her face should
         be uncovered, (for she was covered) that so at least they
         might be satisfied with her beauty.

         13:33. Therefore her friends, and all her acquaintance wept.

         13:34. But the two elders rising up in the midst of the
         people, laid their hands upon her head.

         13:35. And she weeping, looked kup to heaven, for her heart
         had confidence in the Lord.

         13:36. And the elders said: As we walked in the orchard
         alone, this woman came in with two maids, and shut the doors
         of the orchard, ans sent away the maids from her.

         13:37. Then a young man that was there hid came to her, and
         lay with her.

         13:38. But we that were in a corner of the orchard, seeing
         this wickedness, ran up to them, and we saw them lie
         together.

         13:39. And him indeed we could not take, because he was
         stronger than us, and opening the doors, he leaped out:

         13:40. But having taken this woman, we asked who the young
         man was, but she would not tell us: of this thing we are
         witnesses.

         13:41. The multitude believed them, as being the elders, and
         the judges of the people, and they condemned her to death.

         13:42. Then Susanna cried out with a loud voice, and said: O
         eternal God, who knowest hidden things, who knowest all
         things before they come to pass,

         13:43. Thou knowest that they have borne false witness
         against me: and behold I must die, whereas I have done none
         of these things, which these men have maliciously forged
         against me.

         13:44. And the Lord heard her voice.

         13:45. And when she was led to be put to death, the Lord
         raised up the holy spirit of a young boy, whose name was
         Daniel:

         13:46. And he cried out with a loud voice: I am clear from
         the blood of this woman.

         13:47. Then all the people turning themselves towards him,
         said: What meaneth this word that thou hast spoken?

         13:48. But he standing in the midst of them, said: Are ye so
         foolish, ye children of Israel, that without examination or
         knowledge of the truth, you have condemned a daughter of
         Israel?

         13:49. Return to judgment, for they have borne false witness
         against her.

         13:50. So all the people turned again in haste, and the old
         men said to him: Come, and sit thou down among us, and shew
         it us: seeing God hath given thee the honour of old age.

         13:51. And Daniel said to the people: Separate these two far
         from one another, and I will examine them.

         13:52. So when they were put asunder one from the other, he
         called one of them, and said to him: O thou that art grown
         old in evil days, now are thy sins come out, which thou hast
         committed before:

         13:53. In judging unjust judgments, oppressing the innocent,
         and letting the guilty to go free, whereas the Lord saith:
         The innocent and the just thou shalt not kill.

         13:54. Now then if thou sawest her, tell me under what tree
         thou sawest them conversing together: He said: Under a
         mastic tree.

         13:55. And Daniel said: Welll hast thou lide against thy own
         head: for behold the angel of God having recieved the
         sentence of him, shall cut thee in two.

         13:56. And having put him aside, he commanded that the other
         should come, and he said to him: O thou seed of Chanaan, and
         not of Juda, beauty hath deceived tee, and lust hath
         perverted thy heart:

         13:57. Thus did you do to the daughters of Israel, and they
         for fear conversed with you: but a daughter of Juda would
         not abide your wickedness.

         13:58. Now, therefore, tell me, under what tree didst thou
         take them conversing together. And he answered: Under a holm
         tree.

         13:59. And Daniel said to him: Well hast thou also lied
         against thy own head: for the angel of the Lord waiteth with
         a sword to cut thee in two, and to destroy you.

         13:60. With that all the assembly cried out with a loud
         voice, and they blessed God, who saveth them that trust in
         him.

         13:61. And they rose up against the two elders, (for Daniel
         had convicted them of false witness by their own mouth) and
         they did to them as they had maliciously dealt against their
         neighbour,

         13:62. To fulfil the law of Moses: and they put them to
         death, and innocent blood was saved in that day.

         13:63. But Helcias, and his wife, praised God, for their
         daughter, Susanna, with Joakim, her husband, and all her
         kindred, because there was no dishonesty found in her.

         13:64. And Daniel became great in the sight of the people
         from that day, and thence forward.

         13:65. And king Astyages was gathered to his fathers; and
         Cyrus, the Persian, received his kingdom.

         Daniel Chapter 14

         The history of Bel, and of the great serpent worshipped by
         the Babylonians.

         14:1. And Daniel was the king's guest, and was honoured
         above all his friends.

         The king's guest... It seems most probable, that the king
         here spoken of was Evilmerodach, the son and successor of
         Nabuchodonosor, and a great favourer of the Jews.

         14:2. Now the Babylonians had an idol called Bel: and there
         was spent upon him every day twelve great measures of fine
         flour, and forty sheep, and six vessels of wine.

         14:3. The king also worshipped him, and went every day to
         adore him: but Daniel adored his God. And the king said to
         him: Why dost thou not adore Bel?

         14:4. And he answered, and said to him: Because I do not
         worship idols made with hands, but the living God, that
         created heaven and earth, and hath power over all flesh.

         14:5. And the king said to him: Doth not Bel seem to thee to
         be a living god? Seest thou not how much he eateth and
         drinketh every day?

         14:6. Then Daniel smiled, and siad: O king, be not deceived:
         for this is but clay within, and brass without, neither hath
         he eaten at any time.

         14:7. And the king being angry, called for his priests, and
         siad to them: If you tell me not who it is that eateth up
         these expenses, you shall die.

         14:8. But if you can shew that Bel eateth these things,
         Daniel shall die, because he hath blasphemed against Bel.
         And Daniel said to the king: Be it done according to thy
         word.

         14:9. Now the priests of Bel were seventy, beside their
         wives, and little ones, and children. And the king went with
         Daniel into the temple of Bel.

         14:10. And the priests of Bel said: Behold, we go out: and
         do thou, O king, set on the meats, and make ready the wine,
         and shut the door fast, and seal it with thy own ring:

         14:11. And when thou comest in the morning, if thou findest
         not that Bel hath eaten up all, we will suffer death, or
         else Daniel, that hath lied against us.

         14:12. And they little regarded it, because they had made
         under the table a secret entrance, and they always came in
         by it, and consumed those things.

         14:13. So it came to pass after they were gone out, the king
         set the meats before Bel: and Daniel commanded his servants,
         and they brought ashes, and he sifted them all over the
         temple before the king: and going forth, they shut the door,
         and having sealed it with the king's ring, they departed.

         14:14. But the priests went in by night, according to their
         custom, with their wives, and their children: and they eat
         and drank up all.

         14:15. And the king arose early in the morning, and Daniel
         with him.

         14:16. And the king said: Are the seals whole, Daniel? And
         he answered: They lare whole, O king.

         14:17. And as soon as he had opened the door, the king
         looked upon the table, and cried out with a loud voice:
         Great art thou, O Bel, and there is not any deceit with
         thee.

         14:18. And Daniel laughed: and he held the king, that he
         should not go in: and he said: Behold the pavement, mark
         whose footsteps these are.

         14:19. And the king said: I see the footsteps of men, and
         women, and children. And the king was angry.

         14:20. Then he took the priests, and their wives, and their
         children: and they shewed him the private doors by which
         they came in, and consumed the things that were on the
         table.

         14:21. The king, therefore, put them ot death, and delivered
         Bel into the power of Daniel: who destroyed him and his
         temple.

         14:22. And there was a great dragon in that place, and the
         Babylonians worshipped him.

         14:23. And the king said to Daniel: Behold, thou canst not
         say now, that this is not a living god: adore him,
         therefore.

         14:24. And Daniel said: I adore the Lord, my God: for he is
         the living God: but that is no living god.

         14:25. But give me leave, O king, and I will kill this
         dreagon without sword or club. And the king said, I give
         thee leave.

         14:26. Then Daniel took pitch, and fat, and hair, and boiled
         them together: and he made lumps, and put them into the
         dragon's mouth, and the dragon burst asunder. And he said:
         Behold him whom you worship.

         14:27. And when the Babylonians had heard this, they took
         great indignation: and being gathered together against the
         king, they said: The king is become a Jew. He hath destroyed
         Bel, he hath killed the dragon, and he hath put the priests
         to death.

         14:28. And they came to the king, and said: Deliver us
         Daniel, or else we will destroy thee and thy house.

         14:29. And the king saw that they pressed upon him
         violently: and being constrained by necessity: he delivered
         Daniel to them.

         14:30. And they cast him into the den of lions, and he was
         there six days.

         The den of lions... Daniel was twice cast into the den of
         lions; one under Darius the Mede, because he had
         transgressed the king's edict, by praying three times a
         day: and another time under Evilmerodach by a sedition of
         the people. This time he remained six days in the lions'
         den; the other time only one night.

         14:31. And in the den there were seven lions, and they had
         given to them two carcasses every day, and two sheep: but
         then they were not given unto them, that they might devour
         Daniel.

         14:32. Now there was in Judea a prophet called Habacuc, and
         he had boiled pottage, and had broken bread in a bowl: and
         was going into the field, to carry it to the reapers.

         Habacuc... The same, as some think whose prophecy is found
         among the lesser prophets but others believe him to be
         different.

         14:33. And the angel of the Lord said to Habacuc: Carry the
         dinner which thou hast into Babylon, to Daniel, who is in
         the lions' den.

         14:34. And Habacuc said: Lord, I never saw Babylon, nor do I
         know the den.

         14:35. And the angel of the Lord took him by the top of his
         head, and carried him by the hair of his head, and set him
         in Babylon, over the den, in the force of his spirit.

         14:36. And Habacuc cried, saying: O Daniel, thou servant of
         God, take the dinner that God hath sent thee.

         14:37. And Daniel said, Thou hast remembered me, O God, and
         thou hast not forsaken them that love thee.

         14:38. And Daniel arose, and eat. And the angel of the Lord
         presently set Habacuc again in his own place.

         14:39. And upon the seventh day the king came to bewail
         Daniel: and he came to the den, and looked in, and behold
         Daniel was sitting in the midst of the lions.

         14:40. And the king cried out with a loud voice, saying:
         Great art thou, O Lord, the God of DAniel. And he drew him
         out of the lions' den.

         14:41. But those that had been the cause of his destruction,
         he cast into the den, and they were devoured in a moment
         before him.

         14:42. Then the king said: Let all the inhabitants of the
         whole earth fear the God of Daniel: for he is the Saviour,
         working signs, and wonders in the earth: who hath delivered
         Daniel out of the lions' den.

The text in this file was taken with permission from Catholic Software's Douay Bible program, a complete multimedia Bible for the PC. The complete product description follows:

Douay Bible ME: A multimedia Bible. Text and footnotes are from the 1899 version of the Douay-Rheims Bible. Supports unlimited cut and paste as well as searches. It also has a concordance, topical index, and maps. These features make it powerful and easy to use. Music and color photography make it a visual and auditory feast. However, if your computer doesn't support multimedia, you can suppress these features at installation time. Available for DOS, Windows, or Windows 95. $85.00. Order from: Catholic Software, P.O. Box 1914, Murray, KY 42071. Phone: 1-502-753-8198.