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Introduction
Ichabod! Why give this
chapter the title 'Ichabod' you ask? Well, do you remember the story from a
dark passage in
1. The spirit of
2. What God thought…
3. What God did!
4. Our response
Let's have a look.
The Spirit of
Dan
5:1-4 King Belshazzar gave a great banquet for a thousand of his nobles and
drank wine with them. While Belshazzar was drinking his wine, he gave orders to
bring in the gold and silver goblets that Nebuchadnezzar his father had taken
from the temple in
The chapter starts then, with a new king. King Belshazzar was believed to have been Nebuchadnezzar's grandson[1] and unfortunately, as we see above, the humility and faith that King Nebuchadnezzar had come into had not carried on with Belshazzar. The saying that God only has sons, not grandsons, is true indeed.
Now there are three things that stand out
in this passage concerning their attitude at this time:
1) Life was a party! They had it all… Nobles, wives, concubines, wine…
Historians tell us that these ‘parties’ were essentially drunken sexual orgies.
Live for today was the motto of
2) Worship created things – The second point that stands out is that they worshiped the ‘gods’ of silver and gold yet mocked the true God. We see that Belshazzar had no problem in using the sacred items from the Jewish temple to worship and honor these other 'gods' while emphasising his superiority over the God of Israel!
3) Self confident smugness – The history and setting of this passage is
very interesting. History tells us that as they partied up, the Medo-Persian
empire was outside the walls of
So that was the spirit of
What
God thought - Oh you wanton creature!
Isa 47:9-11 “Now then, listen, you wanton creature, lounging in your security
and saying to yourself, “I am, and there
is none besides me. I will never be a widow or suffer the loss of children.’
Both of these will overtake you in a moment, on a single day: loss of children
and widowhood. They will come upon you in full measure, in spite of your many
sorceries and all your potent spells. You
have trusted in your wickedness and have said, ‘No one sees me.’ Your
wisdom and knowledge mislead you when you say to yourself, ‘I am, and there is
none besides me.’ Disaster will come
upon you, and you will not know how to conjure it away. A calamity will
fall upon you that you cannot ward off with a ransom; a catastrophe you cannot
foresee will suddenly come upon you.
We do not have to be in the dark at all about what God thought of this Babylonian spirit for it has been recorded for us through Isaiah’s prophecy in chapter 47. I have written some of it above but you would do well to go away and read it all. Firstly God calls them a ‘wanton creature’. The word wanton means ‘sexually loose, senseless, extravagant’. We see again here that their attitude was to say to themselves that ‘I am…’, ‘I have no need…’, ‘Nothing can ever touch me’. ‘I don’t even need God!’ Remind you of anything?[4] Well, let’s now have a look at God’s response.
What
God did – The Writing is on the Wall!
Daniel
5:5-9 Suddenly the fingers of a human hand appeared and wrote on the plaster of
the wall, near the lampstand in the royal palace. The king watched the hand
as it wrote. His face turned pale and he was so frightened that his knees
knocked together and his legs gave way. The king called out for the
enchanters, astrologers and diviners to be brought and said to these wise men
of
Even as he and his guests wined and dined, the Medo-Persian Empire sat outside the Babylonian walls. But the king didn't care. He was confident that they had done everything necessary to ensure their victory. But then a strange little hand appeared and the laughter turned to fear.[5] The king didn't find this hand at all funny. In fact, he was so frightened that his knees even knocked together! What the might of the Medo-Persian Empire hadn't been able to do, God had now performed through the use of a hand, a wall, and four little words. It is fair to say that seeing the writing on the wall is a fearful thing - then and now. The writing is on the wall for any nation that revels in the same Babylonian spirit that we see here.[6]
Unfortunately, the king had obviously
learned nothing from the stories of king Nebuchadnezzar, and again turns to the
threefold dummies of his enchanters, astrologers and diviners. And they again
prove themselves to be as 'on to it' as their predecessors had been in the days
of Nebuchadnezzar... Ah, not at all!
Conclusion:
Our response
Daniel
5:10-16 The queen, hearing the voices of the king and his nobles, came into the
banquet hall. “O king, live forever!” she said. “Don’t be alarmed! Don’t look
so pale! There is a man in your kingdom who has the spirit of the holy gods
in him. In the time of your father he was found to have insight and
intelligence and wisdom like that of the gods. King Nebuchadnezzar your
father—your father the king, I say—appointed him chief of the magicians,
enchanters, astrologers and diviners. This man Daniel, whom the king called
Belteshazzar, was found to have a keen mind and knowledge and understanding,
and also the ability to interpret dreams, explain riddles and solve difficult
problems. Call for Daniel, and he will tell you what the writing means.” So Daniel
was brought before the king, and the king said to him, “Are you Daniel, one of
the exiles my father the king brought from
It is interesting that people could see that the writing is on the wall and that it made them fearful, but they didn’t know what it all meant or what to do about it. It seems that we are in that position now. There is fear and anxiety over the collapsing financial markets, fear over job security and fear over CO2 emissions and global warming. What is needed is a ‘Daniel’ who can not only see the writing on the wall, but also interpret the signs for the people. Bible believing Christians should be that people.
Now the king may have been a dead loss but
at least the queen had some wisdom as in the moment of crisis she remembered
that ‘there is a man’ who could help.[7] It is
interesting that in the time of a crisis people start looking for answers! From
the above passage it seems that Daniel hadn’t been consulted for some time. Not
in the reign of this king at least. And yet, when real trouble comes into town,
he is sought for again. It seems in the west at least that we have hit that
part of the cycle where our abundance has lead to selfishness, and selfishness
has lead to apathy towards spiritual matters. Is God now shaking things up? Is
He allowing the current financial crisis to shake people out of their
complacency? I believe so. We’ll see in the next study what became of
May we too be like him as we see and interpret the writing that is appearing on the wall.
[1] Please note that
the term 'father' as it is used in Dan 5:2 can refer to any male ancestor.
[2] The scene is
reminiscent of what Paul wrote in 1 Cor 15:32 "If the dead are not
raised, 'Let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we die.' In other words, if
there is no God, if there is no after life, if there is no resurrection or
judgment to come, then live it up! Party, party party! Live for today only, for
tomorrow we die! That was Belshazzar's attitude. It is also the attitude of
countless others today. It would make perfect sense… if there was no God. It
makes no sense if there is a God and there is a life and judgment after death.
[3] As Dr Renald
Showers points out in his book 'The Most High God'
'Nebuchadnezzar
had made
[4] Here is a clue. It
is one of the churches in the book of Revelation. Doesn’t really rhyme with
anything but starts with ‘L’ and ends with ‘’Cea’. It reminds us, does it not, of the Laodicean
church of Revelation chapter 3 where Jesus is pictured outside the church while
those inside revel in their wealth saying 'I am rich; I have acquired wealth
and do not need a thing.' The worship of the gods of gold and silver isn't just
a thing of the past! Is not 'Ichabod' written already over the wealthy
self-sufficient western churches of our modern 'Laodicean' age?
[5] You’ve all heard
the saying ‘the writing is on the wall’ I’m sure. It’s roots is Daniel 5 – that
passage before us. It signifies some impending doom. Someone might say ‘I
haven’t lost my job yet but the writing is on the wall’. ‘Well that same is
spoken of nations. Something inevitable is about to happen to
[6] Ok, this is likely
to be a larger footnote. Preparations for this study took me into some passages
and quotes from Edward Gibbon’s 6 volume work on the fall of
“From bondage to spiritual faith; from
spiritual faith to great courage; from courage to liberty; from liberty to
abundance; from abundance to selfishness; from selfishness to complacency; from
complacency to apathy; from apathy to dependence; from dependence to bondage.”
That being
the case, where would you say the
1.
The
rapid increase in divorce and the undermining of the sanctity of the home
2. The spiraling rise of taxes and
extravagant spending
3. The mounting craze for pleasure
and the brutalization of sports
4. The building of gigantic
armaments and the failure to realize that the real enemy lay within the walls
with the moral decay of the people.
5. The decay of religion and the
fading of faith into a mere form leaving the people without a guide.
Read
those five points again for they are eerily reminiscent of the age in which we
live. In connection to this, consider the following quote from Abraham Lincoln
concerning the
Sobering words and thoughts in the current economic, social and political
climate!
[7] Ultimately Jesus
Christ is the only man with any lasting answers. But we are his ambassadors so
you should have some answers for people who are living in fear and anxiety due
to the writing that is appearing on the wall.