Falling Hard: A Lesson in Humility

One week, I talked with someone about Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice”, which could be a fitting title for chapter 4 of Daniel. Proverbs 16:18 states that “Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall”, for which this narrative is a prime example. Despite previous examples of God’s sovereignty (https://robert-a-l-blake.com/god-delivers-us/), Nebuchadnezzar apparently needed another lesson in humility. He had twice previously confessed the God of heaven as the God of gods (Daniel 2:47; Daniel 3:28-29), but still appeared to be unconvinced. It reminds me of Peter and his denial of Christ (Mark 14:29, 66-72) and his subsequent acceptance of Christ’s commission (John 21:15-19).

A Lesson in Humility

God presented Nebuchadnezzar with his third and final lesson in humility. Not only was he forewarned in a dream, as in a previous chapter (Daniel 2), but he stumbled down the same unyielding path as before by requesting help from so-called wise men. After Daniel pointed him in the right direction, along with an admonition of warning, he took the final plunge. The most powerful man on earth then lived as a beast in the field for seven years. True to the prophecy, however, he finally lifted his eyes to heaven and acknowledged the God of Heaven (Daniel 4:37).

Did it take all of that to erase pride? Obviously it did. The Bible also states that they wrote these things as examples (1 Corinthians 10:11). For whom? For us! Nebuchadnezzar needed three experiences of a lesson in humility to recognize the true source of his wealth and power. Some of us may require more or less.

We serve a merciful and gracious God. He longs for our success. Sometimes we get ahead of Him and forget the Source of our blessings. He allows us to experience lessons of humility, but still extends grace and mercy.

Prayer

Loving Lord, thank You for patiently teaching us to trust in You. When we fall, You pick us up. You never give up on us. A lesson in humility is just another evidence of Your love and desire for us to be more like You. Thank you for Your grace and mercy. Amen.

I pray this post has blessed you. Please like, comment, share, and subscribe. Please contact me via the platform where you read this post to have a more in-depth study of the book of Daniel and end-time prophecies.

Dream of the King

Daniel chapter 2 is the first of the book’s prophecies and brings Daniel himself more into the forefront, as alluded to earlier (https://robert-a-l-blake.com/integrity-without-exception-daniel-the-narrative/). God sends a dream to King Nebuchadnezzar, who is a heathen deity. Yet, he is not beyond the capability of being used by God. In fact, this dream of the king outlined the stage of world events from his time to the second coming of Christ.

Why didn’t Daniel or one of his companions receive the dream directly? God can use anyone and wants to save everyone. The apostle Paul describes it this way: “For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Saviour, Who will have all men to be saved and to come unto the knowledge of the truth.” I Timothy 2:3, 4. The king has a close encounter with the Monarch of heaven and confesses Him as God of all, as we will see later on in the book!

Who is in charge here?

This is the core of the book of Daniel. Yes, the other prophecies are important and serve as bulwark components of faith. The underlying theme is God as the Master Conductor of history and world events on the universal stage. This point is so crucial that it echoes and weaves itself throughout the pages of Scripture. It is paramount that we understand and acknowledge this. He is the same God today Who desires to be intimately involved in each of our lives. There is great potential in store for our lives if we connect our lives with God—the possibilities are limitless!

The Dream’s Interpretation

Daniel received the dream’s interpretation because of earnest prayer after failure by the so-called magicians — a nod to the Moses-Pharaoh drama 1,000 years previously (Exodus 8:19). God is the same today—“If ye abide in me, and my words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you.” John 15:7. We often take this verse out of context to mean literally what it says—anything—a Ferrari, $10 million! The verses before and following this text set the stage for what is the object—the Father’s glory and obedience to His commandments. Daniel exemplified the latter part of James 5:16—“The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much.”

Prayer

Dear Lord, help us spend time in Your word in order to receive direction for each aspect of life. Help each of us to develop a close relationship with You that when You speak, we will recognize Your voice. In Jesus’ name I pray, amen.

I pray this piece has blessed you; if so, please like, subscribe, and share.

Integrity Without Exception

Have you ever read the book of Daniel? For many, it can be foreboding and quite intimidating. There are a lot of strange characters, symbols, and seemingly secret meanings. That is on the surface. When one inspects the narrative, it is understandable and indeed quite relevant to us today. Daniel is the story of a young man who made the best of challenging circumstances and made himself available for service. He didn’t volunteer for his life-altering journey, but accepted it. Daniel showed integrity without exception.

Examples of Integrity Without Exception: Joseph and Daniel

In reviewing the story of Daniel, I can’t help but compare and contrast him to Joseph (Genesis 37, 39-50). Interestingly, at least 1,000 years them, yet we know God is timeless! They both ended up in similar positions in two of the most prominent nations of the earth at their respective times. Though they ended up with similar ranks (#2), they entered their respective nations in different fashion. Both entered as captives and presumably in chains. Joseph entered as a slave, whereas Daniel entered as an “international exchange student”, if you will. Joseph, though imprisoned, never literally faced loss of life; whereas Daniel, though not imprisoned, faced a loss of life—twice. Both passed their series of trials and showed complete allegiance to God, Who rewarded them stupendously. Joseph and Daniel showed unfailing integrity, without exception.

Daniel chapter 1

Daniel and his compatriots entered the first scene (Daniel 1) in quite dramatic fashion with a test, which was seemingly unintended by King Nebuchadnezzar. Yes, the king’s goal was an attempt to brainwash them, but he didn’t expect resistance. He intended it to be a rather routine indoctrination in Babylonian culture, but the young men recognized it as an overt challenge to their relationship with their God. Considering that their forefathers had compromised in spirituality, which resulted in this abrupt relocation for these gentlemen, they sought to stay loyal to God no matter the cost.

Each step was progressive—initially a name change, then forbidden diet, and finally disavowal of God as the Sovereign Lord. Though not tests from the king, God allowed them to prove His servants. They passed the series of tests and stood in stark contrast to other trainees, among which were other young men of similar background. God expects, notices, and rewards obedience.

Heavenly Father, I pray for the readers of this post that they will understand and love Your Word. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

If you have been blessed by this post, please like and share it, thank you.

Blood

There are memories from childhood that stay with you forever. Examples are your first pet, first school day, first kiss, pet’s death, or loved one’s death. You may even have remembrance of a particular event, whether good or bad. You may relate them to the seasons and relive the moments each year. For me, that season was summer.

As a boy growing up in the South, things triggered summer. School was out—hooray! Summer church meetings took place. The fireflies appeared at night—first, an occasional flicker that I chased to predetermine its next signal. I gathered as many as I could into the glass jar I carried. To my dismay, I never achieved the lantern effect I expected in my room later that night.

The primary indicator that summer arrived was that it got hot! It became hot enough to drain every drop of liquid from every pore of my body. This required incessant, often futile hydration with water or any available drink, popsicles, and other frozen treats. One drank from the garden hose and did not worry. Those days were carefree, at least for kids. Helmets or pads for riding bicycles or any other wheeled objects were unheard of, as bumps, bruises, cuts, and sometimes breaks became the unfortunate “normal” parts of growing older.

One such summer day, my most memorable event occurred. My family lived in Nashville for the summer, as my parents attended school. As we drove on our usual route, we stopped at the traffic light. A man walking on the sidewalk teetered and fell straight backwards and we watched with disbelief as the back of his skull burst on the sidewalk! Blood splattered, and he shook uncontrollably. Bystanders rushed to him, one cradling his head while applying pressure with a white handkerchief, which became saturated.

Why did that man fall? Was he sick, drunk, or overheated? I did not have any medical science to even parlay a guess. A man fell and broke his head, which was abnormal. Even now, I remember the scene and the aroma of the restaurant nearby. Every time we drove past the site, being our usual route, I saw the blood-soaked sidewalk; a vivid reminder of what took place, which then triggered an instant multisensory recall.

One day, as we drove past, the scene changed. I could not see the blood stain on the sidewalk! The site was unmistakable, but the blood was not there, gone—clean! As I reflected on this in the recent past, it reminded me of the spiritual correlation of blood.

The theme of blood as a redemptive source ripples through the Bible from Genesis to Revelation. The story is told in the Old Testament book of Leviticus that blood served as the symbolic means of cleansing the Israelites from their sins. In the sanctuary service, each station represented an attribute of Christ as Redeemer. This included blood transferred from the sinner’s animal sacrifice in progressive steps to the veil that shielded God’s presence after confession of sins. Each year on the Day of Atonement, or Yom Kippur, the sanctuary became cleansed of accumulated sins after being transferred to a scapegoat. The blood no longer remained as a silent witness of one’s sins, but gone! The sinner, the guilty sinner, stood guiltless—he was clean!

Jesus Christ today offers each one of us pardon, not based on symbolic animal blood, but on the merits of His shed blood over two thousand years ago (Hebrews 9:28; I John 4:10). The Bible says that we all have sinned (Romans 3:23) and deserve to die (Romans 6:23). But if we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and make us clean (1 John 1:9).