The image in Daniels dream...what does it mean now?

by uuus2b1 15 Replies latest jw friends

  • Leolaia
    Leolaia

    According to 4 Ezra 12:11-12, the interpretation of the "fourth kingdom" (i.e. the iron legs of the image in ch. 2, the beast with iron teeth in ch. 7) as Rome was not Daniel's own view but was a later interpretation.

  • Terry
    Terry

    If you stop and think about it a moment.........................................................................................................................................

    it is mind-boggling that just about everybody has had a go at Daniel's so-called "prophecy" in the last thousand years or so!!

    I mean everybody!

    All the great minds (and not so great) have had the irresistable urge to EXPLAIN, explicate, divulge, hermenuticize and expound upon what Daniel is telling us about End Times!

    Isn't it embarassing how they contradict each other? Isn't it humiliating that these explanations always fail?

    Couldn't it be because these writings mean nothing at all??

    That never seems to occur to anybody.

  • Leolaia
    Leolaia

    No, it's not that it means nothing....it's because there've been so many attempts to reinterpret the text after the fact, and the original historical situation has long faded. If you look at current academic literature, there is very wide agreement on most of the particulars... The visions really aren't any more opaque than other apocalypses of the era, like the Animal Apocalypse of 1 Enoch which was written at roughly the same time. The great vision in ch. 11, for instance, is a very valuable historical document giving a survey of Seleucid history from a Jewish point of view, containing some information found nowhere else. It gives a striking window into the Jewish reaction to the Antiochene persecution of 168-165 BC, written during the time of the persecution itself.... In no sense is it simply a tabula rasa on which a person may project his/her interpretations, tho it has been subjected to this ever since. In another thread in this forum, I showed exactly how the Society's interpretation of ch. 11 does violence to the text and how they literally skip over Antiochus IV in order to apply everything that originally pertained to him to the future and to our own day. The scholarly interpretation is hardly an arbitrary exercise like this but rather is guided by the internal features of the text...

  • Terry
    Terry
    No, it's not that it means nothing....it's because there've been so many attempts to reinterpret the text after the fact, and the original historical situation has long faded. If you look at current academic literature, there is very wide agreement on most of the particulars...

    The use to which the Bible is put in the world at large is disproportionately prophetic; i.e. End Times and Salvation (after Armageddon).

    Next to that, the Bible is thumb-sucking. Which is to say it soothes people by positing a babysitter in the clouds who has their best interests at heart.

    After that, the Bible is a bludgeon used by clever leaders to shape a community of followers, givers and lock-step rubber-stampers to whatever ends the leader aspires. (Everything from Crystal Cathedrals to vast mansions and sleek cars and jets.)

    Last, and surely least, the Bible is a default "historical" document. I say "least" because it does this so badly. One could spend hours and hours pointing out the errors, contradictions, revisional inclusions/exclusions which do violence to actual history.

    If the Bible text of Daniel (the first non-Prophet :) has any value beyond filling in a few missing blanks (as Leolaia mentions here) for the piddling academia, that value would accrue to the time it wastes by occupying really intelligent people with misplaced expectations cherry-picking their way to glory.

    At best, texts such as Daniel gave latter day revisionists another go at explaining shame-facedly why the chosen-people are still Yahweh's beloved even though they were constantly on the brink of being swallowed up and made extinct as World History overtook them time and again.

    The title of this thread, as to "what does it mean now?" bespeaks the besodden intoxication it imparts to everybody who gives it a solemn whiff of credence.

  • proplog2
    proplog2

    The way to understand Daniel is to work backwards instead of forward.

    After all the suggestion is that it would be sealed until the time of the end.

    Everyone thinks they live in the time of the end right?

    There is something unique and significant about OUR time. Nuclear weapons!!! It is now possible for humans to destroy themselves.

    Working your way backward Daniel says the Great Tribulation would be preceded by some King of the South pushing some King of the North.

    Every day there are articles describing just such a situation. Of course if you are an American you are so concerned with Bush, Hillary, Obama, Trump, Rosie Odonnel, Oprah, Jerry Springer, Nascar, Mexican Immigrants that you pay little or no attention to what is happening.

    the eXile
    March 23, 2007
    Russia Goes Ballistic
    By Alexander Zaitchik ([email protected])

    The growing flap over missile defense bases in
    Eastern Europe has me thinking back to 1998, to
    the raucous American debate over NATO expansion.
    Remember that? Me neither. Just about everyone
    who mattered wanted to expand the NATO umbrella
    over the Poles, the Czechs, and the Huns. Most
    everyone else was at least resigned to enlarging
    NATO's "zone of peace and security."

    Only a few people bothered speaking out against
    expansion, and the list wasn't that impressive.
    It included right-wing hag Phyllis Schlafly, who
    thought NATO constituted "European welfare", and
    mega-hack Thomas Friedman, who argued it was
    stupid to needlessly piss off or frighten Russia,
    a weakened but major nuclear power with a
    dilapidated early warning system. Surprisingly,
    the Times editorial board agreed with their
    columnist. It was a lonely position.

    The debate, such as it was, ended in a steamroll,
    with Friedman et. al. entombed face up in wet
    concrete. Schlafley and the Times were no match
    for Lockheed Martin, Bill Clinton and Vaclav
    Havel. Expansion sailed through, as it did again
    in 2002, and Russian concerns were waved off by
    champagne drinking western officials. "Re-lax,"
    Moscow was told. "Sure the Poles and Latvians
    hate your guts, but we're your bankers! Stop
    worrying. Take in a ballet. Go eat some borscht."

    Nine years later, the same basic dialogue is
    still on loop. Just like in '98, Russian generals
    are warning Washington against overstepping along
    their western border. Back when Russia was down
    and everybody knew it, these warnings contained
    an undertone of pleading. Not anymore. The U.S.
    plan for missile defenses in Eastern Europe is
    the dangerous tipping point in relations with a
    resurgent Russia. Everyone keeps saying they
    don't want a definitive split or another arms
    race, but that's exactly what's happening.

    It's been happening for years, in excruciating
    slow-motion. Missile defense isn't just an
    isolated project that can be forced down Moscow's
    throat with a few "briefings" and an emergency
    meeting of the (practically defunct) NATO-Russian
    Council. It's the latest move in all-too coherent
    strategy of encircling Russia with U.S. allies and NATO outposts.

    There are two reasons the missile defense
    provocation will likely push U.S./NATO-Russian
    relations to the breaking point. First is the
    continuum issue; it's just one broken promise too
    many. In 1991 the west promised Gorbachev that
    NATO would not encroach east if the Warsaw Pact
    disappeared. After promising to remain a
    "defensive" alliance dedicated to stabilization
    in Europe, it bombed Serbia. In another 1998
    promise, NATO said it would not allow advanced
    new weapons systems in new member countries. Now
    comes the missile defense plans. And people say we can't trust North Korea?

    Second, the missile-defense system proposed for
    Poland and the Czech Rep (and perhaps, says the
    Pentagon, Ukraine and Georgia) is a work in
    progress. U.S. officials can downplay the size of
    the first seedling installations, but it's the
    future that matters. While the system we're
    hearing about calls for just 10 conventional
    missiles, the technology is fetal, with early
    sonar scans suggest the baby has Down Syndrome.
    Analysts on both sides have admitted the system
    as currently imagined may later be abandoned or
    modified to include nuclear anti-missile
    missiles. The Czech and Polish bases are also to
    be integrated into America's nascent global
    missile defense architecture, including
    futuristic space-based elements. A comprehensive
    Death Star missile defense network is the key to
    Washington's stated goal of "full-spectrum dominance."

    The western pooh-pooh chorus is well practiced at
    portraying Russian statements of concern as the
    lashing out of a dim-witted, paranoid, and
    possibly expansionist power. But this chorus
    sings primarily for western domestic consumption;
    Russians stopped believing their assurances years
    ago. Lead baritone is NATO Secretary General Jaap
    de Hoop Scheffer, who recently said, "You don't
    need to be a technological wizard or an Einstein
    to understand that this cannot be possibly
    directed against the Russians and cannot diminish
    their first-strike capability."

    That's odd, because an article last year in
    Foreign Affairs by Keir A. Lieber and Daryl G.
    Press explained clearly and unabashedly why the
    missile defense system is not only obviously
    geared toward Russia (and China), but furthermore
    that the system will finally allow the U.S. to
    launch a "successful" first nuclear strike
    against Russia without worrying about
    retaliation, giving the U.S. total world nuclear
    supremacy. (Let's ignore for the moment the fact
    that such an attack would trigger global nuclear
    winter.) Aside from tempting the U.S. to commit
    the unthinkable, nuclear primacy has other
    obvious benefits: it is the ultimate political
    power-tool, dramatically increasing NATO/U.S. leverage in crisis-bargaining.

    Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander
    Losyukov recently tried to explain the reality of
    the situation to a Bloomberg reporter. "Whether
    [military programs] are done with good intentions
    or bad, it doesn't matter, it increases the
    hypothetical threat," he said. "We are reacting
    to that in terms of taking necessary military measures.''

    Col-Gen Boris Cheltsov, chief of staff of the air
    force, has likewise described U.S. missile
    defense plans as "a serious threat to the
    military and, consequently, national security of
    Russia, and this can disrupt the whole system of
    strategic stability in the world." Cheltsov also
    points to U.S. programs developing space weapons
    and new high-tech high-altitude aircraft as
    related causes for concern. These Pentagon
    programs form part of the backdrop to Russia and
    China's new crotch-bulging defense budgets
    (combined still a fraction the size of America's.)

    NATO expansion may have started the recent
    downtrend in relations being accelerated by
    missile defense, but there's a long history of
    mistrust between the U.S. and Russia. It goes all
    the way back to the first major beef between the
    two countries. In 1917, shortly after the
    Bolsheviks took power, Woodrow Wilson insisted
    that America had "no intention to interfere in
    the internal affairs of Russia" and would
    "guarantee" that her troops would "not impair the
    political or territorial sovereignty of Russia."
    Meanwhile more than 200,000 foreign troops,
    including 15,000 Americans, invaded Russia between 1918-1920.

    Compare Wilson's words to those of U.S. National
    Security Adviser Stephen Hadley, who last month
    repeated the administration mantra that, "[T]he
    [missile defense] system is not directed at
    Russia, it is a system of limited capability, and
    it poses no threat to the Russian strategic
    deterrent." Just repeat after us: You have
    nothing to fear. We come in peace. Go eat some borscht.

    To be fair, Hadley's right. At the moment the
    system is completely dysfunctional and poses no
    threat to anyone. But in 10, 20, 30 years? And
    what if some future administration as deranged as
    the current one bases its foreign policy on the
    assumption that it does work? These are the
    questions that matter. Answer them honestly and
    you see the world's (not just Russia's) point:
    missile defense is a bad idea, and missile
    defense in Eastern Europe is pouring stupid on
    stupid. To their credit, even most Poles and Czechs agree.

    Russia's response to this latest provocation has
    been predictable. If the other guy with a gun is
    putting on a bullet proof vest, you're going to
    take your own gun off safety and point it at his
    face -- or his nuts. As it did after NATO
    expanded and started raining bombs on Serbia,
    Russia's general staff is once again set to
    revise its military doctrine, with more emphasis
    on one guess nuclear weapons. But not just any
    nukes. New nukes. Bigger nukes. Faster nukes. Closer nukes.

    And retro nukes. Russia is already talking about
    reintroducing short and medium range tactical
    nuclear missiles into Europe if the U.S. proceeds
    with its missile defense plans. Along with being
    a brilliant wedge thrust between the U.S. and its
    main NATO allies, it's the most fashion-backward
    move in major power warfare since the U.S.A.F.
    used napalm on Saddam's troops in '03.

    Tactical nukes. You may remember these European
    Continent-frying weapons from the early-80s, when
    the U.S. put medium-range Pershings in West
    Germany, triggering a mass peace movement in
    Europe. Moscow already had its own short and
    medium range missiles in place, the SS-20. Both
    were scrapped with the 1987 signing of the Treaty
    on the Elimination of Intermediate-Range and Shorter-Range Missiles (RSMD).

    Then the cold war became black-and-white footage
    and we forgot all about nuclear weapons, unless
    they had North Korean, Iraqi, or Iranian flags painted on them.

    Someone cue the Devo, because it's looking like
    New Wave night at cafe Europa. Chief of the
    General Staff Yuriy Baluyevskiy has said Russia
    will withdraw from RSMD if the U.S. proceeds with
    its missile defense plans in Russia's backyard.
    Doing his Bush impersonation, top presidential
    candidate and first vice premier Sergei Ivanov
    has already called RSMD "a relic of the Cold
    War." If Russia does abandon the treaty, it will
    likely revive the Oka, a very fast and easily
    targeted short-range weapon known as the
    "Kalashnikov of missiles." You really wouldn't
    want a nuclear-tipped Oka to get commandeered by
    the wrong sort of people. Even a drooling
    Qaeda-tard like Richard Reid could probably
    launch one. Among the serious downsides of any
    new arms race will be a world awash in more
    assembled nuclear weapons and material in an age of nuclear terror.

    All of which is not to say that Russia is some
    poor little cuddle-bear that just wants to buy
    the world a Kvas. Far from it. Yet it is not the
    one leading this dangerous nuclear waltz. Jaap de
    Hoop Scheffer and Steve Hadley can downplay
    missile defense until they actually believe their
    own words, but the difference between "defensive"
    or "offensive" weapons is in the eye of the
    beholder. And the only beholder that matters is
    Russia, which can wipe America off the map a lot
    faster and easier than Iran or North Korea.

  • Terry
    Terry

    ......or not!

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