We’ve been looking at the impossible situation that Nebuchadnezzar put his royal advisors in. Wanting to see whether they could truly interpret his troubling dream, he refused to tell it to them. Since none could, he determined that all would be terminated.
Only one man could both tell him his dream and interpret it to him, Daniel. Daniel diplomatically approached the king and asked for time, then went home and prayed with his friends. God answered his prayers by communicating what he needed to tell the king. But Daniel doesn’t go immediately to the king, rather he stops and takes the time to give praise back to God for His help.
In vv. 20-24 we have Daniel’s prayer of praise and thanks to God. This is the second thing most of us forget to do, to thank God for His answer.
Then Daniel blessed the God of heaven. Daniel answered and said: “Blessed be the name of God forever and ever, to whom belong wisdom and might. He changes times and seasons; he removes kings and sets up kings; he gives wisdom to the wise and knowledge to those who have understanding; he reveals deep and hidden things; he knows what is in the darkness, and the light dwells with him. To you, O God of my fathers, I give thanks and praise, for you have given me wisdom and might, and have now made known to me what we asked of you, for you have made known to us the king’s matter.”
Verses 20-21 are often thought of as the theme verses for the book of Daniel:
“Blessed be the name of God forever and ever, to whom belong wisdom and might. He changes times and seasons; he removes kings and sets up kings”
The book of Daniel and this very dream that Nebuchadnezzar had dreamed would illustrate how history is “His story” and he sovereignly “removes kings and sets up kings” because He is the Sovereign King over all of history. The “God of heaven” alone possesses the power to control world events. The future does not rest in the hands of the Babylonian kings or their gods. The gods of the nations are powerless to either bless or curse their followers (Isaiah 46:5-10). They cannot affect the future because they are blind, dumb and impotent (Isa. 44:18).
On the other hand, Israel’s God does not merely control the future; he also reveals the future to his servants. He gives wisdom to the wise and reveals mysteries of the future, as He does for Daniel here.
This is precisely what the Babylonian diviners wrote off as impossible (2:11), because they knew that the gods do not dwell with them. Yet Israel’s God, even though He is transcendent and exalted far above the heavens, does dwell with the humble and contrite of spirit (Isa. 57:15).
God determines when in history events are to take place and how long each process or phase in history is to endure. Thus Yahweh not only decreed the fall and destruction of Jerusalem in 587 B.C.—an event future for Daniel in 602 B.C.—but also the exact number of years the captivity would last (cf. Dan. 9:2).
That Daniel referred to God as “the God of heaven” is significant. Daniel’s God was the God “of mercies” (v. 18), a very close and personal God, unlike the remote demon gods of the Babylonians. But He was also the transcendent “God of heaven.” And while the wise men of Babylon might try to read the stars, Daniel knew the God who made the stars.
Prior to Israel’s captivity, the abiding presence of God departed from the temple (Ezekeil 8:4-6; 9:3; 10:4, 18-19; 11:22-23) leading to its eventual destruction at the hands of Babylon. Thus, when God’s manifest presence is no longer dwelling on earth, this title emphasizes His rule from heaven rather than from earth. Also, its use in Daniel is intended to emphasize Israel’s God as the One in command of the heavens rather than the astral bodies worshiped by the Babylonians. The information the king seeks cannot be obtained from any pagan wise man on earth because its source requires a relationship with the God of heaven.
John Phillips notes that this title occurs for the first time in 2 Chronicles 26:23, the last verse of the last book of the Jewish canon. It was a name that was introduced into the Bible because God’s earthly people, Israel, had become Lo Ammi, “not my people” and because God had withdrawn His presence from them. It is a title that demarcates that they were now in “the times of the Gentiles,” a time when God acts from heaven rather than from between the cherubim in the midst of the temple as the God of Israel.
Thomas Constable further notes: “This title for God appears five times in this chapter (vv. 18, 19, 28, 37, 44) plus elsewhere, particularly in books that have pagan Babylon as their setting. It appears in 5:23; nine times in Ezra; four times in Nehemiah; and in Genesis 24:3 and 7; Psalm 136:26; and Jonah 1:9. The Babylonians worshipped the heavens, but Yahweh is the God over all the heavens, not just the God of heaven. He is sovereign over all” (https://soniclight.com/tcon/notes/html/daniel/daniel.htm#_ftnref109).
“Blessed be the name” is significant in that the name stands in Holy Scripture for the nature or revealed character of God, and not a mere label or title.
Daniel’s prayer of praise indicates that God is both omniscient and omnipotent (“wisdom and might”) and that God is sovereignly in control of “times and seasons,” and “he removes kings and sets up kings.” This may be the very thing that Nebuchadnezzar was so worried about—the future of his kingdom. What would become of him? What about his legacy? Would Babylon survive?
These kings believed that they themselves put themselves on the throne, through the wisdom and power of their gods. Daniel’s assertion that the God of Israel was in fact the originator and grantor of human authority was a strong denial of any perceived role for the gods of the nations.
Nebuchadnezzar was raised up by God (Dan. 1:2; 2:37), but was slow to learn he would also be removed by God (Dan. 4:26, 31; 5:21). The last ruler of Babylon, Belshazzar, failed to learn this lesson (Dan. 5:21, 28). “In his dream, Nebuchadnezzar will begin to learn that it is God who is sovereign as He sets up and removes empires. Later, in his second God-given dream (chapter 4), the king will learn in a most personal way that God, not Nebuchadnezzar, is sovereign” (Paul Benware, Daniel’s Prophecy of Things to Come).
This description of God, who is in control of “times and seasons,” can be contrasted to Daniel 7:25 where the little horn, the future world ruler, shall “think to change times and laws,” that is, take the place of God who “changes the times and the seasons” (Dan 2:21).
God turns a king’s heart wherever He wishes (Prov. 21:1). He will soon make use of Cyrus to release the Jews after the Medo-Persian empire overthrows Babylon. Yet Cyrus did not know Him (Isa. 44:28; 45:1-4). At the time of the last Gentile kingdom, God will turn the hearts of the ten toes (ten horns) to give the authority of their kingdoms to the beast (Rev. 17:17). This same point is made in the New Testament (Rom. 13:1, 4).
Daniel mentioned God’s wisdom and power at the beginning and at the end of his praise (vv. 20, 23), and he illustrated both characteristics in between. This entire book clearly reveals God’s wisdom and power.
“It should fill us with joy, that infinite wisdom guides the affairs of the world. Many of its events are shrouded in darkness and mystery, and inextricable confusion sometimes seems to reign. Often wickedness prevails, and God seems to have forgotten the creatures that He has made. Our own path through life is dark and devious, and beset with difficulties and dangers. How full of consolation is the doctrine, that infinite wisdom directs every event, brings order out of confusion, and light out of darkness, and, to those who love God, causes all things, whatever be their present aspect and apparent tendency, to work together for good” (J. L. Dagg, Manual of Theology, Gano Books, 1982 edition of original 1857 edition published by The Southern Baptist Publication Society, p. 86-87).
“To do anything less than commit ourselves completely to our Lord in simple trust during the troubling times in our lives is to insult His wisdom. To resist Him, question Him, doubt Him, or criticize what He allows in our lives is to deny that He is the only wise God, and claim that we are wiser than He” (Richard Strauss, Treasures of Wisdom).
God in His grace grants us His wisdom often through four sources: prayer (James 1:5), Bible reading (Psa. 19:7), wise counsel (Prov. 12:15) and godly relationships (Prov. 13:20).
God enables his servants to have wisdom and knowledge (v. 21b) and he “reveals deep and hidden things” and “he knows what is in the darkness” so that Daniel could interpret Nebuchadnezzar’s dream.
In the immediate context, Daniel refers to God’s ability to see the unknown and to expose it—as in the hidden dream of Nebuchadnezzar. This light illumines what would otherwise be hidden or unknown. There is nothing remaining in darkness before God’s omniscient gaze.
In other passages, we find God is the source of light (Gen. 1:3; John 1:3-5). Indeed, it is part of His very nature (1 John. 1:5-7). In the gospel of John, the Logos, Christ, is identified as the light of the world (John 1:9; 3:19; 8:12; 9:5; 12:46).
This light—provided by Daniel’s interpretation—provides the sought-after answer Nebuchadnezzar’s soul desired. Only God can provide the answer to the issues of the heart and eternity. “So the great existential questions of life and death continue to be insoluble to the worldly wise. Without divine revelation, there is only conjecture and subjective opinion” (Gleason Archer Jr. Daniel).
God not only controls the future, but reveals the future to his servants. This is the reason why Israel should never depend upon idols, for they cannot predict the future (Isa. 41:21-42:9). The gods cannot deliver the nations, cannot create, cannot predict the future, and therefore, should not be worshipped.
And again, Daniel says…
To you, O God of my fathers, I give thanks and praise, for you have given me wisdom and might, and have now made known to me what we asked of you, for you have made known to us the king’s matter.” (Daniel 2:23)
Walvoord comments on how Daniel puts God first in this sentence, emphasizing by position in the sentence, “to you.” Like the Psalmist, he wants to say, “Not to us, O LORD, not to us, but to your name give glory,” (Psalm 115:1).
Perhaps Daniel’s reference to “God of my fathers” is his understanding that he was experiencing God’s compassion in a way similar to how his spiritual forefathers experienced it—in very personal and immediate ways and through prayer. The “God of heaven” was the “God of my fathers” (vv. 19, 23). Daniel knew that he stood in the line of all the great covenants that God had made with His people. As a descendant of Judah (Daniel 1:3, 6), the son of Jacob, the son of Isaac, the son of Abraham. This is one of the titles God has taken to Himself.
God also said to Moses, “Say this to the people of Israel: ‘The Lord, the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, has sent me to you.’ This is my name forever, and thus I am to be remembered throughout all generations” (Exod. 3:15)
This name emphasizes God’s covenant faithfulness and is rooted in the covenant He established with Abraham, who was called from the very region where Daniel now found himself captive. Abraham left “Ur of the Chaldeans” (Gen. 11:28; 15:7; Neh. 9:7) bound for the Promised Land of Israel and now Daniel finds himself back to the land of the Chaldeans! Yet despite all outward appearance, Daniel understood God was still bound by His promise to the fathers (Gen. 12:1-3; Gen. 15:7; 17:19-21; 21:12; 22:18; 25:5, 11, 23; 26:3-5; 26:24; 27:27; 28:3-4, 13-15; 32:9; 35:11; 48:4; 49:10). It was God’s covenant faithfulness standing as a guarantee behind Daniel and his companions who found themselves back in the region of Ur under foreign domination.
And Daniel gives him “thanks and praise” because God had given “what we asked of you,” (did you notice the plural?), the “wisdom and might” needed to communicate to the king. Walvoord notes: “Notice should be made of the pronouns, namely, that while the revelation was given to Daniel as an individual, it was what ‘we [plural] asked of you,’ and through Daniel the king’s secret was ‘made known unto us,’ that is, Daniel’s companions. Daniel does not attribute to his own prayers any special efficacy.”
The prayers in the book of Daniel bring more than deliverance for Daniel, his companions, and the nation. In heaven’s response, important revelation from God will be recorded for the benefit of all mankind.
Within a few years of this night, the entire Jewish race will come under threat in Persia. In response, Mordecai, Esther, and the Jews of Persia fast and pray to obtain deliverance (Esther 4:15-16).
This doxology is at the structural and theological center of this chapter, and, in fact, “God’s sovereignty and wisdom surge like mighty rivers throughout the whole book and figure in other biblical doxologies that praise his might and wisdom (cf. 1 Chron. 29:11; Rom. 11:33-36).
This assertion that Israel’s God is the one who alone possesses all power and wisdom was an important reminder to Daniel’s hearers. As exiles in Babylon, they were surrounded by alternative religions that all claimed to offer access to the hidden mysteries of the universe. But the events of this chapter expose the emptiness to their claims: there is only one God who reveals the future, because there is only one God who controls the future.
We also need to be reminded of this truth today. It is not the politicians, the celebrities or the scientists who control this world, but God alone. The wisdom of the world may at times look outwardly impressive, but only God truly possesses wisdom and knowledge. He alone has the power to work all things according to His will (Eph. 1:9; Romans 8:28).
Daniel was now confident that the information that God had given him would save their lives. This confidence is testimony to the clarity and obvious supernatural source of this revelation. Daniel did not need to contrive an answer that he hoped would satisfy the king, as the Babylonian seers might have tried. He simply needed to declare the revelation that the only living and true God had given him.
Throughout the book Daniel would have equal confidence in the other prophecies God gave to him, even if they dealt with great details of future events.
When we have wonderful answers to prayer, then we should testify to God’s goodness and greatness, which is exactly what Daniel does in vv. 24-30.
David Jeremiah notes: “As we see the actions of a boy growing into a man, a composite picture of Daniel begins to appear. He is composed before crisis, courageous before the captain who is to take his life, confident before God in prayer, careful before his success to give praise to the Lord, and when God answers his prayer he is contrite in his spirit” (Handwriting on the Wall, p. 55).
Warren Wiersbe concludes: “When God’s people face a crisis, they need to follow the example of Daniel and his friends and take the matter to the Lord in prayer. Faith is living without scheming, and faith brings glory to God. Daniel and his friends couldn’t take credit for what happened because it came from the hand of God. “Call upon Me in the day of trouble, I will deliver you and you shall glorify Me” (Psalm 50:15). “Whatever God can do faith can do,” said A. W. Tozer, “and whatever faith can do prayer can do when it is offered in faith. An invitation to prayer is, therefore, an invitation to omnipotence, for prayer engages the Omnipotent God and brings Him into our human affairs” (The Set of the Sail, p. 33).