Who confirms what covenant with whom during the last 7 years?

ABSTRACT: In Daniel 9:27, “he will make a firm covenant with the many for one week.” In Dispensationalism, this is an end-time Antichrist who will make a covenant with many during the seven last years before Christ returns. But this article shows that it is Jesus Christ who confirms God’s covenant with Israel through the 3½ years of His personal ministry plus, after His death, 3½ years of His ministry through the Holy Spirit.

A summary of this article is available HERE.


Purpose

Daniel 9:27 reads:

“… he shall confirm the covenant with many for one week;
and in the midst of the week
he shall cause the sacrifice and the oblation to cease”

Jerusalem destroyed

The “one week” is the last of the seventy weeks, namely, the last seven years. The “he” must refer to somebody mentioned in the previous verse (Dan 9:26). That verse refers to two people: the Messiah who is “cut off” and “the prince that shall come,” whose people will destroy the city. It must be one of them.

In Dispensationalism, the “he,” who will make a firm covenant with many, is the “prince” of verse 26 whose people destroyed the city in AD 70. Since that refers to the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70 by the Romans, Dispensationalism argues that the prince in verse 27 will be an end-time leader of a revived Roman Empire. He will be the Antichrist and will reign during the last seven years before Christ returns. The “firm covenant” is interpreted as some new pact into which that Antichrist will enter at the beginning of the last seven years. But, during those seven years, he will break his covenant and destroy the sanctuary and its services.

In contrast, this article shows that “he” is the Messiah and that it is God’s covenant with Israel that “he” will “make.” This article:

    • Provides objections to the Dispensational view,
    • Argues that the covenant of the 70th week is God’s covenant with Israel, and 
    • Shows that the “he,” who confirms the covenant, is the Messiah; Jesus Christ.

Objections to the Dispensational view

The following are objections to the view that “he” refers to an end-time Antichrist:

(1) The prince and his people live 2000 years apart.

As stated, “the people of the prince” who destroy the city (v26) refer to the Roman Empire which destroyed Jerusalem in the first century. But then, if the prince is an end-time Antichrist, the people and their prince live 2000 years apart. One can argue that the “prince” serves as a symbol for the series of emperors, but it remains a bit of a forced interpretation.

(2) The prophecy does not indicate such a gap.

The wording of the text of Daniel in no way suggests that the 490 years will be interrupted for an indefinite period. There appears to be no valid reason, or defensible ground, for postulating a gap between the 70th week and the previous 69 weeks.

(3) It becomes two unrelated prophecies.

To postpone the last seven years to the end of the age divides the prophecy into two completely separate and unrelated prophecies; one about Christ 2000 years ago, and one about an end-time Antichrist. This destroys the simple unity of the prophecy.

(4) The prophecy does not end with Christ’s return.

If the last “week” is the seven years before Christ returns, then it ends with Christ’s return but the prophecy in no way indicates the return of Christ. If the 490 years are to end with Christ’s return, would the prophecy not end with a description of His return, as the other prophecies in Daniel do? In contrast, the Daniel 9 prophecy ends in the accumulation of desolations and chaos.

(5) How can the Roman Empire be revived?

But how can the Roman Empire be revived 1500 years after it ceased to exist?

(Actually, the answer is that the Roman Empire was never fully destroyed. It continued to exist in the little horn growing out of it and is still alive and well today. For more detail, see The Beast.)

(6) There is no second rebuilding of the temple.

As prophesied in Daniel 9, Jerusalem was rebuilt a few hundred years before Christ and destroyed again in 70 AD (Dan 9:25-26). But Dispensationalism requires that the sanctuary be rebuilt a second time at the end of the age and that sacrifices be resumed. However, the prophecy explicitly promises only one rebuilding of the city and the sanctuary. If the temple was to be rebuilt a second time after the destruction in verse 26, would the prophecy not have explicitly stated that, given that it is so clear about the rebuilding in verse 25?

Furthermore, after the sacrificial system was abolished 2000 years ago, there can never be a valid return to the old covenant and its earthly temple worship. Christ, the antitype, has terminated once for all the “shadow” and inaugurated a “better covenant” that offers His righteousness as the everlasting righteousness (see Heb 7:22; cf. Heb 10:12; Rom 3:22, 25). In fact, that is precisely the meaning of the statement: “In the middle of the week he will put a stop to sacrifice and grain offering” (Dan 9:27).

The reinstatement of the sacrifices is based on the assumption that Daniel 9 covers the same ground as the other prophecies of Daniel, but another article shows that Daniel 9 does not describe the same crisis as the other prophecies in Daniel. Daniel 9 deals with Israel only, and with the 490 years allocated to her. The other prophecies in Daniel, in contrast, deal with all nations and with all time from Daniel until Christ’s return.

It is God’s covenant.

(1) The 490 years extend Israel’s covenant.

SinaiThe first justification for this proposal, as discussed in a previous article, is that the 490 years are an extension or renewal of God’s covenant with Israel. Therefore, the seven-year covenant in 9:27 must be the last seven years of that 490-year covenant.

(2) God’s covenant unites prayer and prophecy.

To come to that conclusion, the previous article has shown that the covenant pattern of (1) disobedience – (2) repentance – and (3) covenant renewal is the central theme in Daniel 9 that unites the prayer and the prophecy in Daniel 9. This context speaks against the supposition that an altogether different covenant is abruptly introduced in the last 7 of the 490 years.

(3) Elsewhere in Daniel, it is God’s covenant.

Of the six times that the word “covenant” appears in Daniel, four times it is explicitly God’s covenant with Israel (Dan 9:4; 11:28, 30, 32). Some propose that the covenant in 9:27 is not God’s covenant with Israel because of the absence of the article “the,” but in Daniel 11:28, 30 and 32, “covenant” is also used without the article, while the reference is explicit to God’s “holy covenant.”

(4) It is not a new covenant; it is ‘enforced’.

The verb translated as “make a firm” in the NASB is “gâbar.” Strong’s short definition of this word is “prevailed.” Of the 25 times that this word appears in the Old Testament, the NASB translates it 14 times as “prevail.” As stated by Meredith G. Kline in The covenant of the Seventieth Week, the evidence of the usage of gâbar in the Bible indicates that verse 27 has in view the enforcement of a covenant previously granted. It is not a verb for the making of a new covenant. It should, therefore, be translated as “make firm a covenant”, and not as “make a firm covenant.” Similarly, the KJV translates it as “confirm the covenant” and Young’s Literal Translation reads “strengthening a covenant.” These translations imply a covenant that existed before the last seven years. Then it can only be God’s covenant with Israel.

(5) ‘The many’ most often refer to God’s people.

“The many,” with whom “he” confirms the covenant, most often refer to God’s people. For instance:

“The Righteous One, My Servant, will justify the many,
As He will bear their iniquities“ (Isa 53:11).

“Those who have insight among the people will give understanding to the many; yet they will fall by sword and by flame” (Dan 11:33; See also Dan 11:39; 12:3; Matt 26:28; Heb 9:26-28; Rom 5:15, 19; 1 Cor 10:33).

If “the many,” with whom the covenant is confirmed, are God’s people, then it must be God’s covenant.

“He” is the Messiah.

By showing that the “he,” who confirms the covenant for the seven last years, is the “Messiah” of verse 26, namely, Jesus Christ, and not the Antichrist, this section confirms that the covenant of the last “week” is God’s covenant:

(1) In the prophecy’s pattern, it is the Messiah.

As discussed, the prophecy has a poetic pattern that shifts the focus repeatedly back and forth between the two foci; Jerusalem and the Messiah:

JERUSALEM MESSIAH
v25 decree to rebuild until Messiah the Prince
7 weeks 62 weeks;
built again v26 Messiah cut off …
destroy v27 firm covenant for one week

This shows the two foci:

Daniel prayed for Jerusalem (Dan 9:18) and Gabriel told him that seventy weeks were decreed for the city, starting with “the issuing of a decree to restore and rebuild Jerusalem” (Dan 9:25). Jerusalem will be rebuilt (v25), but, Daniel had to also hear that it would again be destroyed (v26).

The other main focus of the prophecy is “Messiah the Prince” (Dan 9:25). Daniel was told that the Messiah would appear at the end of the first 483 years (v25), but “will be cut off” (v26), which means to be killed.

The table above shows that, in this pattern, it is the Messiah who confirms the covenant for seven years in verse 27.

(2) In the chiasm, the one week refers to the Messiah.

As also discussed, the prophecy is also structured as a chiasm. In a chiasm, the first item corresponds to the last, the second to the second last, etc. In the chiasm in Daniel 9, the “one week” in verse 27 corresponds to the Messiah in 25b:

Messiah cut off 26a
Construction 25c —— Destruction 26b

Messiah the Prince 25b ———– Covenant one week 27a
Construction 25a ———————- Destruction 27c

(3) The main person in verse 26 is the Messiah.

The “prince that shall come” is not the subject of that clause in verse 26. It reads “the people of the prince”, not “the prince of the people.” The subject of the clause is “the people.” Verse 27, therefore, should not refer to the prince with the pronoun “he.”

The main person in verse 26 (and in the entire prophecy) is the “Messiah.” He is, therefore, the appropriate antecedent for “he” in verse 27.

(4) The prince who is to come is a supernatural being.

The prince in verse 26 is described as “the prince who is to come.” A few verses later we read of another prince who is “to come:”

“I shall now return to fight against the prince of Persia; …
the prince of Greece is about to come. …
Yet there is no one who stands firmly with me
against these forces except Michael your prince.”

(Dan 10:20, 21; see also Dan 12:1)

Since this is a supernatural being that is speaking here (Dan 10:16, 18), the princes against whom he fights, and the prince Michael who stands with him, are also supernatural beings. The NASB, quoted above, refers to them as “forces.” They are not human beings. 

Since both the “prince of Greece” and the prince of Rome are “to come” (Dan 10:20; 9:26), it is implied that the prince of Rome in 9:26 is also a supernatural being.

The Messiah is also called a prince (Dan 9:25). Since He could say, “before Abraham was born, I am” (John 8:58) and, since the Baptist could say, “He existed before me” (John 1:30), the Messiah is a human being but also a supernatural being.

Each of the princes (of Persia, of Greece, and “Michael your prince”) represents a nation:

Michael is the prince of the nation of Israel (Dan 12:1).

Both the princes of Rome and “of Greece” are “to come” (Dan 9:26; 10:20). But the “prince of Greece” was to come sooner, for he was “about to come,” just like the empire of Greece came before the Roman Empire.

In conclusion, the prince in 9:26 is not a human being but a supernatural “force” (Dan 10:21) or being representing the Roman nation. Since the “he” of verse 27 is a human being, he cannot refer back to the prince in verse 26, for the latter is a supernatural being.

(5) The arrival of the Messiah brings expectations.

The Messiah arrives at the end of the 69th week (v25). This causes us to expect that great things will now happen, particularly given the goals set in verse 24. Verse 26 adds that He will be killed, but say nothing more. Verse 27 lists the events for the 70th week, namely “he will make a firm covenant” and “he will put a stop to sacrifice.” The great expectation, that the arrival of the Messiah brought, implies that these events are the actions of the Messiah. To assign them to an end-time Antichrist, as Dispensationalism does, is to convert this prophecy about Christ into a prophecy about the Antichrist.

(6) The Daniel 9 prophecy is thoroughly messianic.

The “he” of verse 27 will confirm the covenant for seven years but he will also, “in the middle of the week … put a stop to sacrifice and grain offering.”

In the context, where the purpose of the 490 years includes “to make atonement for iniquity” and “to bring in everlasting righteousness” (v24), through killing the messiah (v26), and given the context of the New Testament, “he,” who makes an end to the sacrificial system, is the Messiah:

He was “Jesus the Messiah” (Matt 1:1, cf. 1:16, 17; 2:4; John 1:41, 4:25).

He was killed.

He solved the sin problem of the world. As required by verse 24, He made “atonement for iniquity” (John 1:29; Matt.26:28; Heb 7:27, 9:26-28; Heb 9:12; 10:10, 12, 14) and brought in “everlasting righteousness” (Heb 9:12; Rom 5:10, 11; Col 1:20; 2 Cor 5:19; Col 1:22; Rom 5:18; John 3:17; Col 1:19-20). He was “pierced through for our transgressions” (Isa 53:5).

His death put a stop to sacrifice. Christ’s death did not cause the Jewish sacrifices to cease immediately. The Jewish sacrifices continued until the destruction of Jerusalem forty years later. But these sacrifices pointed forward to the ultimate sacrifice of the Lamb of God. When Jesus—the Lamb of God—died, He fulfilled the significance of those sacrifices. The Jewish sacrifices were consequently terminated at the death of Christ in the sense of its loss of meaning.

The letter to the Hebrews states this explicitly. When Jesus ascended to heaven and became High Priest (Heb 6:20), the law changed (Heb 7:12), including the sacrificial system (Heb 7:19; 8:4; 9:22). Jesus set “aside the first [sacrifices and offerings] to establish the second” (Heb 10:9). (See also Heb 8:13 and Eph 2:15.) In this way, His death caused “sacrifice and the oblation (NASB: grain offering) to cease” (Dan 9:27).

The Daniel 9 prophecy, therefore, is thoroughly messianic in nature. According to the chiastic structure of the prophecy, the killing of the Messiah is the main event through which the goals are fulfilled. In this context, the “stop to sacrifice” in verse 27 refers to Jesus’ death and the “he” is Jesus Himself. To allocate verse 27 to an end-time Antichrist, as Dispensationalism does, or to Antiochus IV in the second century BC, as the liberal interpretation does, does injustice to the overall essence of the prophecy.

Conclusions

Seventy weeksVerse 27 says that Jesus Christ will confirm God’s covenant with Israel during the 70th week. The discussion of the end of the 490 years has shown that, during these final seven years, Jesus confirmed God’s covenant with Israel: Never before or after in human history has God appealed so strongly for the heart of any nation as He did, firstly, through Christ’s personal ministry on earth for 3½ years and, secondly, through the Holy Spirit during the 2 to 4 years after He died.

Daniel 9 does not specify a specific event for the end of the seventy weeks. However, as discussed, the seventy weeks was an extension of God’s covenant with Israel, as also indicated by the phrase, “Seventy weeks are cut off for your people and your holy city” (Dan 9:24). The seventy weeks, therefore, end when God’s covenant with Israel ends.

This is confirmed by verse 27, which says that he shall confirm the covenant with many for one week. This is the last of the seventy weeks. When that week came to an end, the messiah no longer confirmed the covenant with Israel.


OTHER ARTICLES

According to the Dead Sea Scrolls, when was Daniel written?

SUMMARY 

Critical Scholars reject Daniel.

The Book of Daniel claims to have been written in the sixth century BC, foretelling history until Christ’s return. However, over the past 300 years, theological faculties of major universities have submitted to the anti-supernatural culture of modern intellectualism. Since they do not accept that it is possible to foretell the future, they claim that the Book of Daniel was written AFTER the events it describes. In other words, it is a history book presented as a prophecy.

Specifically, they claim that Daniel was written during the reign of the Greek king Antiochus IV; around the year 165 BC because (they say) Daniel accurately describes history up to the Maccabean Revolt against Antiochus, but is confused about later history.

The Dead Sea Evidence

The Dead Sea Scrolls were collected by an ancient Jewish sect and discovered around 1950 in caves at Qumran near the Dead Sea. Many of the scrolls and fragments were copies of books of the Old Testament, including the Book of Daniel. These scrolls confirm that the Bible and, specifically, the Book of Daniel, are reliable:

The Bible

The Dead Sea Scrolls show that the Old Testament is reliable:

The Old Testament in our Bibles is translated from the Masoretic Text (MT) which dates to about a thousand years AFTER Christ. But the Dead Sea Scrolls are a full thousand years older.

Comparisons of the MT to the Dead Sea Scrolls demonstrated the unusual transmission accuracy over those thousand years. The chief differences have to do with the spelling of words.

That means we now have proof that the Old Testament, and by implication, our Bibles, has been accurately transmitted (copied) for more than 2000 years. It is, therefore, reasonable to believe that the Old Testament has also been accurately copied before the time of the Qumran community.

The Book of Daniel

Secondly, the Dead Sea Scrolls show that the Book of Daniel is accurate. Before these scrolls were discovered, scholars had little confidence in the reliability of Daniel due to the differences between the ancient Greek translations and the Hebrew and Aramaic of Daniel in the MT.

However, the eight Daniel manuscripts discovered at the Dead Sea confirmed the accuracy of the Book of Daniel in our Bibles because they conform closely to the MT.

Daniel is part of the Scriptures.

A third conclusion from the Dead Sea Scrolls is that Daniel was regarded as “Scripture” at Qumran. This is indicated by the large number of copies of Daniel discovered and by how Daniel was used. For instance, the Florilegium (4Q174) quotes Daniel 12:10 as ‘written in the book of Daniel, the Prophet‘ (frgs. 1-3 ii 3-4a). This formula is typical of quotations from canonical Scripture at Qumran.

While critical scholars claim that Daniel was written in 165 BC by an unknown writer, the reference to “the book of Daniel, the Prophet” means that the Qumran community regarded Daniel both as a real historical person and a prophet.

The canonical status of Daniel at Qumran can be confirmed by comparing it to the Book of Jubilees, which is not in our Bibles. Both books were regarded as authoritative by the Qumran sect but with different levels of authority:

Daniel was regarded as a primary authority, namely as the word of God spoken through the prophet. In fact, nobody regarded Daniel as describing past events as a prophecy during the centuries before and immediately after Christ. All of Judaism regarded Daniel as a primary authority.

In contrast, Jubilees was regarded as a secondary authority, meaning it was an authoritative INTERPRETATION of Scripture. Jubilees was similar to a creed of a Christian denomination today, namely, regarded as authoritative by a subgroup but not by all.

Daniel is true prophecy.

These scrolls also show that Daniel was written BEFORE the time of Antiochus IV:

The Qumran community was formed around 150 BC; about 15 years after the time of Antiochus. Their earliest copies of Daniel are dated to about 50 years after Antiochus.

But it takes at least 100 years for new documents to become accepted as Scripture. It must undergo a slow process of distribution and copying until it wins the people’s hearts.

Therefore, since the Qumran community regarded the Book of Daniel as Scripture, it must have existed long before the Qumran community was formed. For example:

Two of the Daniel manuscripts discovered at the Dead Sea (4QDan(c) and 4QDan(e)) have been dated to the late 2nd BC. This was only about 50 years after critical scholars say Daniel’s prophecies were composed. That does not leave enough time. It is improbable, if not impossible, that the book was composed during the Maccabean revolt in 165 BC, as the critical scholars claim, and gained acceptance as an inspired Scripture within 50 years.

It follows that Daniel was written before the time of Antiochus. If that is so, then Daniel accurately predicts future events.

Scholars treat Daniel differently.

In the case of Psalms, Ecclesiastes, and Chronicles, after copies of these books had been found at Qumran, critical scholars were willing to push the date of composition for these books back a century or more. They say, for example:

“Each song had to win its way in the esteem of the people before it could be included in the sacred compilation of the Psalter. Immediate entrée for any of them is highly improbable.

“The discovery of a fragment of Chronicles at Qumran renders a Maccabean date virtually impossible for any part of Chronicles.”

But, although the evidence is identical, they refuse to draw the same conclusion for Daniel because it would mean that Daniel is a true prophecy.

Was Daniel a Known Forgery?

If the critical scholars are right, namely that Daniel was written under a false name during the Maccabean revolt, pretending to be an old book but really describing history in the form of a prophecy, then everybody who lived through the Maccabean revolt would have known that. That includes the first members of the Qumran sect. They would have known that the book failed to correctly predict the success of the Maccabean revolt a year or two after it was written.

No book of the Bible would be accepted as “Scripture” within 50 years after it was written. But that is even more true for Daniel if it was a known forgery.

Conclusion: Daniel is inspired.

Therefore, Daniel’s prophecies must have been written before the Maccabean revolt against Antiochus IV. Consequently, the detailed prophecies in Daniel 11, pointing to Antiochus, really were written before those events. 

This does not prove that Daniel’s prophecies were written in the sixth century BC. But this does prove that Daniel is divinely inspired and contains true prophecy. That forces us to conclude that Daniel is what it itself claims to be, namely that it was written in the sixth century BC.

– END OF SUMMARY – 


THE ACADEMIC CONSENSUS

Modern science presupposes that everything has ‘natural’ causes. The theological faculties of universities operate in that intellectual climate and, over the past 300 years, unfortunately, have submitted to that culture. In other words, the theological faculties of universities no longer presuppose that the Bible is the Word of God. In fact, the reverse is true today, namely that they presume that the Bible is NOT the word of God. This means that they assume that everything in the Bible, including the miracles and prophecies, has natural causes.

Consequently, in academic circles, historical criticism (critical scholarship) has become the standard approach to Bible study. That means that they ‘criticize’ the Bible against secular history. Whenever they find a difference, they assume the Bible is wrong.

For example, the book of Daniel mentions two kings that were previously unknown, namely Darius the Mede and Belshazzar. Archeology has since revealed that a king named Belshazzar did exist but, before that, critical scholarship concluded that neither of these kings ever existed.

Due to its anti-supernatural presupposition, to avoid the strong evidence for the divine authorship of Scripture from the detailed prophecies in Daniel that ultimately came to pass, historical criticism takes the position that Daniel’s prophecies were written after the events it so accurately ‘predicts’:

“We need to assume that the vision as a whole is a prophecy after the fact. Why? Because human beings are unable accurately to predict future events centuries in advance … So what we have here (in Daniel) is in fact not a road map of the future laid down in the sixth century B.C. but an interpretation of the events of the author’s own time, 167-164 B.C.”1Towner, Daniel, Interpeter’s Bible, John Knox:1984, p. 115

They claim that the prophecies were written exactly in 167-164 BC because they are able to align the prophecies of Daniel 11 with the history of the Greek kings up until that date, but after that date, they say, Daniel’s prophecies no longer agree with actual history.

167-164 BC was during the Jewish Maccabean revolt against the armies of the Greek king Antiochus Epiphanes. Critics claim that Daniel’s prophecies were written at that time to inspire the Jewish revolt.

For the same reasons, critical scholars also claim that the events predicted in Daniel 11 after that point in time were the uninspired attempts by an unknown author, but he (she?) failed miserably because the ‘prophecies’ did not foresee the success of that revolt.

It is a bit of a contradiction to say that Daniel was written to inspire the revolt but that its prophecies did not foresee the success of the revolt. Nevertheless, this view is the academic consensus today. One can see that in encyclopedias such as Britannica. In other words, it is the consensus of the theological faculties of universities.

For a further discussion, see historical criticism.

THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS

In 1947, a young shepherd boy made the discovery of the century: In one of the Qumran Caves near the Dead Sea, he found a scroll. From that year on to 1956, eleven caves were discovered. They brought back to light hundreds of ancient Old Testament manuscripts, along with a large number of other writings.

The manuscripts include thousands of fragments, larger manuscripts, and fewer than a dozen well-preserved, almost intact manuscripts.

Dating of Manuscripts

Historians use various techniques to date these manuscripts. However, the date of a document does not mean that the contents were first created at that time. For example, take the following two Dead Sea manuscripts:

They overlap in terms of text covered but are dated a century apart. Ulrich studied the orthography (the spelling of words) and wrote that the later manuscript may have been copied from the earlier one “by a scribe who was intent upon reproducing the text in the more contemporary, more full and clear and interpretative orthography of the late Second Temple period.” 2[The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Origins of the Bible. Eugene Ulrich. Eerdmans/Brill:1999:162]

In other words, the later manuscript may appear to be written a century later because of changes in the spelling of words and writing style, but the contents are exactly the same as the earlier one.

But this means that the earlier manuscript, dated 50 BC, could well be a copy of an original document created centuries earlier. See Thinktank for a further discussion.

Daniel was not written at Qumran.

It is generally accepted that Daniel was not written at Qumran:

“There is no clear case of an apocalypse actually authored within the Qumran community.” (Collins Thinktank)

In the view of critical scholars, the prophecies of Daniel were created in 165 BC but the stories in the first half of Daniel were already in circulation by that time.

In the conservative view, Daniel was compiled in the 6th century BC, as the book itself also claims.

CONCLUSIONS FROM THE SCROLLS

The Bible is reliable.

The Old Testament in our Bibles is translated from a major manuscript of the Masoretic Text (MT). Up until the discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls, the oldest MT manuscripts were dating to about a thousand years AFTER Christ. This allowed some scholars to question the faithfulness of the text of the Old Testament. Consequently, they took great freedom in amending, changing, and adjusting the Hebrew text. (Hasel)

But the Dead Sea Scrolls are much older. They date to between the 3rd century BC and the 1st century AD. Bronze coins found at the same sites are dated from 135 BC until 73 AD. This supports the radiocarbon and paleographic dating of the scrolls. (Wikipedia)

Therefore, the Dead Sea Scrolls are the oldest surviving manuscripts of books of the Bible and reveal how the Old Testament, including the book of Daniel, read a full thousand years before the oldest copy of the MT. They would either affirm or repudiate the reliability of textual transmission from the original texts to the oldest Masoretic texts at hand.

The Dead Sea Scrolls demonstrated the unusual accuracy of transmission over a thousand-year period, rendering it reasonable to believe that current Old Testament texts are reliable copies of the original works. For example, comparisons of the MT to the Dead Sea Scrolls show the following:

Of the 166 words in Isaiah 53, there are only 17 letters in question. Ten of these letters are simply a matter of spelling, which does not affect the sense. Four more letters are minor stylistic changes, such as conjunctions. The remaining three letters comprise the word “light,” which is added in verse 11, and does not affect the meaning greatly.3The Dead Sea Scrolls by Hebrew scholar Millar Burrow

“The chief differences … have to do with the spelling of words.”4G. Ernest Wright, Biblical Archeologist, (No. XII, 1949)

As proof of the accuracy of the Bible, the Dead Sea Scrolls are considered one of the most important finds in the history of archaeology.

We have, therefore, proof that our Bibles have been accurately transmitted (copied) for more than 2000 years. It is, therefore, reasonable to believe that the Old Testament has been accurately copied during the centuries before the time of the Qumran community; at least from the time of Ezra the Scribe.

Daniel is reliable.

Modern scholars question its reliability.

The official Greek translation of Daniel used in ancient times was that of Theodotion (ca. 180 AD). His translation has a close affinity with the MT. But the oldest Greek translation of Daniel, namely in the Septuagint, contains considerably added material and reads differently from the MT. Around 400 AD, Jerome ventured the opinion that the Septuagint “differs widely from the original [Hebrew], and is rightly rejected.” (Hasel)

Nevertheless, these differences and some other considerations have caused leading modern scholars to have little confidence in the text of Daniel. For example, Professor Klaus Koch suggested that, while we have a Hebrew/Aramaic text and two Greek versions, none of these three is original.5Koch et al. 1980:22, 23; Koch 1986:16–21

The Scrolls confirm its reliability.

However, the eight Daniel manuscripts discovered at the Dead Sea confirmed the accuracy of the book of Daniel in our Bibles today because they:

(1) Are very close to each other and conform closely to Masoretic tradition (Cross 1956:86).

(2) Do not contain any of the additions that are in the ancient Greek translation (the LXX, also called the Septuagint) but not retained in the Protestant Bibles, namely the Prayer of Azariah, the Song of the Three Young Men, and the Story of Susanna.

(3) Preserve the Hebrew and Aramaic sections of the book.

In the MT, Daniel is written partly in Hebrew and partly in Aramaic. Hartman and Di Lella (1978:75) assumed that the book of Daniel in its entirety was written originally in the Aramaic language and that the Hebrew parts of the book are translations from Aramaic into Hebrew. (Hasel) However:

Two different manuscripts (4QDan(a) and 1QDan(a)) confirm the change from Hebrew into Aramaic for Daniel 2:4b.

Both 4QDan(a) and 4QDan(b) show the change from Aramaic into Hebrew in Daniel 8:1, just as in the MT. (Hasel)

Consequently, scholars conclude:

The Daniel fragments … reveal, on the whole, that the later Masoretic text is preserved in a good, hardly changed form. They are thus a valuable witness to the great faithfulness with which the sacred text has been transmitted.”6Mertens 1971:31

“Despite the fragmentary state of most of Daniel scrolls, they reveal no major disagreements against the Masoretic Text, although individual readings differ on occasion.”7Peter W. Flint, The Daniel Tradition at Qumran in Studies in the Dead Sea Scrolls and Related Literature, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids, Michigan.

“The chief differences (w.r.t. Daniel) … have to do with the spelling of words.”8G. Ernest Wright, Biblical Archeologist, (No. XII, 1949).

The overwhelming conformity of these Qumran Daniel manuscripts with the MT is evidence that the MT preserved the text of the book of Daniel well. It is incredible that a book should be copied for a thousand years and remain virtually intact.

Daniel is Inspired Scripture.

To date, eight manuscripts of the biblical book of Daniel have been discovered at the Dead Sea. This is more than as for much larger books such as Jeremiah and Ezekiel. (Wikipedia) It is evident from the number of manuscripts that the book of Daniel was a favorite book in the Qumran community.

The Dead Sea Scrolls also include discussions of and references to Daniel in other works. Flint observes:

“Every chapter of Daniel is represented in these manuscripts, except for Daniel 12. However, this does not mean that the book lacked the final chapter at Qumran, since Dan 12:10 is quoted in the Florilegium (4Q174), which explicitly tells us that it is written in ‘the book of Daniel, the Prophet.'” (Thinktank)9Eschatology, Messianism, and the Dead Sea Scrolls. Craig Evans and Peter Flint (eds). Eerdmans:1997. 43)

Flint (p44) continued:

“We may conclude that Daniel was regarded as a scriptural book at Qumran for two reasons:

(1) The large number of preserved copies is a clear indication of Daniel’s importance among the Qumran covenanters.

(2) The way in which Daniel was used at Qumran is indicative of its authoritative status; for instance, the Florilegium (4Q174) quotes Dan 12:10 as ‘written in the book of Daniel, the Prophet’ (frgs. 1-3 ii 3-4a). This reference has two implications:
– That Daniel was regarded by the writer as Scripture and
– That it may have belonged among the ‘Prophets’.” (Flint:44) (Thinktank)

The formula “which written in the book of Daniel the prophet” is typical of quotations from canonical Scripture at Qumran. (Hasel) It is similar also to Matthew 24:15, where Jesus refers to “Daniel the prophet.”

Another example of a Qumran document that refers to Daniel as a scriptural book is 11QMelch. Quoting Isaiah, it refers to “the messenger who announces peace” and interprets this as “the anointed of the spirit about whom Daniel spoke.” (Thinktank) This probably refers to “the Anointed One” (Dan 9:25; NIV), whom we interpret as Jesus Christ (See Daniel Nine).

In other words, while critical scholars claim that Daniel was written in 165 BC by an unknown writer, the Qumran community regarded Daniel as a real historical person and as a prophet.

These are clear, objective evidence of Daniel’s rightful place among the inspired Jewish Scriptures. (Hasel) As Professor Ulrich says:

“However one uses in relation to Qumran the category of what is later explicitly termed ‘canonical,’ the book of Daniel was certainly in that category.” (Hasel)10Ulrich 1987:19

JUBILEES WAS ACCEPTED SOON.

A possible objection to the arguments above is that the Book of Jubilees was written 160-150 BC, and was accepted at Qumran as an authoritative book, even being used in prooftexts. Does this mean that Daniel could have been accepted as inspired within 15 years?

Different Levels of Authority

The difference lies in the level of authority:

Primary (Bible) – In traditional Protestantism, we begin with sacrosanct Scripture as “primary” or “ultimate” authority.

Secondary (Creeds) – Every denomination, however, has somewhat different interpretations of the Scripture, and these interpretations are set forth in Creeds. For that denomination, those Creeds are ‘authoritative’. To disagree with the Creed is to relinquish membership in that sub-group. The authority of the Creed, however, is “secondary” to the “primary” authority of the Bible. The secondary character of the Creed’s authority can be seen in its usage of the primary authority: It will use the Scriptures to support arguments.

Teachers – But typically, the authority structure doesn’t stop at just these two levels, but additional levels can appear. Certain ‘teachers’ can assert their authority to interpret both Scripture and Creeds.

Primary Documents require more time.

It takes a very long time for a document to be accepted as a primary document. For example, if someone came forth with a book and said that it was a ‘lost’ book of the Sacred Scriptures, how long do you think it would take for Protestantism to accept it (if ever)? Right—forever!

But secondary documents are ‘instantly’ accepted by the group that produced them. If, for example, a group of theologians decided they didn’t like the current dominant creed and decided to craft a NEW ‘sub-creed’, how long would it take the membership of that sub-group to accept that new sub-creed? Right, very little time at all.

Daniel is Primary, Jubilees Secondary.

For the following reasons, while the book Daniel was considered primary authority at Qumran, Jubilees enjoyed only secondary authority:

Is it part of the Bible?

Daniel is part of the Bibles we have today but the Book of Jubilees is not. It was not considered ‘Scripture’ by Formative Judaism of the first century.

Is it accepted by all?

During the centuries before and after Christ, all of Judaism accepted Daniel as authoritative. None of those closest to the data – including eyewitnesses – considered Daniel to be describing the past events as if it describes the future:

“The book of Daniel … was considered prophetic at Qumran, in the New Testament, by Josephus, by Melito, and indeed, to judge by the evidence, by all.”11The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Origins of the Bible. Eugene Ulrich. Eerdmans/Brill:1999.:91

Prof. Menahem Kister, Bible Department, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, wrote:

“The last chapters of Daniel were thus accepted as sacred and worthy of interpretation and midrash in all streams of Judaism relatively shortly after they were composed.”

To come to this conclusion, he argued as follows12Biblical Perspectives: Early Use & Interpretation of the Bible in the Light of the Dead Sea Scrolls. Michael Stone and Esther Chazon (eds.). Brill:1998.102:

“Explicit and implicit citations of Daniel 12 are found elsewhere in the sect’s literature.

Outside the sect, an allusion to Dan. 11:31 is found in 1 Macc. 1:54;

The rabbis cite and interpret these chapters as part of their Bible, probably reflecting the Pharisaic acceptance of these visions as authoritative.

Matt 24:15, Mark 13:14 and Josephus, Ant. 10:269-276, treat Dan. 8, which is from the same period, as an authoritative text.”

Josephus was a Romano-Jewish historian who lived and wrote at the same time as when the books of the New Testament were composed. He wrote:

“If … there is anyone who … wishes to learn about the hidden things that are to come, let him … read the Book of Daniel, which he will find among the sacred writings” (Ant. 10.210).

“We are convinced … that Daniel spoke with God, for he was not only wont to prophesy future things, as did the other prophets, but he also fixed the time at which these would come to pass” (Ant. 10.266-67).

“Events under Antiochus Epiphanes … had been predicted many years in advance by Daniel, on the basis of his visions” (Ant. 10.276).

In contrast, Jubilees was very popular at Qumran but was not accepted as authoritative for all of Judaism.

Is the author regarded as a prophet?

As mentioned, Daniel is cited “as is written in the book of Daniel, the prophet.” There is no evidence that the unknown author of Jubilees was considered a prophet.

Did it generate pseudo works?

The book of Daniel has generated additional, transitory works associated with his name (i.e., the Pseudo-Danielic mss). Jubilees did not generate any “pseudo-” types of works or expansions on itself that we can find.

Do other documents interpret it?

Daniel was interpreted by other Qumran documents. It doesn’t present itself as something that interprets other scripture.

In comparison, the Book of Jubilees is a rewriting of the Bible “which include implicit exegesis and longer additions to the biblical narrative.”13Biblical Perspectives: Early Use & Interpretation of the Bible in the Light of the Dead Sea Scrolls. Michael Stone and Esther Chazon (eds.). Brill:1998.:101-2 In other words, it did not have primary authority.

“The Book of Jubilees is a rewritten version of Genesis 1Exodus 14 … The largest group of additions to the biblical text are halakhic (an interpretation of the laws of the Scriptures).”14Nickelsburg, in [Jewish Writings of the Second Temple Period: Apocrypha, Pseudepigrapha, Qumran Sectarian Writings, Philo, Josephus. Michael E. Stone (ed.), Fortress:1984.:97ff

The book of Jubilees, therefore, is a ‘re-telling of the bible’ document, and that genre added an ‘interpretative layer’ on top of the biblical narrative. It has interpretative or secondary authority rather than primary authority or ‘scriptural authority’.

For a further discussion, see Thinktank.

DANIEL IS PRE-MACCABEAN.

The Qumran community, therefore, regarded the book of Daniel as inspired Scripture and referred to the author of the book as “Daniel the prophet.”

Before a document can be accepted as such, it has to go through a slow process of copying and distribution and more copying and distribution until it wins the hearts of the people.

Dated to the Late 2nd Century BC

Already in 1961, Professor Cross dated 4QDan(c) to the “late second century BC.” (Hasel)15Professor Frank M. Cross, Harvard University, The Ancient Library of Qumran 43

To date, two of the manuscripts are dated to the late 2nd BC, namely 4QDan(c) and 4QDan(e). (Thinktank)16The Dead Sea Scrolls after Fifty Years (vol 2). Peter W. Flint and James C. Vanderkam (eds). Brill: 1999: 53 Both these manuscripts are from the last half of the Book of Daniel (10:5 to 11:29 and 9:12-17). ) This is significant because the academic consensus is that the stories in the first six chapters of Daniel may be older, but they claim that the prophecies were added in 165 BC, during the Maccabean revolt against Antiochus Epiphanes. For example:

Daniel 11:40-45 … is a vaticinium ex eventu, that is a record of the events of the recent past in the form of a prophecy for the future.”17‘Time and Times and Half a Time’: Historical Consciousness in the Jewish Literature of the Persian and Hellenistic Eras, Ida Frohlich (trans. Bea Vidacs), Sheffield:1996. 80

50 years are too few.

But that would mean that the oldest copies of the book of Daniel are dated only about 50 years after its composition in 165 BC. That does not leave enough time (Hasel). It is quite improbable, if not impossible, that the book was composed during the Maccabees revolt, as the critics claim, and gained acceptance as an inspired book within 50 years. (Thinktank) In 1969, based on the evidence available at that time regarding the Qumran Daniel texts, Roland K. Harrison had already concluded that:

The second-century dating of the book of Daniel was “absolutely precluded by the evidence from Qumran, partly because there are no indications whatever that the sectaries compiled any of the Biblical manuscripts recovered from the site, and partly because there would, in the latter event, have been insufficient time for Maccabean compositions to be circulated, venerated, and accepted as canonical Scripture by a Maccabean sect.18Harrison, R.K. 1969 Introduction to the Old Testament (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans):1127 (Gerhard Hasel)

After this, he stated, based on the Qumran manuscripts, that:

“There can no longer be any possible reason for considering the book as a Maccabean product.” (Hasel)19Harrison, R.K. 1979 Daniel, Book of. Pp. 859–66 in International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, vol. 1 (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans). P. 862

Waltke wrote:

The “discovery of manuscripts of Daniel at Qumran dating from the Maccabean period renders it highly improbable that the book was composed during the time of the Maccabees.”20Bruce K. Waltke, “The Date of the Book of Daniel,” Bibliotheca Sacra 133, no. 532 (October 1976): 321.

15 years are too few.

The Qumran community was an ascetic sect of Jews who lived in the Judean Desert near the Wadi Qumran, along the northwest shore of the Dead Sea roughly between 150 BC and AD 68 (Encyclopedia). As discussed, they regarded Daniel as a prophet and the book of Daniel as the word of God. Since interaction with the outside religious community would have been very limited, and largely polemical, their views would have remained fairly constant for the 200 years of its existence. This implies that Daniel was already accepted as FULLY INSPIRED Scripture when that community was formed – in 150 BC.

But this was only 15 years after the prophecies in the book of Daniel were composed (according to critical scholars) in 165 BC. This is completely too little time. You just cannot, within only 15 years, get from a known forgery to full acceptance as inspired Scripture. Remember, many of the first members of that sect lived through the Maccabean struggle. They saw all of this with their own eyes. And, being a sect, they would have been rigorous in accessing documents.

Daniel, therefore, must have existed LONG before the Qumran community was formed. But that would mean that Daniel was written before at least some of the events it predicts.

For a further discussion, see Thinktank.

SCHOLARS TREAT DANIEL DIFFERENTLY.

For books of the Bible that do not claim to predict the future, critical scholars, when they date a manuscript copy of that book to the second century BC, are willing to push the date of the original a century or more back, but not for the book of Daniel. For example:

Psalms

It was previously proposed that some of the Psalms in the Bible were composed during the Maccabean struggle. But after Frank Cross found that one manuscript of one of these psalms is dated more or less to the same time as their supposed composition, critical scholars were willing to abandon the idea that any of the psalms were written during the Maccabean struggle:

“The fragmentary copy of the Psalter from Qumran (4QPsaa) … shows quite clearly … that the collection of canonical psalms had already been fixed by the Maccabean period.”21F.M. Cross, The Ancient Library of Qumran and Modern Biblical Study (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1961), p. 165.

This is based on the following argument:

“Each song had to win its way in the esteem of the people before it could be included in the sacred compilation of the Psalter. Immediate entrée for any of them is highly improbable.”22Brownlee, professor of religion, Claremont Graduate School

As a result, scholars have pushed those compositions formerly regarded as “Maccabean psalms” to the Persian period. (Thinktank)

Ecclesiastes

Similarly, two scrolls of Ecclesiastes found at Qumran were dated to the middle of the second century BC. This is not much later than the time at which many scholars have thought the book was originally written. From this, critical scholars conclude that this “somewhat enhanced” “the probability of its composition in the third century, if not earlier.”23M. Burrows, The Dead Sea Scrolls (New York: Viking, 1955), p. 118

Chronicles

Likewise, “the discovery of a fragment of Chronicles at Qumran renders a Maccabean date virtually impossible for any part of Chronicles.”24Myers, professor of Old Testament at the Lutheran Theological Seminary, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania

The same principle should apply to Daniel.

Harrison concluded:

“It is now evident from the findings at Qumran that no canonical writing can be dated later than the end of the Persian period, i.e., much beyond 350 B.C.”25R.K. Harrison, “Historical and Literary Criticism of the New Testament”, in EBC, vol. 1

This conclusion should apply to all canonical writings (books of the Bible), but critical scholars refuse to apply this principle to the Book of Daniel. Waltke complains about this inconsistency:

“Equivalent manuscript finds at Qumran of other books where the issue of predictive prophecy is not in question have led scholars to repudiate a Maccabean date for their compositions. … But critical scholars have refused to draw the same conclusion in the case of Daniel even though the evidence is identical.”26BibSac—V133 #532,Oct 1976,p.322

For a further discussion, see Thinktank.

WAS DANIEL A KNOWN FORGERY?

No book of the Bible would be accepted as “Scripture” only 50 years after it was written but, for the following reasons, it is even more true for Daniel for, if the critical scholars are right, during the Maccabean struggle, everybody would have known that:

      • Daniel was written under a false name,
      • Pretending to be an old book making long term predictions, but really describing past history, and that
      • It failed to correctly predict the success of the Maccabean revolt a year or two after it was written.

Would Daniel be renowned as a prophet if it were known that he had lived a mere 50 years earlier? In that event, he would have been a contemporary person writing fiction.

This is almost a death blow to the Maccabean theory of the composition of Daniel.

CONCLUSION

The high regard that this community had for Daniel can be much better explained if one accepts an earlier origin of Daniel than proposed by the Maccabean hypothesis of historical-critical scholarship. (Hasel)

Notice that all the historical and linguistic ‘problems’ in the Book of Daniel are irrelevant to a discussion of this “Maccabean or Pre-Maccabean” question. These kinds of problems could be used to argue for a 3rd century BC date versus a 6th century BC date, or for an uninformed writer versus an eyewitness writer, or for a fictional versus historical genre, perhaps, but NEVER for a Maccabean or Pre-Maccabean dating.

For a further discussion, see Thinktank.

OTHER ARTICLES

FOOTNOTES

  • 1
    Towner, Daniel, Interpeter’s Bible, John Knox:1984, p. 115
  • 2
    [The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Origins of the Bible. Eugene Ulrich. Eerdmans/Brill:1999:162]
  • 3
    The Dead Sea Scrolls by Hebrew scholar Millar Burrow
  • 4
    G. Ernest Wright, Biblical Archeologist, (No. XII, 1949)
  • 5
    Koch et al. 1980:22, 23; Koch 1986:16–21
  • 6
    Mertens 1971:31
  • 7
    Peter W. Flint, The Daniel Tradition at Qumran in Studies in the Dead Sea Scrolls and Related Literature, Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids, Michigan.
  • 8
    G. Ernest Wright, Biblical Archeologist, (No. XII, 1949).
  • 9
    Eschatology, Messianism, and the Dead Sea Scrolls. Craig Evans and Peter Flint (eds). Eerdmans:1997. 43)
  • 10
    Ulrich 1987:19
  • 11
    The Dead Sea Scrolls and the Origins of the Bible. Eugene Ulrich. Eerdmans/Brill:1999.:91
  • 12
    Biblical Perspectives: Early Use & Interpretation of the Bible in the Light of the Dead Sea Scrolls. Michael Stone and Esther Chazon (eds.). Brill:1998.102
  • 13
    Biblical Perspectives: Early Use & Interpretation of the Bible in the Light of the Dead Sea Scrolls. Michael Stone and Esther Chazon (eds.). Brill:1998.:101-2
  • 14
    Nickelsburg, in [Jewish Writings of the Second Temple Period: Apocrypha, Pseudepigrapha, Qumran Sectarian Writings, Philo, Josephus. Michael E. Stone (ed.), Fortress:1984.:97ff
  • 15
    Professor Frank M. Cross, Harvard University, The Ancient Library of Qumran 43
  • 16
    The Dead Sea Scrolls after Fifty Years (vol 2). Peter W. Flint and James C. Vanderkam (eds). Brill: 1999: 53
  • 17
    ‘Time and Times and Half a Time’: Historical Consciousness in the Jewish Literature of the Persian and Hellenistic Eras, Ida Frohlich (trans. Bea Vidacs), Sheffield:1996. 80
  • 18
    Harrison, R.K. 1969 Introduction to the Old Testament (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans):1127
  • 19
    Harrison, R.K. 1979 Daniel, Book of. Pp. 859–66 in International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, vol. 1 (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans). P. 862
  • 20
    Bruce K. Waltke, “The Date of the Book of Daniel,” Bibliotheca Sacra 133, no. 532 (October 1976): 321.
  • 21
    F.M. Cross, The Ancient Library of Qumran and Modern Biblical Study (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1961), p. 165.
  • 22
    Brownlee, professor of religion, Claremont Graduate School
  • 23
    M. Burrows, The Dead Sea Scrolls (New York: Viking, 1955), p. 118
  • 24
    Myers, professor of Old Testament at the Lutheran Theological Seminary, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
  • 25
    R.K. Harrison, “Historical and Literary Criticism of the New Testament”, in EBC, vol. 1
  • 26
    BibSac—V133 #532,Oct 1976,p.322
  • 27
    The Antichrist in Daniel, which is the same as the beast in Revelation, arises out of the Roman Empire; it is not Antiochus Epiphanes.
  • 28
    Discussion of the prophecy and the four main interpretations
  • 29
    Critical scholars teach that Daniel was written after the events it claims to predict.
  • 30
    The ultimate purpose of this website is to explain the mark of the beast.
  • 31
    Does Revelation describe events chronologically? Must it be interpreted literally? The temple in heaven, Christ’s Return, Hear/See Combinations, and the Numbers in Revelation
  • 32
    There was a book in heaven that not even Christ was able to read because it was sealed up with seven seals. But, by overcoming, He became worthy to break the seven seals and open the book.
  • 33
    This is the apex of Revelation, providing an overview of history from before Christ until the end-time, with emphasis on the end-time persecution.
  • 34
    These plagues will follow after the end-time Christian persecution and will be followed by Christ’s return. What is the purpose of these?
  • 35
    Revelation has three beasts with seven heads and ten horns each; a great red dragon, the beast from the sea, and a scarlet beast.
  • 36
    Babylon is mentioned only once in the first 15 chapters but the seventh and final plague targets her specifically. Then Revelation 17 and 18 explain who and what she is.
  • 37
    The conclusion that Jesus is ‘God’ forms the basis of the Trinity Doctrine.
  • 38
    The decision to adopt the Trinity doctrine was not taken by the church.
  • 39
    Including Modalism, Eastern Orthodoxy view of the Trinity, Elohim, and Eternal Generation
  • 40
    Discussions of the Atonement – How does God do away with sin?
  • 41
    How people are put right with God
  • 42
    Must Christians observe the Law of Moses?
  • 43
    Must Christians observe the Sabbath?
  • 44
    Are the dead still alive and aware?
  • 45
    Will the lost be tormented in hell for all eternity?
  • 46
    And why does God not make an end to all evil?
  • 47
    Key events that transformed the church into an independent religion
  • 48
    When? How? Has His return been delayed?
  • 49
    I do not have any formal theological qualifications and I am not part of any religious organization. These articles are the result of my studies over many years.
TABLE OF CONTENTS