Israel's Future: Daniel's Remarkable Prophecy
We
now move from the modern state of Israel to the future. Jeremiah 31:35, 36,
“Thus says the LORD, who gives the sun for a
light by day, and the ordinances of the moon and of the stars for a light by night,
who disturbs the sea and its waves roar; The LORD of hosts is his name: if those ordinances depart
from before me, says the LORD,
then the seed of Israel also shall cease from being a nation before me for
ever.” What this tells us is that in Jeremiah 31, at a time just prior to the
Babylonian captivity, God is saying that if these ordinances—the sun, the moon
and the stars, and all the laws of the universe—depart from before Him then the
seed of Israel shall also cease from being a nation from before me forever. So
there is the emphasis here on the permanency of the seed of Israel Even though
they are about to go out of the land they are not going to be destroyed as the
seed of the people. Verse 37, “Thus says the LORD; If heaven above can be measured, and the
foundations of the earth searched out beneath, I will also cast off all the
seed of Israel for all that they have done, says the LORD.” The point that we see
here is a reminder, a reiteration, of God faithfulness to Israel and of their
permanence in history.
How
does what is going on today help us to understand what may be going on in the
future with Israel? Current events, even though they may not necessarily be the
fulfillment of prophecy, are certainly significant. Our first question is: Does
the modern state of Israel have a legitimate claim on their historic homeland
today. The answer to that is yes. The type of the current fifth cycle of
discipline is the fifth cycle stage that occurred in the Old Testament between
585 and 516 BC. Those are really the dates for the 70 years because that is the
destruction of the temple to the rededication of the temple. It is that period
that they are out of the land, and what is happening during that time is that
the Babylonians are also introducing other ethnic groups that come into the
land, just like what has happened in the lengthier period of the past two
millennia. Nevertheless, they still have a right to the land because God is the
landlord who gave them this unconditional lease, this eternal lease to the
land. Even though squatters come in while they are temporarily removed, Israel
still has the right to the land because God says they will never lose their
status, even though they may be in apostasy and carnality.
A
second question is: Is the existence of the modern state of Israel
prophetically significant? Third question: What should the role of the believer
be in relationship to modern Israel? This is a very important question. If the
Jews are still God’s people, of the Abrahamic covenant is still in effect, what
should my role as a believer be in terms of supporting Israel? Generally we
should be in support of Israel. Generally speaking, the foreign aid that
America gives to Israel is not excessive. There are many who believe that
Israel should be completely self-sufficient. That is not really the issue. The
issue is, if Israel is a distinct nation in history then you can’t apply to
Israel the same set of standards you apply to foreign aid or help to every
other nation of the world because Israel, and only Israel, has a contractual
relationship with God. They are distinct and they should be treated as such.
This pro-Jewish attitude and the desire to support the Jews and their
restoration to Israel has been a part of the thinking of American culture since
the Puritans and various Christian groups came to America at its very
foundation. They brought that attitude with them from Britain, and this is what
has set apart the British and the Americans down through the ages: support for
Israel. And where did it come from? It came from our understanding of Scripture
because as believers we have access to a level of historical truth that the
unbeliever doesn’t have, and it needs to affect the way we make decisions in
terms of national policy because we do know the truth.
We
now focus on Israel’s future and the foundation for understanding God’s plan
for Israel’s future is contained in the book of Daniel. Daniel chapter 9 is one
of the most remarkable prophecies in all of Scripture. In 605 BC Nebuchadnezzar
invaded down through the area we know as Syria and into what was formerly the
northern kingdom of Israel and into Judah. He basically conquers Judah even
though at this time he doesn’t conquer Jerusalem or destroy the temple, but
because of his conquest he is able to take back with him a number of captives.
These are members of the aristocracy, members of the royal family. These are
the young men who are the princes of Judah. He takes them back to Babylon to
train them as administrators. Even later on Ptolemy is going to take many Jews
with him to Egypt because he understands that the Jews are good administrators.
Among these young men is Daniel, and God has a remarkable plan for Daniel’s
life. Even though Daniel is not a Babylonian he is blessed by God. God prospers
him. Daniel is obedient and committed to God and over the course of his life
God raises him from the status of basically a slave, a prisoner of war, to the
second highest position in the kingdom of Babylon and also the subsequent
kingdom of Persia.
In
605 BC the Jews were under the fourth cycle of discipline. In 586 the fifth
cycle took place when Nebuchadnezzar invaded Judah for the third time, conquers
Jerusalem, and destroys the Solomonic temple and thus the first temple period
comes to an end. This began what is known in history as the seventy-year
Babylonian captivity. It begins with the destruction of the temple in 586 and
ends with the dedication of the second temple, or the temple of Zerubbabel, in
516. About 48 years after the destruction of the temple, in 538, a year after
Babylon is destroyed by the kingdom of the Medes and the Persians, we have the
events in Daniel chapter 9.
Daniel
9:1, “In the first year of Darius the son of Ahasuerus, of the seed of the
Medes, which was made king over the realm of the Chaldeans.” So this locks us
down into a particular date in history. Daniel who is elderly at this time has
concluded a study of Old Testament passages. He has been searching these
Scriptures to see how long they are going to stay out of the land. He studies a
variety if passages and he comes to realize that according to God’s prophecies
in the law about their removal from the land, and according to God’s timetable
given in Jeremiah, that it is now almost time for the Jews to return to their
homeland. In his thought he thinks it is time for them to go back and
experience that final restoration spoken of in Deuteronomy chapter thirty when
they are going to establish the kingdom and the Jews will all be a regenerate
people and go back to the land and enter into their glorious kingdom. That is
what he is expecting. But God is going to send Gabriel to him to interpret the
timetable for Israel, and to tell him that they are not quite there yet. There
is another 490 years in the timetable. There would be a return shortly, but it
is not the return, not that ultimate return from all the nations spoken
of in Deuteronomy.
Leviticus
26 gives us these cycles or stages of increased catastrophe and calamity that
God promises to bring on to the Jews as a result of their disobedience to Him.
These included economic crises, military collapse, and other things that are
outlined. Verse 31ff, “And I will make your cities waste, and bring your
sanctuaries unto desolation, and I will not smell the savour of your sweet
odors. And I will bring the land into desolation: and your enemies which dwell
therein shall be astonished at it. And I will scatter you among the nations,
and will draw out a sword after you: and your land shall be desolate, and your
cities waste. Then shall the land enjoy her sabbaths, as long as it lies
desolate, and you be in your enemies' land; even then shall the land rest, and
enjoy her sabbaths. As long as it lies desolate it shall rest; because it did
not rest in your sabbaths, when you dwelt upon it.” The Sabbath was the seventh
day of the week. The Jews were to work for six days and rest of the seventh
day. But there was also a sabbatical year, the seventh year in a cycle. Every
seventh year was to be a Sabbath unto the Lord with no work. This encouraged an
economy of saving rather than spending because they had to store things up for
the seventh year when they were not going to work, produce, manufacture.
Israel’s calendar was built on this seven-year cycle, with each cycle having
one year of rest when the land could lie fallow and everyone could devote
themselves to the study of the Word and to the worship of the Lord.
Between
1406 BC when they enter into the land under Joshua and 586 BC when they are
taken out of the land by Nebuchadnezzar there are apparently seventy of these
sabbatical years that are ignored. So seventy sabbatical years times seven-year
cycle comes out to be 490 years. So that gives us a time frame. There is a
490-year time frame that precedes 586 BC and part of the reason they are
removed from the land, based on Leviticus 26, is because they have violated the
Sabbath law. The Sabbath was the sign of the Mosaic covenant and they had
violated it, so they have to let the land lie fallow for seventy years to make
up for those seventy years when they failed to obey the Sabbatical law.
Then
next prophecy we go to is in Deuteronomy 4. Moses is clearly stating that the
Jews will reject God, they will rebel against God, and they will get kicked out
of the land. Verses 26, 27, “I call heaven and earth to witness against you
this day, that you shall soon utterly perish from off the land where you go
over Jordan to possess it; you shall not prolong your days upon it, but shall
utterly be destroyed. And the LORD
shall scatter you among the nations, and ye shall be left few in number among
the heathen, whither the LORD
shall lead you.”
And
what will happen? Verse 28, 29, “And
there you will serve gods [still be apostates out of the land], the work of
men's hands, wood and stone, which neither see, nor hear, nor eat, nor smell.
But if from there [scattered among all the nations] you will seek the LORD your God [there will be a
turning to the Lord], you will find him, if you seek him with all your heart
and with all your soul.” So what we see is that this restoration that is spoken
of in Deuteronomy chapter four has positive volition turning to God preceding
their restoration to the land. This is talking about a restoration in
regeneration.
Deuteronomy
30:1, “And it shall come to pass, when all these things are come upon you, the
blessing and the curse, which I have set before you [Deut. 28 & 29], and
you will call them to mind [where?] among all the nations, where the LORD your God has driven you.
And will return to the LORD
your God, and will obey his voice according to all that I command you this day,
you and your children, with all your heart, and with all your soul; that then
the LORD your God will turn your
captivity, and have compassion upon you, and will return and gather you from
all the nations, where the LORD
your God has scattered you.” Has this been fulfilled yet? No. 536 wasn’t a
return from all the nations and there wasn’t a massive turning back to the Lord
that occurred. There were just a few that returned and many of the Jews are
still on negative volition. So we haven’t seen the fulfillment of this type of
return at all—the return from all the nations in positive volition and
regeneration where the Lord brings them back. This is what occurs at the end of
the Tribulation period. In fact the Tribulation is designed to bring the Jewish
people to a point where they turn and call for the Messiah to come again and
deliver them.
Isaiah
prophecies a lot about what is going to happen when the Babylonians come, the
Assyrians come, when they are taken out of the land, and what is going to
happen during the restoration. In Isaiah 11 we have a description of the status
of the time of that great and glorious return. This passage is talking about
that return we have just read about in Deuteronomy, the glorious return in
regeneration. Isaiah 11:11, “And it shall come to pass in that day [when
Messiah is back; at the end of the Tribulation; Millennial circumstances], that
the Lord shall set his hand again the second time to recover the remnant
of his people, which shall be left, from Assyria, and from Egypt, and from
Pathros, and from Cush, and from Elam, and from Shinar, and from Hamath, and
from the islands of the sea.” That restoration didn’t occur in 536 BC when they
just came from Babylon. This is talking about a second time, which is future. It
is Millennial, the recovery of the people who are left and they come from all
over the earth. How many recoveries is this? It is the second recovery. How
many recoveries can come before this? How many times can they return to the land
from all over the earth before this? Only once.
Daniel
thinks that the recovery in his time is going t0o be this glorious recovery.
Jeremiah gives us a timetable. Jeremiah 25:11, 12, “And this whole land shall
be a desolation, and an astonishment; and these nations shall serve the king of
Babylon seventy years. And it shall come to pass, when seventy years are
accomplished, that I will punish the king of Babylon, and that nation, says the
LORD, for their iniquity, and
the land of the Chaldeans, and will make it perpetual desolations.” The point
is that Daniel has been reading this and he says, “What, the king of Babylon
has been punished for their iniquity? It’s about time.” Daniel 9:2, “In the
first year of his reign I Daniel understood by books the number of the years, specified
by the word of the LORD
through Jeremiah the prophet, that he would accomplish seventy years in the
desolations of Jerusalem.” A side note here: How did he interpret those
numbers? Was it allegorically? Was it symbolically? No, it was literally! So if
it is interpreted literally here, then when we get to the end of the chapter
and the next timetable we expect that those numbers should be taken literally
as well.
2
Chronicles 36:21, “To fulfil the word of the LORD by the mouth of Jeremiah, until the land had
enjoyed her sabbaths: for as long as she lay desolate she kept sabbath, to
fulfil threescore and ten years.” This connects it back to the Leviticus
passage. They were going to be taken out because of their failure to fulfill
the Sabbaths.
Then
as Daniel goes back and reads Leviticus 26:40 he reads that there is a
condition for restoration: “If they shall confess their iniquity, and the
iniquity of their fathers, with their trespass which they trespassed against
me, and that also they have walked contrary unto me; and that I also have
walked contrary unto them, and have brought them into the land of their
enemies; if then their uncircumcised hearts be humbled, and they then accept of
the punishment of their iniquity: then will I remember my covenant with Jacob,
and also my covenant with Isaac, and also my covenant with Abraham will I
remember; and I will remember the land.”
So
what does Daniel do when he reads this? He says, “We have to confess our sins.”
They can’t go back until there is national confession. He is the key man, he is
the leader, so in Daniel 9:11 he begins to confess for the nation. He stands in
their stead as their substitute, as their leader, and he begins to confess
their sin. “Yes, all Israel have transgressed your law, even by departing, that
they might not obey your voice; therefore the curse is poured upon us, and the
oath that is written in the law of Moses the servant of God, because we have
sinned against him…As it is written in the law of Moses, all this disaster is
come upon us: yet made we not our prayer before the LORD our God, that we might turn
from our iniquities, and understand your truth.” They are not going to go back
until there is confession. There has to be cleansing before they can go back
into the land.
Then
God sends Gabriel to clear everything up. Daniel 9:21, “Yet, while I was
speaking in prayer, the man Gabriel, whom I had seen in the vision at the
beginning, being caused to fly swiftly, reached me about the time of the
evening offering. And he informed me, and talked with me, and said, O Daniel, I
am now come forth to give you skill to understand.” The word “skill” means to
act with understanding, to be able to think deeply about all these different
passages and put them together and come to a conclusion. This is discernment to
see how things apply. He goes on to say, “At the beginning of your
supplications the command went out, and I am come to tell you; for you art
greatly beloved [prized]: therefore consider the matter, and understand the
vision.”
Then
in verses 24-27 we have one of the most significant and remarkable prophecies
in all of the Scriptures, because it shows us, for one thing, that these
prophecies are to be taken literally. But it is also a great indication of when
the Messiah was to come and in support of the fact of Jesus’ claims to be the
Messiah. “Seventy weeks [literally, 70 periods of 7, i.e. 490 years] are
determined upon your people [the Jews] and upon your holy city [Jerusalem], to
finish the transgression [lit. rebellion], and to make an end of sins [the
national sin of Israel], and to make atonement for iniquity [not the payment
for sin on the cross but the realization of the prophetical fulfillment of the
day of atonement, i.e. when Israel realizes her reconciliation to God,
fulfilled when Messiah comes back], and to bring in everlasting righteousness
[Messianic kingdom], and to seal up the vision and prophecy [brings it to a fulfillment],
and to anoint the most Holy [Millennial temple]. You ate to know and discern,
that the issuing of a decree to restore and rebuild Jerusalem until the Messiah
the Prince there will be seven weeks, and sixty-two weeks: it will be built
again with plaza [the inside parts of the city], and the moat [external fortifications],
even in times of distress.” So this isn’t a return of people to reestablish the
city. It is more than that, it is a reestablishment of the city in terms of its
defenses and its fortifications. “And after the sixty-two weeks shall Messiah
be cut off, and have nothing: and the people of the prince who is to come will
destroy the city and the sanctuary; and its end will come with a flood, and even
to the end of there will be war, desolations are determined. And he [the prince
who is to come] will make a firm covenant with many for one week [the 70th
week]: but in the middle of the week he will put a stop to sacrifice and grain offering, and on the wing of abominations he
shall make it desolate, even until complete destruction, and one that is
decreed is poured on the one who makes desolate [the end of the Antichrist].”
We
have 70 weeks == 490 years. It starts with the decree to restore and rebuild,
and that first period of sixty-nine weeks goes from the issuing of the decree
to Messiah the prince. Now which decree? There were four from which to choose.
Cyrus decreed in 538 for the people to start going back to the land. Another
decree by Darius Hystaspes is mentioned in Ezra 6, and that is just to go back
to the land again. Then there is the decree by Artaxerxes Longimanus which is
given in 457 BC. None of these relate to rebuilding the fortification. So we
have to exclude those. But there is a second decree by Artaxerxes given to
Nehemiah in 444 BC to go back and complete the construction of the
fortifications and the walls around the city. That is the decree that we are
talking about. There is a decree to restore, and we can date it to March 5th,
444 BC. It is for “your people,” so this is related to Israel. If we take seven
times seven we have 49 years, 62 times 7 is 434 years, and when we add them
together we have a time period of 483 years. If we multiply 483 years times a 360-day
year we come up with a 173,880 days.
There
is a reason we use a 360-day year and it comes right out of Scripture. In Daniel
9 we are told that this last week is split in half, so it has two sections—two halves
in one week. This is also referred to in Daniel 7:25; 12:7; Revelation 12:14 by
the phrase “time [1], times [2], and a half a time” – three and a half. In
Revelation 12:6 it is also described as one thousand two hundred and sixty
days, defined as 42 months in Revelation 11:2 and 1260 days in Revelation 11:3,
and we divide 1260 days by 42 months, we come up with a 30-day month. 30 x 12 =
360 days. So in a prophetic calendar God is operating on a 360-day year. That
is what we have to work with. We can check this. If we multiply 69 x 7 x 360 we
come up with 173,880 days. From March 5th, 444 BC to March 30th,
33 AD, which is Palm Sunday when Jesus entered Jerusalem, is 173,880 days. God
tells Daniel precisely when the Messiah is going to come. And Jesus marches
right into Jerusalem, and everybody is singing Hosanna, Glory to God in the
highest, and Jesus is welcomed as the Messiah, but of course they reject Him
the next day. In Daniel it says, “Then after the sixty-two weeks the
Messiah will be cut off.” It doesn’t say “In the seventieth week.” That implies
a gap, doesn’t it? After the 69th week is over but before the 70th
week begins Messiah is cut off. The temple is destroyed.
Now
we are going to have the 70th week which is the time of the coming
prince. That is also for Israel: “your people and your holy city.” So when we
go through our timeline we have 70 x 7 = 490 years which are decreed for
Israel. But we have only 173,880 days or 483 years up to the cutting off of the
Messiah. So what happened to the other seven years? Are they going to be
literal? Everything else is literal. So that means there is a literal seven-year
period in the future for Israel. Conclusion: God has a future plan for Israel
for the fulfillment of this time clock, and that is the seven-year Tribulation in
the future. Daniel 9:27, “Then he shall confirm the covenant with many for one
week: but in the middle of the week he shall bring an end to sacrifice and offering,
and on the wing of abominations shall be one who makes desolate, even until the
consummation…” So there is a one-week period here: seven days which in fact are
seven years. In the middle of the week, three and a half years into it, there
is this desolation. Jesus picks up this terminology in Matthew 24 when He is
describing the Tribulation. Half way through when there is the abomination of
desolation when the Antichrist desecrates the Tribulation temple. Are the Jews
regenerate during the Tribulation, or apostate? They are apostate. When they
rebuild that Tribulation temple that has to be there in the Tribulation, is it
apostate? Yes. So there has to be a new temple built sometime by the first
three years of the Tribulation for the Antichrist to desecrate. Furthermore, for
the Antichrist to have a covenant with the many, to enter into a peace treaty
with Israel, what else has to be present at the beginning of the Tribulation? What
begins the Tribulation is the signing of the peace treaty. So what has to be
present at that time? The nation Israel! There has to be somebody there for him
to enter into a peace treaty with. There has to be an apostate, unregenerate group
of Jews, organized as a nation in the land, at the beginning of the Tribulation.
Otherwise it can’t get started. This structure in Daniel 9 is the structure and
the outline for what Jesus describes as the Tribulation in Matthew 24. It is
the basic structure for Revelation 4-19. We can’t really understand Matthew 24,
the Olivet Discourse, or Revelation 4-19, without understanding the prophecy of
Daniel.