Daniel 1:1-21
Faithfulness in Babylon
God ruled over Judah’s humiliation and Babylon’s power, and he preserved faithful servants in exile. Daniel and his companions refused real covenant compromise, and God gave them favor, wisdom, skill, and endurance in a foreign court.
Daniel 2:1-49
Nebuchadnezzar's dream of the statue
God alone reveals hidden mysteries and rules over the rise and fall of kingdoms. Nebuchadnezzar’s dream shows that every human empire is temporary, but the kingdom God establishes will stand forever.
Daniel 3:1-30
The fiery furnace
Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego refuse to worship Nebuchadnezzar’s image because only the Lord deserves ultimate allegiance. God vindicates their faithful obedience by preserving them in the fire and exposing the limits of the king’s…
Daniel 4:1-37
Nebuchadnezzar humbled
God humbled proud Nebuchadnezzar so that he would learn that the Most High rules over every human kingdom. Earthly power is real but borrowed, divine sovereignty is absolute, and restoration comes only when pride bows before heaven’s…
Daniel 5:1-31
Belshazzar's feast and the writing on the wall
Belshazzar proudly mocks the God of Israel by profaning the Jerusalem temple vessels, and God answers with immediate judgment. The Lord numbers kingdoms, weighs rulers, and ends empires at his appointed time.
Daniel 6:1-28
Daniel in the lions' den
God vindicates Daniel’s faithful devotion and shows that no empire, law, or ruler stands above him. Daniel is trapped by human law because he continues serving the living God, but God rescues him and turns the event into public testimony…
Daniel 7:1-28
The vision of the four beasts
Daniel sees beastly kingdoms rise from the chaos of history, oppress God’s holy ones, and boast against the Most High. Yet their authority is temporary: the Ancient of Days judges them, and everlasting dominion is given to one like a son…
Daniel 8:1-27
The ram and the goat
God shows Daniel that powerful empires will rise and fall, and that a proud ruler will violently attack Israel’s worship and sanctuary. Yet this evil will be limited by God, the sanctuary will be put right again, and the blasphemous ruler…
Daniel 9:1-27
Daniel's prayer and the seventy weeks
Daniel responds to Jeremiah’s prophecy by confessing Israel’s sin and pleading for mercy for Jerusalem, the sanctuary, and God’s people. God answers by revealing that the end of exile belongs to a larger, fixed plan in which sin will be…
Daniel 10:1-21
The glorious messenger and spiritual conflict
God heard Daniel’s humble seeking from the first day, even though the answer was delayed by conflict in the unseen realm. This vision shows that Israel’s future under the empires remains ruled by God, and that his servants need divine…
Daniel 11:1-45
Kings of the north and south
God shows Daniel that the rise and fall of empires are not random. Proud rulers may deceive, conquer, and persecute, but they can go only as far as God’s appointed limit, while the faithful must endure wisely and remain loyal to the holy…
Daniel 12:1-13
The time of the end and resurrection hope
Daniel 12 teaches that God will bring his people through an unparalleled time of distress and finally vindicate them through resurrection, judgment, and everlasting inheritance. Those who belong to him are known and kept by him, the wicked…