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The Ten Horns from a Preterist view point.

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Nilloc

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Interesting links. I've heard of one commentator who believed that the whole Book of Daniel runs parallel to itself and the Ten Commandments. The idea is that the 70 years of exile parallel the 70 weeks and that the book is divided up into ten sections that parallel the Ten Commandments.

I haven't read the commentary, but one of the examples of parallelism between the 70 years of exile and the 70 weeks is that Daniel being thrown into the lions den parallels the death of Christ. Then Daniel being raised out of the den parallels the Resurrection.
 
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HarrisonS

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The translation of the Hebrew word b'rith all depends on the context. In a "religious" context, it would be "covenant"; in a political context "treaty"; in a business context "contract". The authoritative Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew lexicon (BDB) has an excellent in-depth discussion of this.

You are absolutely right about the meaning of the word "confirm". In modern usage, it simply means "to affirm or reaffirm that something is true or valid". For this reason, I feel that it should be avoided here, since it "waters down" considerably the meaning for modern readers. The word "enforce" captures the meaning of the Hebrew here exactly.

Thank you for the three references on Hebrew parallelism; they are all excellent. However, if there is parallelism here, it can work both ways; it could equally well be an antithetic parallelism showing parallels between the subjects of verses 26 and 27, for example, Christ versus Antichrist (See your references). It all depends on the identity of the "he" in verse 27. Logically it should be "the prince who is to come" nagid habba, since (1) it would have been pointless to mention him here unless Daniel (or rather the angel) was not going to say anything about him here and (2) he comes chronologically after the destruction of the temple in 70 AD (v. 26). Also, the sacrifice and offering were not stopped after Messiah was cut off, but continued for nearly forty years. The writer to the Hebrews still uses the present tense in referring to the sacrifices (Heb. 10:11). Only the validity of the sacrifices came to an end then.

I really appreciate your intelligent and insightful comments, unlike some I have encountered in these forums. It is important sometimes to be able "to think outside the box" and always to think analytically as you have done here, and I think we can use more of this!
 
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Notrash

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LittleLambofJesus

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Iron is only mentioned 1 time outside of revelation, and is also one of the metals shown in the "Great City" in Revelation 18. Intereresting.

http://christianforums.com/showthread.php?t=7249947


Revelation 2:27 And he shall shephered them with a rod of iron; as the vessels of a potter shall they be broken to shivers: even as I received of my Father.

Revelation 9:9 And they had breastplates, as it were breastplates of iron; and the sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of many horses running to battle.

Revelation 12:5 And she brought forth a man child, who shall be shepherding all nations with a rod of iron: and her child was caught up unto , and to his throne.

Revelation 18:12 The merchandise of gold, and silver, and precious stones, and of pearls, and fine linen, and purple, and silk, and scarlet, and all thyine wood, and all manner vessels of ivory, and all manner vessels of most precious wood, and of brass, and iron, and marble,

Revelation 19:15 And out of his mouth goeth a sharp sword, that with it he should smite the nations: and he shall shepherd them with a rod of iron: and he treadeth the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of El-Shaddai

4603. sidereos sid-ay'-reh-os from 4604; made of iron:--(of) iron.
 
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Notrash

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GW

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Like so much of prophecy, the first application is usually located within the O.T. period. That OT figure then applies to Christ typologically. So it is with Daniel's prophecy. The Book of Daniel is one united prophecy that links to itself so much that it cannot possibly be treated as having many separate ages and people in mind. Daniel has Antiochus in mind, as the primary sense. The parallels within Daniel are clear and unmistakable:

The "Little Horn" in Daniel is Antiochus:
(Compare 8:9-12,23-25 --to--> Dan 7:8,24-26)


The daily sacrifice taken away by Antiochus
(Compare 8:11-12 --to--> 11:31 --->12:11 ---> 9:27)


"Transgression of Desolation" refers to Antiochus
(Compare Dan 8:13 --to--> 11:31 ---> 12:11 -->9:27)


The period for the power of Little Horn (Antiochus)
(Compare 8:13-14 (1150 days) --to--> 12:7 (time, times & half = 3.5 years)


The end for Antiochus and the restoration of the kingdom to the Jews
(Compare Dan 7:26 --to--> 8:17,19 ---> 9:26 ---> 11:40 ---> 12:4,9)

Since all scholarship on Daniel agrees that Antiochus is meant in chapter eight and eleven, then the undeniable parallels to chapter eight demand Antiochus as well. His destruction of the power of the holy people at 8:24 is the same as 12:7. His taking away the daily sacrifice at 8:11-12 is the same as 11:31 and 12:11 and 9:27. His abomination of desolation at 8:13 is the same as 11:31 and 12:11. His time frame for doing this is discussed at 7:25, 8:14, 12:7 and 9:27. Finally, the time for the end of that event is given at 8:17,19; 7:26; 11:40; 9:26; and 12:4,9. These are all the same "end."

The four empires mentioned in chapter two and seven are approximately as follows: Babylonian (head of gold/the lion), Median (breast and arms of silver/the bear), Persian (belly and thighs of brass/the leopard) and Grecian (legs of iron and feet of iron and clay/beast with ten horns). The "little horn" (Antiochus) arises out from the ten horns (Alexander and his successors) as described in chapter seven and thus out of the four notable ones (the rulers of the four divisions of Alexander's empire) as described in chapter eight.

The parallels internal to the book itself are weighty and must not be avoided simply because of usual precommitments and presuppositions imposed upon the book. I say it again: The unity of Daniel's vision cannot and must not be avoided.

The link that Daniel has to Jesus is one of typology, as was the link so commonly asserted by the apostles in their teaching.

.
 
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Nilloc

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Hey GW, good to see ya.
Since all scholarship on Daniel agrees that Antiochus is meant in chapter eight and eleven, then the undeniable parallels to chapter eight demand Antiochus as well.
Antiochus is without a doubt in mind in chapters 8 and 11. But I would disagree that he is the only one in mind in the latter chapters of Daniel. Just because similar language is used, doesn't require that its all speaking of the same person/event/ect...
The "Little Horn" in Daniel is Antiochus:
(Compare 8:9-12,23-25 --to--> Dan 7:8,24-26)
The little horn of chapter 7 cannot be the same as 8 (Antiochus). The little horn of chapter 7 (who I now believe is Nero Caesar) comes up from the ten kings (the first ten Caesar's: Julius (1), Augustus (2), Tiberius (3), Caligula (4), Claudius (5), Nero (6) Galba (7), Otho (8), Vitellius (9), and Vespasian(10)) where as Antiochus comes from Alexander's four generals (Dan. 8:8-9). From my studying on some sites, I've never found any connection with Greece to the ten horns; it fits first century B.C. and first century A.D. Rome perfectly.

Nero does fulfill the little horn role in chapter 7. He did subdue three kings (Tiberius, Caligula and Claudius were killed to get Nero on the throne) and he, like all the Caesar's, "spoke boastfully." Verse 25 speaks of the saints being handed over to him for a time, times, and half a time (three and a half years) which was the amount of time the persecution of Christians by Nero lasted: from A.D. 64 to Nero's death in A.D. 68.
No disagreements.
Since all scholarship on Daniel agrees that Antiochus is meant in chapter eight and eleven, then the undeniable parallels to chapter eight demand Antiochus as well.
Again, just because similar language is used doesn't require it all to be Antiochus. Also, there are too many difficulties trying to make the little horn of chapter 7 fit Antiochus.
Mede and Persia, historically speaking, were not seperate kingdoms, they were one. One arm of the statue represents Mede and the other represents Persia. As for the bear, that clearly is describing Medo-Persia; the bear is raised up on one side, which refers to how Persia was stronger than Mede and the three ribs in it's mouth refer to the three conquests of Medo-Persia: Lydia, Babylon, and Egypt. In Daniel 8 Mede and Persia are shown as one kingdom, not two. Sorry GW, but making the breast & arms of silver/bear Mede alone does not work; it fits perfectly with Medo-Persia. Also, if it was only Mede alone, then Daniel was a false prophet, because historically, Mede and Perisa were a united kingdom. He can't have made the two seperate and be a true prophet.

Persia can't be the leopard either; it fits better with Greece. The four wings and four heads would refer to Alexander's kingdom divided into four parts (Macedon, Asia Minor, Seleucid, and Egypt) and Alexander's four generals.

ten horns (Alexander and his successors)
I have never found any connection between Greece and the ten horns. Can you please explain this; Alexander did not have ten successors to my knoweledge, only his four generals. The ten horns sound more like the ten Caesar's.
The parallels internal to the book itself are weighty and must not be avoided simply because of usual precommitments and presuppositions imposed upon the book.
No, they shouldn't, but we should not rule out that the fourth kingdom is Rome (especially because of the many problems with making Greece the fourth as I pointed out above) or that the little horn of chapter 7 is different from the little horn chapter 8.

Please, as a brother in Christ, consider the points I made GW. I got much of my info here, so please check it out.

God Bless.
 
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Notrash

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Is the covenent itself a one week (7 yr) event or is it's implementation and it's confirmation a 7 yr event?
Confirmation can refer to the "implementation" of the new covenant in the mind of the jews by it's replacement of the old covenant. That it is also the centerpiece and fullfillment of the Edenic and Abrahamic promises of the blessing of the nations through faith is quite possible and to be understood later (as Paul's letters define).

Agreed that the exact dates are yet unknown, and it is agreed that the new covenant was never terminated to the jewish or or other peoples. It is the final and everlasting kingdom of all peoples, nations and languages spoken of in Dan 7:14.

We do not see eye to eye due to your insistence that this is a 7 yr only covenant between a man and some jews, rather than the Messiah's and Holy Spirits confirming, establishing and defining of a pre-determined or pre-made Covenant for 7 years. It was primarily "CONFIRMED" within Jerusalem and primarily to the Jewish (Daniels people) (first) all within the 70 weeks (490 yrs) mentioned in Dan 9:24 and primarily in the final 7 wk/yr period.

This brings us to another point, and that being that the futurists rendering of a delayed final week do not fit into the introductory theme of Dan 9:24 where all those things are said to be accomplished within the next 490 yrs. The verses following vs 24 go into some description of how those things will be accomplished within those years.

Popular usage is an accurate terminology and assessment. However, the 'popular usage' of the phrase antichrist still a very wrong application of the phrase anti-christ as found in 1st and 2nd john. In fact, from that meaning of Johns usage: those who hope for a second visitiation to the earth seem to deny the importance and the finished work Christ accomplished during his first (and I believe only) physical (in the flesh; humbling himself in the form of a man) visitation to the earth. The verses in first and second John that tell of "the anti-christ" seem to be the verses that speak against a second "in the flesh" coming. In fact in the olivet discourse, his second coming is said to be (or have been) "in the clouds", which may contrast with "in the flesh".

If anything, the phrase to be used for this supposed 'evil guy with red eyes covered with blue contact lenses would be 'man of sin'. And after that naming is made, we could then deal with the specific meaning of that term.

Anti-christ in it's biblical usage does not refer to a future ruler. Antichrist is already (and has been for 2000 yrs) anyone who does not beleive and profess that the Messiah has already come "in the flesh" for for all of mankind and the jews first. That perspective and the verses in I and 2 John lead one to consider that those who believe in a future second coming of Messiah "in the flesh" for a judaic kingdom have denied the true Messiah and his accomplished and finished work. John even mentions a play on words where some people were apparently speaking of an anti-christ saying that because they speak of anti-christs, we know that the Christ has already come.

This is true. But the covenant mentioned in Daniel 9:27 was a seven-year covenant and thus cannot be identified with the New Covenant.

Again, were in disagreement, but I dont' expect to convince your perspective but to plant thoughts of a diffferent perspective than what you've been taught by man.

The 'new covenant' is only a 'new' covenant' to distinguish it and contrast it against the weak, inferior and temporary "old covenant'. Otherwise the 'new covenant' is an expansion and continuation of ideas found in the Edenic and Abrahamic promises. All of these promises being fulfilled in Christ and "ESTABLISHED", 'CONFIRMED' and even 'implemented' during the 70th 7 yr period.

I see no contradiction here. In the middle of the “week” he will cause the sacrifice and offering to cease; in other words, he shall stop the sacrifice and offering.
 
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Notrash

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I reject that "I need to realize" the above twisting of scripture into a "double fulfillment".
You need to ask, seek and knock to see if your statements stand true and if they glorify the words and works of Jesus. A simple search of Josephus and ealry writings (Eusebius) show that there were many phenomenon during the last years and months in the city of Jerusalem. Among those were formations of Roman Chariots and soldiers "in the clouds", a light in the shape of a sword appearign over the temple for a full hour (I think), a light and voices emmitting from the temple, a lamb being born from a cow in the temple, strong winds forcing doors of the temple shut, and a country man named "jesus" who for years before the desolation cried daily, "a voice from the east, a voice from the west, north and south"... woe to the inhabitants of Jerusalem. (and many other "phenomenon") If you have trouble finding them, let me know.

I find the idea of a “cover up” of unusual celestial events by futurists in the early church to be far-fetched, to say the least.

Perhaps 'cover up' is a little strong, but I think there is a jewish/zionist influence in the dispensational works. For example, why does no dispensational Bible college that I know have an extensive course on Josephus' works where these phenomenon are revealed or on works such as Endersheims" life and times of Jesus the Messiah or other similar works by Mauro, Anstey and others. The greatest time of history should be exhaustively researched and studied, but rather it is selectively indoctrinated.

We need to first claify the words surrounding Genos, Genea, Genemma,etc and then address you claims of 'all things' not being seen or accomplished. It seems that your partially defining 'generation' due to the belief that 'all these things' have not come to pass in the first century.

We can start by doing a word use study of Genea;
http://cf.blueletterbible.org/search/translationResults.cfm?Strongs=G1074&Criteria=generation%2A&t=KJV

In every time it seems (although arguably depending on ones interpretaion) to be referring to a group of people living at one lifespan.

Genea means:
1) fathered, birth, nativity
2) that which has been begotten, men of the same stock, a family
a) the several ranks of natural descent, the successive members of a genealogy
b) metaph. a group of men very like each other in endowments, pursuits, character
1) esp. in a bad sense, a perverse nation
3) the whole multitude of men living at the same time
4) an age (i.e. the time ordinarily occupied be each successive generation), a space of 30 - 33 years


Genea does not mean “race, tribe or family”, as you say; That is the definition of Genos. It has entirely different meanings.
http://cf.blueletterbible.org/lang/lexicon/Lexicon.cfm?Strongs=G1085&t=KJV
Genos means:
1) kindred
a) offspring
b) family
c) stock, tribe, nation
1) i.e. nationality or descent from a particular people
d) the aggregate of many individuals of the same nature, kind, sort

Then there is the word Gennema which many people substitued the definition for genea;
http://cf.blueletterbible.org/lang/lexicon/lexicon.cfm?strongs=G1081
Genemma means:
1) that which has been born or begotten
a) the offspring or progeny of men or animals
b) the fruits of the earth, the produce of agriculture

It's translation is generation, and it would be the word that the author would use if a continued kind or progeny of Jews would have been meant by Jesus. Jesus used Genea, meaning those living in that lifespan, not Genos or Gennema.

Now, having defined the meaning of Jesus' intention of the use of the word Genea and limiting the events that he described to those people whom he was talking to, now we must search to discover if "all these things" could have possibly happened. Your saying that they didnt' all occur or happen seems to contradict what Jesus just said. Thus you might want to reconsider that you might just not know of "all these things" yet, just as I did not know of 'all these things".

Again, searching on google or pretertist archive yields lots of new information.




Some good perspectives here about the kingdom of God. It is possible that we do not manifest or take hold of the physical aspects of the kingdom of God in the manner that we should. I am learning some things about an act of expatriation whereby some persons leave whatever allegience that they are born under and can become physically and politically part of a domicile of the kingdom of God and proclaim subjectiveness to that jurisdiction at whatever costs.
 
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GW

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NILLOC: Antiochus is without a doubt in mind in chapters 8 and 11. But I would disagree that he is the only one in mind in the latter chapters of Daniel.

GW: The parallels I listed show that all the chapters are a united whole, not a scattered piecemeal patchwork of different people times and places. The internal evidence (study the parallel passages closely) demands Antiochus, and history lines up naturally with it too, as even liberal scholars have been forced to admit. (The Antiochus view of Daniel's prophecy fits history so closely that liberals scream and howl that the book had to be written at or near the death of Antiochus, so that the book is actually history and not prophecy! Imagine that.)

NILLOC: Just because similar language is used, doesn't require that its all speaking of the same person/event

GW: Reading Daniel as a unified whole works with history (as even liberal scholars admit) and is demanded by the internal parallels. We're not talking about mere "similar language"---the parallels I listed are the same events and language used to describe those events.

Study the internal evidence closely to see a united whole is meant:


The "Little Horn" in Daniel is Antiochus:
(Compare 8:9-12,23-25 --to--> Dan 7:8,24-26)


The daily sacrifice taken away by Antiochus
(Compare 8:11-12 --to--> 11:31 --->12:11 ---> 9:27)


"Transgression of Desolation" refers to Antiochus
(Compare Dan 8:13 --to--> 11:31 ---> 12:11 -->9:27)


The period for the power of Little Horn (Antiochus)
(Compare 8:13-14 (1150 days) --to--> 12:7 (time, times & half = 3.5 years)


The end for Antiochus and the restoration of the kingdom to the Jews
(Compare Dan 7:26 --to--> 8:17,19 ---> 9:26 ---> 11:40 ---> 12:4,9)
 
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Notrash

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Hi GW. Good research that I can be in agreement with; except for the inclusion of Dan 7 and 9.

How does the 490 yrs from the command to rebuild the temple coincide with Antiochus in the final week of Dan 9:27?

Also, how do you associate Jesus' telling the people in 30 Ad that when they see the abomination of desolation spoken by Daniel the Prophet, that they should run for the hills if this was all referring to Antiochus.?
 
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Nilloc

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Hi GW,
The parallels I listed show that all the chapters are a united whole, not a scattered piecemeal patchwork of different people times and places.
The Scriptures, history, and context of the passages, show they are not.
The internal evidence (study the parallel passages closely) demands Antiochus,
No it doesn’t, especially when the fourth kingdom being Greece is so hard to prove and actually contradicts Jesus’s application of Daniel 7:13 (which you say happened over a hundred years before Christ) to Himself (Matt. 24:30, 26:64; Mark 13:26, 14:52; Luke 21:27) and the fact that making the fourth kingdom Greece contradicts history, which makes Daniel a false prophet.
and history lines up naturally with it too,
History lines up well with Medo-Persia being the second kingdom, Greece the third, and Rome the fourth. It doesn’t line up “naturally” if the Medes and Persians are split or that the ‘ten horns’ belong to Greece (which I have found no historic fulfillment of).
Then why do you agree with them? They say Daniel screwed up by splitting the Medes and Persians and made a false prophecy about Greece Empire having ten horns. Even the Book of Daniel itself says plainly that the Medes and Persians were one kingdom (Dan. 5:29, 8:20). In Revelation, the sea Beast (Rome) is the same as the fourth Beast in Daniel.
Reading Daniel as a unified whole works with history (as even liberal scholars admit)
Actually they don’t; they say Daniel messed up in his counting of the empires.
and is demanded by the internal parallels. We're not talking about mere "similar language"---the parallels I listed are the same events and language used to describe those events.
You haven’t proven they are and I showed that Nero fulfilled the little horn of chapter 7 and that it could not possibly have been referring to Antiochus. Just because language is “similar” or even the exact same, does not mean it’s referring to the same thing. That’s not the way to interpret the Bible; to just assume that the events are the same because the same language is used does not do justice to Daniel. When closely examined, the fourth kingdom does not fulfill the role of Greece, nor Antiochus, the third kingdom does.

God Bless.
 
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Nilloc

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Hi GW. Good research that I can be in agreement with; except for the inclusion of Dan 7 and 9.
Same here.

Excellent points Notrash, Jesus clearly stated that not all the prophecies of Daniel are refering to Antiochus.
 
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HarrisonS

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I am going to comment on the rest of your posts later, but let me jump in here to comment briefly on your last post.


I really cannot believe what I am reading here! First you state here that I was incorrect in saying that the first definition of genea as “race, tribe or family”, and then immediately you give a link that proves that I was right! All three words, “race”, “tribe” and “family” appear in the definitions shown in this link. Then, as if that was not enough, you immediately go on to give a list of definitions that further corroborates what I had said! The most respected Greek lexicons, Arndt & Gingrich and Abbott-Smith as well as the TDNT are all in essential agreement on these definitions, as is your link. Aside from you puzzling statement that my definition was wrong, we are in 100% agreement on all of these definitions.


All of this being said, this whole issue is moot anyway, and we do not even need the reference to “generation” in Matt. 24:34 at all to draw our conclusion. It only reaffirms what we are already saying. If you will reread my last post you will see that I said, “In any case, the phrase “when you shall see all of these things” in verse 33 makes all of [the definition of genea] moot.”


You keep on ignoring the fact that “all of these things (verses 33 and 34) MUST INCLUDE the Second Coming of Christ in verse 30. Here is another interesting observation: Matt. 24:2 states that “there shall not be left here one stone upon another that shall not be thrown down.” Most teachers, including those with whom I would find essential agreement will be quick to tell you that this was literally fulfilled in 70 AD. It was not. The Wailing Wall is still standing, even today! “not … one stone upon another” sounds very thorough. This can only mean that the final fulfillment of this passage is still in the future!


I will return later with further comments.
 
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GW

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NoTrash and Nilloc:

I, too, used to treat Daniel in a piecemeal fashion as you are doing. But then I discovered two things that utterly forced me to shift to the Antiochus interpretation:

(1) Daniel's book ties itself to Antiochus using parallels that cannot be denied without tossing sound exegesis out the window (see the parallels below)

(2) Scholars have repeatedly proven that Daniel's prophecy fits the history leading up to and including Antiochus. (This is so clear that liberals insist that Daniel had to be written at about the time of Antiochus' death. In other words, liberals don't believe in the possibility of prophecy, so they say the book *has to be history disguised as prophecy.* That's how much the book fits history culminating in Antiochus.)


The parallels once again demand Antiochus:

The "Little Horn" in Daniel is Antiochus:
(Compare 8:9-12,23-25 --to--> Dan 7:8,24-26)


The daily sacrifice taken away by Antiochus
(Compare 8:11-12 --to--> 11:31 --->12:11 ---> 9:27)


"Transgression of Desolation" refers to Antiochus
(Compare Dan 8:13 --to--> 11:31 ---> 12:11 -->9:27)


The period for the power of Little Horn (Antiochus)
(Compare 8:13-14 (1150 days) --to--> 12:7 (time, times & half = 3.5 years)


The end for Antiochus and the restoration of the kingdom to the Jews
(Compare Dan 7:26 --to--> 8:17,19 ---> 9:26 ---> 11:40 ---> 12:4,9)

I wish I had more time to go through the whole study. But for now simply note that Daniel's writings themselves link to each other in such a fashion as to require that Antiochus is meant throughout.

The link to Christ is a typological one only.
 
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LittleLambofJesus

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I, too, used to treat Daniel in a piecemeal fashion as you are doing. But then I discovered two things that utterly forced me to shift to the Antiochus interpretation:
I would disagree and I may put up my Translation of Daniel 11 on the Christian Scriptures board verse by verse. I do not believe it has anything to do with antiochus/macabees otherwise all of Dan 11/12 will appear to be a false prophecy.
One could be a type of "gentile" King and the other a type of "Jewish" king.

Remember that the Judeans in the NT were playing "kissy face" with the Romans?

Daniel 11:27 and Two of them, the Kings, heart of them to evil-mischief, and on a table one lie they shall speak. And not she shall prosper, that further End/07093 qets to appointed-time/04150 mow`ed.

Matthew 27:64 Oder thou! then to be secured the sepulcher till the third day lest then coming His disciples should be stealing Him and may be saying to the people 'He was roused from the dead-ones' and shall be the last deception worst of the first.
 
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Notrash

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LittleLambofJesus

Hebrews 2:14.... Pesky Devil, git!
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What do you think of the Catholics and some other denominations saying they are already in that "millineum" now. I find that view just as false and deceptive.

http://christianforums.com/showthread.php?t=6813701&page=37
Question time. Jesus returns before or after 1000yrs
 
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