a8:21
b8:5
c8:22
d8:23-25
e8:9
f11:21-45
g8:11-12
h8:24
i8:25
j7:9-10
k13-14
l8:24
mActs 12:20-23

‏ Daniel 8:21-25

8:21  a The large horn represents Alexander the Great, the mighty first king who forged the Greek Empire. Two centuries after Daniel, Alexander would swiftly conquer the world (8:5  b); he overcame Persia in 331 BC. Alexander died in 323 BC at the age of thirty-three, but not before he arrogantly allowed himself to be called a god.

• Josephus records that some Jewish priests showed the book of Daniel to Alexander, but Alexander treated Homer’s Iliad as his Bible and relied on it for guidance.
8:22  c After Alexander’s death in 323 BC, his kingdom was divided into four major kingdoms, ruled by his generals (see profile for The Greeks at end of chapter).
Summary for Dan 8:23-25: 8:23-25  d The small horn (8:9  e) was a fierce king. The description matches Antiochus IV (175–163 BC), one of the Seleucids (cp. 11:21-45  f). He bore the name “Epiphanes” (“The Manifest Presence [of God]”), but many, including Jews, mockingly called him “Epimanes” (“Mad Man”). By desecrating the Temple and Jewish worship (8:11-12  g), Antiochus tried to destroy Judaism and unify his kingdom under the cult of Hellenistic culture. Some Jews were swept up in the program of Hellenism and adopted Greek ways.
8:24  h not by his own power: God remained in sovereign control of the seemingly fortuitous events of history that brought Antiochus IV to power.

• a shocking amount of destruction: See 1 Maccabees 1:10-63, which describes many of the evils that Antiochus IV instigated.
8:25  i The Prince of princes is the King of Israel, the ruler of heaven and earth (7:9-10  j, 13-14  k). Antiochus, at the time of his death, exalted himself as God and intended to destroy Jerusalem.

• he will be broken: Just as Antiochus IV’s rise was not by his own power (8:24  l), so he was destroyed by God’s hand rather than by human power. His end was to be eaten by worms (1 Maccabees 6:7-16 and 2 Maccabees 9:4-28; cp. Herod Agrippa, Acts 12:20-23  m).
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