a3:14
b3:15
c3:16-18
dExod 18:10
eDan 12:1-3
f3:23
g3:23
h3:25
iGen 3:8-9
jDan 3:28
k3:26
l4:2
m24-25
n7:25
oGen 14:18
pNum 24:16
qDeut 32:8-9
rPs 73:11
sIsa 14:14

‏ Daniel 3:14-27

3:14  a Is it true . . . ? The Aramaic word is used only here in the Old Testament. The king may have been asking, “Are your actions deliberate?”
3:15  b I will give you one more chance: The three men’s earlier relationship to the king may have helped them get a second chance.
Summary for Dan 3:16-18: 3:16-18  c The three men declared their faithfulness to God above all. They were entrusting themselves to the God who had rescued the entire nation of Israel from the power of Pharaoh (Exod 18:10  d). God later revealed that those who remain faithful unto death will be delivered even after they have died (Dan 12:1-3  e).
3:23  f In the Greek version and the Latin Vulgate, The Prayer of Azariah and The Song of the Three Jews are inserted after 3:23  g (see Daniel Book Introduction, “Author and Date”).
3:25  h walking around: The same word is used in Gen 3:8-9  i.

• like a god (literally like a son of the gods): The king understood the being as the Lord’s angel (Dan 3:28  j).
3:26  k The title Most High is often used to refer to God (e.g., 4:2  l, 24-25  m; 7:25  n; Gen 14:18  o; Num 24:16  p; Deut 32:8-9  q; Ps 73:11  r; Isa 14:14  s). In Canaanite religion, it often referred to Baal.
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