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Nebuchadnezzar’s Dream of the Shattered Statue[a]

Chapter 2

The King’s Dream. During the second year of his reign, King Nebuchadnezzar had a dream that troubled him deeply and made sleep impossible. Therefore, the king commanded that the magicians, the sorcerers, and the Chaldeans[b] were to be summoned to interpret his dream. When they arrived and stood in his presence,

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Footnotes

  1. Daniel 2:1 How was the author to circulate subversive writings on the coming end of the reign of Antiochus IV, without naming the king? How was he to proclaim the coming of God’s reign, when a pagan prince was in control? Here is one of the stories that, doubtless, circulated behind the king’s back. To a small extent it makes use of the story of Joseph at the pharaoh’s court (Gen 41), but draws more direct and important conclusions. In this allegory, dreams, which the ancients considered a means used by divinities to communicate with human beings, play an important part. Dreams serve chiefly as a literary device for writers of apocalypses, such as the Book of Daniel.
  2. Daniel 2:2 Chaldeans: some Chaldeans studied astrology.