Add parallel Print Page Options

Daniel’s Vision of a Ram and a Goat[a]

Chapter 8

Vision of the Ram and He-Goat. In the third year of the reign of King Belshazzar, I, Daniel, had another vision subsequent to the first vision that I had previously experienced. In my vision I saw myself in the citadel of Susa[b] in the province of Elam, standing by the Ulai canal.

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. Daniel 8:1 Daniel has a new vision. First, there is a ram with two horns of unequal length (that is, of unequal power): the Medes and the Persians. Then a goat comes from the West, a king of Greece, to snatch them from their place: Alexander the Great. When the latter dies, in 323 B.C., his successors, or Diadochi, will argue over the empire: the Lagids, the Seleucids, the Antigonids, and later the Attalids. Finally, the beautiful land, Jerusalem, falls into the power of Antiochus (v. 9), who attempts to subdue the soul of Israel by violence (v. 10). He identifies himself with God, suppresses the daily sacrifice (in 167 B.C.), and erects an altar for Zeus over the altar in the temple. But the days of the persecutor are numbered.
  2. Daniel 8:2 Susa, the capital of Elam, was the summer residence of the Persian kings.