I would like all of you to think about the following verse. You’re letting the word ‘day” stand in your way. Yes, ‘day’ does refer to 24 hours; it’s a complicated Hebrew word and needs to be understood in the context in which it stands.
Now, if I say, “Tomorrow, at 10 o’clock, I will leave my house, go to the store and purchase a loaf of bread.”
When would this prophecy of mine begin, and when would it end? The comma tells us two events will take place and are connected by a single timeline. It will start when I leave my house at ten, (note the comma) go to the store (and when I get there), and buy a loaf of bread. That ends the prophecy.
Now compare that to,
Daniel 12:11, “From the time the daily sacrifice shall be taken away, (note the comma) and the abomination that makes desolate set up, there shall be a thousand two hundred and ninety days.” It’s two events separated by one long period.
The first question that needs to be answered is, when was the daily sacrifice taken away?
Daniel wrote these verses in 599 B.C., the first year of Darius. Daniel was in Babylon; the Temple in Jerusalem was still standing, and the temple sacrifices were still going on in Israel.
Against that backdrop, Daniel wrote, “From the time the daily sacrifice shall be taken away and the abomination that makes desolate is set up, there shall be a thousand two hundred and ninety days.”
So, when does the prophecy begin? It begins when the daily sacrifice is taken away. When was that? That happened when Nebuchadnezzar removed the sacred vessels from the Temple in 598 B.C., see Chronicles 36:5-7, one year after Daniel wrote the prophecy.
Keep in mind that there’s a comma between the daily sacrifice being taken and “the abomination that makes desolate set up,” connected by one long period, “a thousand two hundred and ninety days (years).”
Daniel’s book contains a combination of Hebrew and Chaldean, the language of the Babylonians. Many words in Daniel’s book can be misunderstood if you don’t look them up. I believe the word ‘day’ is one of them. It has to be understood in the context of both chapters 11-12. Chapter 11 begins with three Persian kings and ends “at the end of the days.” Chapter 12 begins with “And,” so it’s a continuation of Chapter 11 and every event in between.
So, it’s a continual flow between two specific events, separated by 1290 years beginning in 598 B.C., ending when the “abomination of desolation is set up.” Set up means whatever the abomination is, it is ‘put there, set in place’ like the Dome was finished in 692 A.D., exactly 1290 years from when the daily sacrifice was taken away.
I started my journey into end-time prophecy many years ago. When I began, so many things were being written that were confusing and stretched way out of shape. I’ve read the same books you have on the subject, Lahay, Walvoord, Duck, Jack Van Impi, Lindsey, Adam Clark, and Matthew Henry, all saying pretty much the same thing, all weaving the book of Revelation into Daniel’s prophesies. Because I’m a pre-triber, I am not concerned about the seven years of tribulation John writes about, so I never confuse it with Daniel’s prophesies.
Now, you don’t have to respond if you cannot get past the word day. I’ve been reading Dougggs post and all the comments attached to it. There is too much confusion and too many disagreements.
My last comment is, if you add 1335 years to 692, we would be standing in the year 2027, precisely 2000 years after the Lord was baptized in October of 27 A.D. at the age of 30.
I honestly believe this year will be like no other in history. The walls have crumbled in America; there is no other place for a Christian or Jew to hide. Not in this world!
Now, if I say, “Tomorrow, at 10 o’clock, I will leave my house, go to the store and purchase a loaf of bread.”
When would this prophecy of mine begin, and when would it end? The comma tells us two events will take place and are connected by a single timeline. It will start when I leave my house at ten, (note the comma) go to the store (and when I get there), and buy a loaf of bread. That ends the prophecy.
Now compare that to,
Daniel 12:11, “From the time the daily sacrifice shall be taken away, (note the comma) and the abomination that makes desolate set up, there shall be a thousand two hundred and ninety days.” It’s two events separated by one long period.
The first question that needs to be answered is, when was the daily sacrifice taken away?
Daniel wrote these verses in 599 B.C., the first year of Darius. Daniel was in Babylon; the Temple in Jerusalem was still standing, and the temple sacrifices were still going on in Israel.
Against that backdrop, Daniel wrote, “From the time the daily sacrifice shall be taken away and the abomination that makes desolate is set up, there shall be a thousand two hundred and ninety days.”
So, when does the prophecy begin? It begins when the daily sacrifice is taken away. When was that? That happened when Nebuchadnezzar removed the sacred vessels from the Temple in 598 B.C., see Chronicles 36:5-7, one year after Daniel wrote the prophecy.
Keep in mind that there’s a comma between the daily sacrifice being taken and “the abomination that makes desolate set up,” connected by one long period, “a thousand two hundred and ninety days (years).”
Daniel’s book contains a combination of Hebrew and Chaldean, the language of the Babylonians. Many words in Daniel’s book can be misunderstood if you don’t look them up. I believe the word ‘day’ is one of them. It has to be understood in the context of both chapters 11-12. Chapter 11 begins with three Persian kings and ends “at the end of the days.” Chapter 12 begins with “And,” so it’s a continuation of Chapter 11 and every event in between.
So, it’s a continual flow between two specific events, separated by 1290 years beginning in 598 B.C., ending when the “abomination of desolation is set up.” Set up means whatever the abomination is, it is ‘put there, set in place’ like the Dome was finished in 692 A.D., exactly 1290 years from when the daily sacrifice was taken away.
I started my journey into end-time prophecy many years ago. When I began, so many things were being written that were confusing and stretched way out of shape. I’ve read the same books you have on the subject, Lahay, Walvoord, Duck, Jack Van Impi, Lindsey, Adam Clark, and Matthew Henry, all saying pretty much the same thing, all weaving the book of Revelation into Daniel’s prophesies. Because I’m a pre-triber, I am not concerned about the seven years of tribulation John writes about, so I never confuse it with Daniel’s prophesies.
Now, you don’t have to respond if you cannot get past the word day. I’ve been reading Dougggs post and all the comments attached to it. There is too much confusion and too many disagreements.
My last comment is, if you add 1335 years to 692, we would be standing in the year 2027, precisely 2000 years after the Lord was baptized in October of 27 A.D. at the age of 30.
I honestly believe this year will be like no other in history. The walls have crumbled in America; there is no other place for a Christian or Jew to hide. Not in this world!
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