Daniel 6:1–6:28
Sources
Reformation Study BibleCalvin (1560)Geneva Bible Notes (1599)John Trapp (1647)John Gill (1748)Matthew Henry (1714)Jamieson-Fausset-BrownBarnes (1832)Cross-References (TSK)Reformation Study Bible
Darius. See note 5:31. Darius the Mede is not referred to in surviving historical sources outside the Scripture, and there is no interval between Belshazzar and Nabonidus (5:1 note) and the accession of Cyrus of Persia. Commentators have suggested that “Darius the Mede” could be: a throne name for Cyrus, the founder of the Persian Empire (v. 28 note); a title; or a designation for Gobryas, a general who had defected from Nebuchadnezzar to Cyrus and later captured Babylon. Cyrus made Gobryas governor over the territories the Persians took from the Babylonians. | an excellent spirit was in him, See 1:17; 4:8; 5:12. | the law of his God. Unintentionally, Daniel's adversaries affirm not only his moral integrity but also the visible nature of his piety and com- mitment to the God of Israel. | are agreed. The false implication is that Daniel concurred with the proposal. These officials are hypocritical in their seeming devotion to Darius. Their scheme is an attempt to manipulate him for their own designs. any god or man... except to you. The proposal would appear to Darius to be more political than religious, and would serve to consolidate his authority over newly conquered territories. | the law of the Medes and the Persians. The unchangeableness of their law is also attested in extrabiblical writings. The effect of the decree was to create a conflict for Daniel between allegiance to God and obedi- ence to human government. | down on his knees. Standing may have been a regular posture in prayer (1 Chr. 23:30; Neh. 9:2-5), while kneeling, a mark of humility, occurred in circumstances of particular solemnity (1 Kin. 8:54; Ezra 9:5; Ps. 95:6; Luke 22:41; Acts 7:60; 9:40). as he had done previously. Evidently Daniel's prayer habits were public knowledge. | one of the exiles from Judah. This ethnic identification of Daniel is perhaps indicative of prejudice towards the Jews on the part of the other officials (3:8). | set his mind to deliver Daniel. Darius immediately perceived that he had been victimized by the intrigue of his own officials in order to trap Daniel. His loyalty to Daniel remained unshaken. | May your God .. . deliver you. Against his own will Darius was forced to comply with the decree. Nevertheless, he is confident that Daniel's God will intervene on behalf of His faithful servant. | sealed it with his own signet. Signet rings and cylinder seals were used by the Assyrians, Babylonians, and Persians. The ring or cylinder was pressed into soft clay to leave the mark of the owner of the seal. Breaking seals was a violation of the law. | My God sent his angel. Possibly, although not necessarily in the context, this was the Angel of the Lord. See note 3:28. | the king ... commanded. Darius could rescue Daniel without vio- lating the decree since its demands had been fulfilled. | a decree. Compare 2:47; 3:28, 29; 4:2, 3, 34-37; 5:18-29. As in the previous narratives, God displays His sovereign control of nature and his- tory, kingdoms and kings. The decree is an eloquent testimony to “the living God" and His indestructible kingdom. It is an official acknowledg- ment of Daniel's God, although it does not necessarily reflect personal faith on the part of Darius. | Daniel prospered. Although the government changed hands, God's favor sustained Daniel and continued his authority.
Calvin (1560)
Daniel 6:1-2 1. It pleased Darius to set over the kingdom an hundred and twenty princes, which should be over the whole kingdom; 1. Placuit coram Dario, et praefecit super regnum praesides provinciarum centum et viginti, qui essent in toto regno. 2. And over these three presidents; of whom Daniel was first: that the princes might give accounts unto them, and the king should have no damage. 2. Et super illos essent, atque ut essent super eos, satrapae tres, quorum Daniel unus esset: et ut praesides provinciarum illis redderent rationem: et rex non pateretur damnum. As to the translation, some translate the last clause of the second verse, "That the king should not have any trouble;" but since nzq, nezek, signifies "to suffer loss," I willingly adopt this sense; because the king did not escape trouble, through a desire for ease, as he might have done, being an old man, but he willingly managed his own affairs, and committed the care of them to three men, lest anything should be lost through passing through too many hands. For experience shews us how confusion is caused by a multitude. If there had been only there an hundred and twenty governors of provinces, many inconveniences must have happened, and much loss would have occurred; hence the king placed [34]three prefects over these hundred and twenty. Here again we may perceive how God cared for his Prophet, not so much for any private reason or through private respect, as by his aid the wretched captives and exiles should be benefited. God wished to stretch forth his hand to the Jews by means of Daniel. And we may deservedly call him God's hand in sustaining the Jews. The Persians, being barbarians, were not naturally more merciful than others; hence God interposed his servant Daniel to succor them. We must notice, in the context of this history, how Daniel alone was chosen by Darius one of these three superior officers. He was the third in rank under king Belshazzar, although for a moment, yet it might occasion envy under the new king that so great an honor was conferred upon him. Very probably Darius was informed of the previous predictions of Daniel; how the hand appeared upon the wall, how he interpreted the writing, and became a heaven-sent messenger to denounce destruction on king Belshazzar. For unless this rumor held reached Darius, Daniel would never have obtained so much authority under him. His own army abounded in numbers, and we know how every conqueror is surrounded in war by many dependents, all of whom wish to share in the spoil. Darius, therefore, would never have noticed a stranger and a captive, and admitted him to such great honor and power, unless he had understood him to be a known Prophet of God, and also a herald in denouncing destruction against the Babylonish monarchy. Thus we gather how providential it was for him to be among the first satraps, and even third in the kingdom, as this brought him more quickly under the notice of Darius. For if Daniel had been cast down by king Belshazzar he would have remained at home in concealment; but when he appeared clothed in royal apparel, the king inquired who he was? He heard the means of his arriving at so high an honor; hence he acknowledged him as God's Prophet, and appointed him one of the three prefects. Here also God's providence is again set before us, not only in preserving his servant in safety, but in providing for the safety of the whole Church, lest the Jews should be still more oppressed by the change of masters. But a temptation is afterwards inflicted, by which the holy Prophet and the whole people were severely tried; for the Prophet says:
Geneva Bible Notes (1599)
It pleased Darius to set over the kingdom {a} an hundred and twenty princes, which should be over the whole kingdom; (a) Read Es 1:1.
John Trapp (1647)
It pleased Darius to set over the kingdom an hundred and twenty princes, which should be over the whole kingdom; It pleased Darius. — Chald., Pulchrum fuit coram Dario. Order, he knew, must be observed, or the kingdom could not continue; himself also was old, and needed assistants. It was honour and work enough for him illos iudicare quos constituit iudices aliorum to appoint others to judge also - as Petr. Blesensis saith that our Henry II did - to judge those whom he had made judges of others. The great Turk doth so to this day, whence few of his grandees, his viziers especially, or chief officers, die in their beds. An hundred and twenty princes. — For his one hundred and twenty provinces, which afterward came to be one hundred and twenty-seven. Esther 1:1 Monarchs will ever be adding.
John Gill (1748)
It pleased Darius to set over the kingdom an hundred and twenty princes,.... This is the same Darius mentioned in the latter part of the preceding chapter; who, as soon as he took the kingdom of Babylon, divided it into a hundred and twenty provinces, as Jacchiades observes; as was the manner of the Medes and Persians. So Darius the son of Hystaspes divided the kingdom of Persia into twenty provinces, and set governors over each, according to Herodotus (r); to these hundred and twenty provinces seven more were afterwards added, through the victories of Cyrus and Cambyses, and Darius Itystaspes, Esther 1:1 . Josephus (s), through forgetfulness, makes these princes and provinces three hundred and sixty: which should be over the whole kingdom; or, "in the whole kingdom" (t); in the several parts of it, and take care of all things relative to the civil government of it, both for the honour and advantage of the king, and the good of the subjects. (r) Thalia, sive l. 3. c. 89. (s) Antiqu. l. 10. c. 11. sect. 4. (t) "in toto regno", Pagninus, Montanus, Piscator, Cocceius; "toti regno", Junius & Tremellius.
Matthew Henry (1714)
We notice to the glory of God, that though Daniel was now very old, yet he was able for business, and had continued faithful to his religion. It is for the glory of God, when those who profess religion, conduct themselves so that their most watchful enemies may find no occasion for blaming them, save only in the matters of their God, in which they walk according to their consciences.
Jamieson-Fausset-Brown
CHAPTER 6 Da 6:1-28. Darius' Decree: Daniel's Disobedience, and Consequent Exposure to the Lions: His Deliverance by God, and Darius' Decree. 1. Darius—Grotefend has read it in the cuneiform inscriptions at Persepolis, as Darheush, that is, "Lord-King," a name applied to many of the Medo-Persian kings in common. Three of that name occur: Darius Hystaspes, 521 B.C., in whose reign the decree was carried into effect for rebuilding the temple (Ezr 4:5; Hag 1:1); Darius Codomanus, 336 B.C., whom Alexander overcame, called "the Persian" (Ne 12:22), an expression used after the rule of Macedon was set up; and Darius Cyaxares II, between Astyages and Cyrus [ÆSCHYLUS, The Persians, 762, 763]. hundred and twenty—satraps; set over the conquered provinces (including Babylon) by Cyrus [Xenophon, Cyropædia, 8.6.1]. No doubt Cyrus acted under Darius, as in the capture of Babylon; so that Daniel rightly attributes the appointment to Darius.Daniel is made chief of the presidents and princes of the realm, Daniel 6:1-3 . They conspire against him, and obtain an insnaring decree, Daniel 6:4-9 . Daniel, excused of the breach thereof, against the kingâs will is east into the lionsâ den, Daniel 6:10-17 . The king findeth him miraculously saved, Daniel 6:18-23 . His adversaries are cast in and devoured, Daniel 6:24 . Darius by a decree magnifieth God, Daniel 6:25-28 . No text from Poole on this verse.
Barnes (1832)
It pleased Darius to set over the kingdom - Evidently over the kingdom of Babylon, now united to that of Media and Persia. As this was now subject to him, and tributary to him, it would be natural to appoint persons over it in whom he could confide, for the administration of justice, for the collection of revenue, etc. Others however, suppose that this relates to the whole kingdom of Persia, but as the reference here is mainly to what was the kingdom of Babylon, it is rather to be presumed that this is what is particularly alluded to. Besides, it is hardly probable that he would have exalted Daniel, a Jew, and a resident in Babylon, to so important a post as that of the premiership over the whole empire, though from his position and standing in Babylon there is no improbability in supposing that he might have occupied, under the reign of Darius, a place similar to what he had occupied under Nebuchadnezzar and Belshazzar. In dividing the kingdom into provinces, and placing officers over each department, Darius followed the same plan which Xenophon tells us that Cyrus did over the nations conquered by him, Cyrop. viii.: Εδόκει ἀυτῷ σατράπας ἤδη πέμπειν ἐπὶ τά κατεστραμμένα ἔθνη Edokei autō satrapas ēdē pempein epi ta katestrammena ethnē - "It seemed good to him to appoint satraps over the conquered nations." Compare Esther 1:1 . Archbishop Usher (Annal.) thinks that the plan was first instituted by Cyrus, and was followed at his suggestion. It was a measure of obvious prudence in order to maintain so extended an empire in subjection. An hundred and twenty princes - The word here rendered "princes" (אחשׁדרפניא 'ăchashedarepenayā') occurs only in Daniel in the Chaldee form, though in the Hebrew form it is found in the book of Esther Est 3:12; Esther 8:9 ; Esther 9:3 , and in Ezra Ezr 8:36; in Esther and Ezra uniformly rendered lieutenants. In Daniel Dan 3:2-3, Daniel 3:27 ; Daniel 6:1-4 , Daniel 6:6-7 it is as uniformly rendered princes. It is a word of Persian origin, and is probably the Hebrew mode of pronouncing the Persian word satrap, or, as Gesenius supposes, the Persian word was pronounced ksatrap. For the etymology of the word, see Gesenius, Lexicon The word undoubtedly refers to the Persian satraps, or governors, or viceroys in the large provinces of the empire, possessing both civil and military powers. They were officers high in rank, and being the representatives of the sovereign, they rivaled his state and splendor. Single parts, or subdivisions of these provinces, were under inferior officers; the satraps governed whole provinces. The word is rendered satraps in the Greek, and the Latin Vulgate.
Cross-References (TSK)
Daniel 5:31; 1 Peter 2:14; Exodus 18:21; Esther 1:1