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Showing posts with label O.T. - Daniel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label O.T. - Daniel. Show all posts

December 17, 2019

Preface to the Commentary on the Book of the Prophet Daniel (St. Jerome)


Commentary on the Book of the Prophet Daniel

Preface

By St. Jerome

Porphyry wrote his twelfth book against the prophecy of Daniel, denying that it was composed by the person to whom it is ascribed in its title, but rather by some individual living in Judaea at the time of the Antiochus who was surnamed Epiphanes. He furthermore alleged that "Daniel" did not foretell the future so much as he related the past, and lastly that whatever he spoke of up till the time of Antiochus contained authentic history, whereas anything he may have conjectured beyond that point was false, inasmuch as he would not have foreknown the future. Eusebius, Bishop of Caesarea, made a most able reply to these allegations in three volumes, that is, the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth. Appollinarius did likewise, in a single large book, namely his twenty-sixth. Prior to these authors Methodius made a partial reply.

December 17, 2016

December 17, 2015

The Relics of the Prophet Daniel in Constantinople


It is said the relics of the Prophet Daniel came to Constantinople in the fourth century by St. Helen, the mother of Constantine the Great, after collecting Christian relics in the Holy Land. They were placed in the Church of Saint Romanos the Martyr (a third century Martyr from Antioch commemorated on Nov. 27th) near the Romanos Gate of the land walls (the modern Topkapi Gate). It is maintained that this church was established by St. Helen herself before her death, but others say it may be a late fourth century structure. Some sources call this church the Church or Monastery of Saint Daniel.

Synaxarion of the Holy Prophet Daniel and the Three Children Ananias, Azarias and Misael


On the seventeenth of this month [December], we commemorate the Holy Three Children Ananias, Azarias and Misael, and Daniel the Prophet.

Verses

To Daniel
Now you see God in reality on His throne,
Being beheaded Daniel, and not in a vision as of old.

To the Three Children
The Three Children shed their blood in a foreign place,
Like the fire beforehand, now they are led to the sword.

On the seventeenth Daniel was beheaded, who sees the future.

The blessed Daniel the Prophet was from the royal tribe of Judah, of the family of those prominent in the royal service. He was born in Upper Beth-horon. While he was still an infant, he was brought as a slave from Judah to Babylon, and there he prophesied for seventy years. The Birth of Christ he foretold four hundred and sixty years beforehand. He was a man of such chastity, that the Jews thought he was a eunuch. And he lamented much over the slavery of his fellow Jews. It was also his desire to fast from all foods. Though his bodily appearance was lean, he was very good looking by the grace of God above.

December 17, 2014

What the Fiery Furnace of Babylon Foreshadowed


Within historical context, St. John Chrysostom explains that the Three Holy Children, who refused to worship the pagan idol in Babylon, were delivered from the burning fiery furnace of King Nebuchadnezzar for the following reason:

"For fire is accounted by the Persians to be a god.... God, therefore, being desirous to pull up by the roots the material of impiety, permitted the punishment to take this form, in order that: He might give the victory to his servants before the eyes of all these fire-worshipers; and, that He might persuade them by the plain fact that the gods of the nations are in dread not of God only, but even of the servants of God. Consider how the crown of victory was woven by the adversaries, and the enemies themselves were made witnesses of this trophy." ("On the Statues", Homily 4)

December 22, 2013

The Fleshless and Incarnate Logos


By His Eminence Metropolitan Hierotheos
of Nafpaktos and Agiou Vlasiou

The center of the Old and New Testament is Christ, with the difference that, in the Old Testament the Prophets saw the fleshless Logos, while in the New Testament the Apostles and the deified see the incarnate Logos. All the revelations of God in history, are revelations of the Son and Logos of God. In the Old Testament the Logos of God is the Angel of Great Counsel, the Angel of Glory, while in the New Testament the Logos of God becomes Christ, for the divine nature, by virtue of the hypostatic union of the divine and human nature in the person of the Logos, anointed human nature.

In a hymn written by Saint John of Damascus, it is written: "Although previously fleshless, afterward You became incarnate for us." Saint John of Damascus even teaches that the name "Christ" is a name of the hypostasis and not the nature. He writes: "We say that the name 'Christ' is the name of the hypostasis, not in the sense of one kind, but as signifying the existence of two natures. For He anointed Himself; as God He anointed His body with His own divinity, and as Man He was anointed. For He is Himself both one and the other. Thus the divinity anointed His humanity." He goes on to say: "For Christ, which name implies both natures, is spoken of as at once God and man, created and uncreated, subject to suffering and incapable of suffering."

Every passage used by Christ from the Old Testament in His teaching, as well as the passages interpreted by the Holy Apostles and referenced the revelations of God, are passages related to the revelation/appearance of the fleshless Logos. Yahweh of the Old Testament is He who is, who was and is to come, the Son and Logos of God, the Christ.

The Old Testament speaks of the divine nature of the Logos, while the New Testament, after the incarnation of the Logos of God, speaks of His divine and human natures which are united hypostatically to the person of the Logos and empower this hypostatic union and the exchange of properties of the two natures. The New Testament names as "Christ" the Lord of Glory and the Angel of Great Counsel of the Old Testament. So the name "Christ" is also referred to in the Old Testament and attributed to the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.

Saint John of Damascus says that when Christ is called "Son of God" He accepts the properties of human nature, which is united with His divine nature hypostatically, and when He is called "son of man" He declares that He accepts the properties and glorying of the divine nature. And this is because of the exchange of properties of each nature, for there is the identity of the hypostasis and the partaking of the two natures. For this reason we can say of Christ: "This is our God seen on the earth" and "This man is uncreated, passionless and indescribable."

The teaching of the Fathers of the Church is clear that the revelations of God in the Old Testament are revelations of the fleshless Logos. The appearance of the Prophet Moses and the Prophet Elijah on Mount Tabor, during the Transfiguration of Christ, shows this reality, that these great prophets during the course of their lives saw the fleshless Logos, who now recognize Him in the flesh. This also happened with Abraham, who according to Christ rejoiced: "Our father Abraham rejoiced to see this day, and he saw it and was glad" (Jn. 8:56). This is also shown by the fact that the Risen Christ interpreted to the Disciples walking towards Emmaus all that referred to Him in the Scriptures which had taken place. Specifically, Luke the Evangelist writes: "And beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, He explained to them what was said in all the Scriptures concerning Himself" (Lk. 24:27).

There are some who separate the vision and the revelation of the Prophet Daniel from other revelations of God in the Old Testament, and they speak of the revelation of God to Daniel as the Ancient of Days as a revelation of God the Father.

Specifically, in the book of the Prophet Daniel this divine vision is described as follows:

"As I looked, thrones were set in place, and the Ancient of Days took his seat. His clothing was as white as snow; the hair of his head was white like wool. His throne was flaming with fire, and its wheels were all ablaze. A river of fire was flowing, coming out from before him. Thousands upon thousands attended him; ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him. The court was seated, and the books were opened. Then I continued to watch because of the boastful words the horn was speaking. I kept looking until the beast was slain and its body destroyed and thrown into the blazing fire. (The other beasts had been stripped of their authority, but were allowed to live for a period of time.) In my vision at night I looked, and there before me was one like a son of man, coming with the clouds of heaven. He approached the Ancient of Days and was led into his presence" (Dan. 7:9-13).

This vision records two persons, one the Ancient of Days sitting on a throne, and the other the son of man coming on the clouds of heaven who came to the place where the Ancient of Days was sitting. There is a rich theological analysis around the interpretation of this prophecy, regarding who the Ancient of Days is, whether it be the Father or the Son. There are texts that support the Ancient of Days is the Father and the son of man is Christ, and there are other texts that support they are one and the same person, the Son and Logos of God, who as the Ancient of Days became man, without discarding His divinity. And in this way the Ancient of Days sitting on a throne is connected and identified with the future Judge.

The patristic and hymnological tradition mainly accepts the second interpretation, that it is one and the same person, that the Ancient of Days is the Fleshless Logos, for no one has seen the Father according to the clear words of Christ, and that the son of man is described as the incarnate Ancient of Days. Also, all the Theophanies of the Old Testament are revealtions of the Logos and, of course, if the Ancient of Days is the Father and not the Son, then we cannot explain why the Son and not the Father was incarnated.

Therefore, the authentic interpretive analysis of the vision of the Prophet Daniel is that it is not two persons, but one and the same person, since the Ancient of Days is the Son and Logos of God who is united and is ageless with the Father and the Holy Spirit; the Son who in due time became man and, of course, at His Second Coming will judge mankind.

Source: Ekklesiastiki Paremvasi, "Άσαρκος και σεσαρκωμένος Λόγος", December 2003. Translated by John Sanidopoulos.
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