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In today’s chapters, Daniel serves three different rulers of Babylon. To Nebuchadnezzar, Daniel and his friends are total weirdos, at times downright offensive, for refusing to participate in certain Babylonian customs. But Nebuchadnezzar trusts Daniel to interpret his dream. After being humbled by God with an extended time of eating grass in a field like a cow, Nebuchadnezzar praises God as just and true.
His successor, Belshazzar, seems to have learned little from Nebuchadnezzar’s experience. Belshazzar uses the stolen gold cups, dedicated for use in worship of Yahweh in Yahweh’s temple, to throw an idol-worshiping party. A disembodied hand joins the party and draws a message that only Daniel can interpret. This causes Belshazzar to appoint Daniel to the third-highest office in the kingdom, clothing him in royalty with purple and gold (Dan. 5:29).
That very night, Belshazzar is killed. King Darius now takes the throne. Daniel serves him so well that Darius plans to appoint him over the entire kingdom. Trying to prevent this, malicious royal advisors soon convince Darius to declare a new law that forces everyone in the kingdom to pray to Darius only. A pit filled with hungry lions awaits anyone who does otherwise.
Some laws are for breaking, though, and that is a rule Daniel refuses to obey. As an Israelite, he prays to Yahweh and Yahweh alone.
Notice how Daniel faces the same test his friends faced in yesterday’s reading. The king commanded everyone to worship him, threatening a fiery execution for those refusing to comply. Still, the friends say no. Daniel does the same. Even better, he’s unashamed, throwing his windows wide open so everyone can see him praying to Yahweh, not Darius.
By praying to Yahweh, Daniel is not merely rebelling against Babylonian oppression; he is entrusting his life to God. He’s laying his life down, trusting that God knows how to preserve it better than he does.
Throughout his time in Babylon, Daniel models courageous loyalty as he walks the way of exile. Today’s video explores this “way of exile” biblical theme with more depth.
Reflection Questions
- Meditate on Genesis 1-2, Isaiah 11:6-9, and Isaiah 65:25. How do those passages describe the Edenic ideal for humanity as God’s royal images? Where do humans live up to this ideal in today’s reading? Where do they fall short? What happens?
- Take a moment to review Hannah’s song in 1 Samuel 2. Where do you see Hannah’s description of God ring true in today’s reading?
About this Plan

Read through the Bible in one year with BibleProject! One Story That Leads to Jesus includes daily devotional content, reflection questions, and more than 150 animated videos to bring biblical books and themes to life. Join the growing community around the globe who are learning to see the Bible as one unified story that leads to Jesus.
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