Bible Commentaries
Expositor's Dictionary of Texts
Daniel 1
Daniel 1:2; Daniel 1:6
I was taken captive when nearly sixteen years of age. I did not know the true God; and I was taken to Ireland in captivity with so many thousand men, in accordance with our deserts, because we departed from God and kept not His precepts.
—St. Patrick's Confessions.
Daniel 1:8
The strangeness of foreign life threw me back into myself.
—Newman, Apologia, I.
Daniel's Self-denial
Daniel 1:8
We are told about a great many good men in the pages of the Bible: some who were generally beloved by God, as the Prophet Daniel; some who found grace in the eyes of Jehovah, as Noah. It is instructive and interesting to investigate why these men found grace and why they were beloved.
I. The Life of Noah.—If we examine the life of Noah, we find that he had at least four characteristics:—
a. He was obedient to God.
b. He had faith in God.
c. He reverenced God.
d. He worshipped God.
We can thus see to some extent why he found grace in the eyes of Jehovah. The life of Noah, like every other life in the Old Testament, is meant to be an example to us, to show what our lives should be or what they ought not to be.
II. The Life of Daniel.—Again, if we investigate the life of Daniel 1:12
See Addison's Spectator (No195), and Dante's Purgatorio, xxii145.
Daniel 1:21
Most failures lie in not going on long enough. I heard a man in a meeting in the country long ago say, that one of the most encouraging verses he knew was a verse of common metre to this effect:—
Go on, go on, go on, etc.
—James Smetham.
What is commonly admired as successful talent is far more a firm realizing grasp of some great principle, and that power of developing it in all directions, and that nerve to abide faithful to it, which is involved in such a true apprehension.
—Newman.
Reference.—II.—J. G. Murphy, The Book of Daniel , p85.
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