I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.
In the year 2000, on the 23rd day of this month, my wife married me. So here we are on day 13 of the 20 days that I am going to wish her Happy Anniversary for 20 years of marriage. Happy Anniversary Darling!
Today, I am reading and commenting on Daniel 5-6.
This passage is the origin of the phrase “read the writing on the wall.” Every time I read this passage I am struck by the fact that by the time the writing is on the wall to read, it is too late to do anything; there is not even time to flee. As I wrote the above it occurred to me that perhaps I should spend some time considering the message on the wall, “Mene, Mene, Tekel, Parsin.” The passage tells us that “Mene” means “numbered”, as in the days of the person to whom the message was sent are numbered. No explanation is given for why “Mene” appears twice. Technically, the word “Mene” is a specific weight, so perhaps it appearing twice is what makes it mean “numbered”. Or perhaps, “Mene” appears twice to indicate that the number has been reached. In any case, the first two parts of this message applies to all of us. Our days are numbered, and our actions will be weighed and they do not measure up. We need to recognize that we cannot measure up. We also need to recognize that the point I made at the beginning is true: when the writing on the wall appears it is too late to turn to God.
The story of Daniel in the lions’ den is another one of those stories which I have always loved. As a child I learned to story as a lesson on God’s ability to protect us in even the most dangerous situation. Today I want to focus on what Daniel did in the face of a government edict forbidding him to worship God. He ignored it. When he learned of the edict forbidding prayer to anything or anyone other than the king, he did not change his routine in any way. He did not stage a protest, but he also made no attempt to hide what he was doing. He neither prayed in a way to draw attention to the fact that he was defying the edict, nor in a way which would make it difficult for anyone to discover what he was doing. He was not ashamed, nor afraid, to do what he had always done. He felt no need to make a statement opposing the law.