Lesson 142 - Elementary
Memory Verse
"Fear ye not" (Matthew 10:31).
Notes
Early Life
Daniel was an old man now. Many years before, he had been a little boy in the land of Palestine. Perhaps he was born in Jerusalem -– the City of God. No doubt his mother and father had read their Bible to him every day and had told him how God had delivered the Children of Israel from the land of Egypt. God had brought them through the Red Sea, and on Mount Sinai in the wilderness Moses had talked with God.
God wanted His people to be good and kind and holy like Himself, so He gave Moses certain commandments and rules that would help the people to be good. God had told Moses to build a tabernacle, or beautiful tent, where He could live among His people. Later on, King Solomon built a beautiful stone Temple, or church, in Jerusalem where the people came to talk with God. Perhaps Daniel thought: Oh, I want to be close to God and talk with Him like Moses did! He listened carefully when the Law of God was read, so he would know just what God wanted him to do; and when he was old enough he read it himself. No doubt Daniel was happy and his heart was warmed and thrilled as he went to the Temple to pray morning and evening.
A Captive
One day when Daniel was just a young man, King Nebuchadnezzar and his soldiers came and took Daniel and many of the Jews away from their homes and brought them to Babylon. Perhaps on the long journey from Jerusalem, Daniel felt sad that he would not be able to go to the Temple to pray, but he knew that if he would just turn his face toward the Temple and pray wherever he was, God would help him. He may have thought: Wherever I am I will open my window toward Jerusalem and pray, and God will bring us back from captivity.
Daniel did not forget how his mother and father had taught him to live; and when he and his friends were given meat and wine from the king's table, perhaps he thought: I cannot eat this food; it has been offered to idols and this strong wine will make me dull and foolish. He may not have known just what to do at first, but he and his friends prayed; then they asked if they could have only vegetables and cereals to eat and water to drink. Daniel prayed every day. He must have studied hard and been cheerful and pleasant, and ready and willing to do what he was told to do.
Finally, King Nebuchadnezzar died and there were other kings. Daniel did the very best he could for each one of them. They knew he loved and worshiped the living God, and they could trust him to do what was right.
Daniel Trapped
When Darius became king he had three presidents and 120 princes to help him. God had made Daniel wise, and he worked hard and was a big help to the king, so Darius thought about setting Daniel over the whole kingdom. The other presidents and the princes envied Daniel. They felt jealous and mean in their hearts, because they wanted to be leaders instead of Daniel.
They wanted to do something mean to Daniel and get him out of the way. They decided they would tell on him if he did something wrong: then maybe the king wouldn't like him so well. But God helped Daniel to do everything just right. Then they asked the king to make a law that no one in all the kingdom should pray to any god, or to any man except the king, for 30 days, and anyone who disobeyed that law should be put into the lions' den. The king was probably pleased, and may have thought: The people think I am a wonderful king and that I will be good to them and give them what they ask for. He did not know they wanted to hurt his good helper, Daniel. So King Darius signed the law that no one should ask anything of God, or of any man except the king, for 30 days.
Daniel heard about the law but he could not wait for 30 days to pray to God. He loved God and it would have made him very sad not to talk with God for 30 days. And he needed God to help him with everything he did. He would not quit praying for even one day, so he went into his house; and his windows being opened toward Jerusalem, he knelt three times a day and prayed, and gave thanks before his God, just as he did before. God had helped him so that he and his friends did not have to eat the king's food, and God had walked in the fiery furnace with his friends, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego, so of course God would help him now, too.
The Den of Lions
The presidents and princes probably hoped: Now we will get rid of Daniel, and one of us can be first in the kingdom. They told the king that Daniel was not paying any attention to his law; he was praying to God three times a day.
When the king heard this, he was very unhappy because he had made such a foolish law. Now the good Daniel, whom he loved and trusted more than any of his helpers, would have to be put in the lions' den. He did not want Daniel to be destroyed, but the law could not be changed. No doubt he had heard how Shadrach, Meshach, and Abed-nego had been saved from the burning, fiery furnace, and thought that surely his God would save Daniel, too.
That evening Daniel was put into the lions' den, and the king went to his palace, but he did not feel like eating and he could not sleep because he felt so bad about Daniel's being in the lions' den.
Protection
Early the next morning the king hurried over to the lions' den and cried out, "O Daniel, servant of the living God, is thy God, whom thou servest continually, able to deliver thee from the lions?” From the den came Daniel's voice, "O king, live for ever. My God hath sent his angel, and hath shut the lions' mouths, that they have not hurt me.” He told the king that it was because God knew he had not done anything wrong that He had sent an angel to shut the mouths of the lions.
How glad the king was to hear Daniel's voice! He knew that Daniel's God was the living God, and sent a message to everybody in his kingdom to worship the God of Daniel, "for,” he said, "he is the living God, . . . who hath delivered Daniel from the power of the lions.”
The wicked presidents and princes had expected to hurt Daniel, but instead they were put into the lions' den themselves and were destroyed. We should be careful not to hurt other people; we are sure to hurt ourselves, too, when we try to hurt others.
Questions
1. Why did the King like Daniel and show favour to him? [DAN:6:3].
2. What did Daniel do when he knew it was against the law to pray to God? [DAN:6:10].
3. What happened to the lions when Daniel was put in the den with them? [DAN:6:22].
4. Why was Daniel saved from being hurt by the lions? [DAN:6:23].
5. What happened to the men who envied Daniel and wanted to hurt him? [DAN:6:24].