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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Daniel 1:5

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Daniel 1:5

And the king appointed them a daily provision of the king’s meat, and of the wine which he drank: so nourishing them three years, that at the end thereof they might stand before the king.

5. a daily portion of the king’s delicacies ] Superior food, such as was served at the table of the king himself, was to be provided for the selected youths. It was a compliment to send anyone a portion of food from the table of a king or great man (Gen 43:34, in Egypt; 2Sa 11:8, in Israel: 2Ki 25:30, in Babylon, may be similar); and at least in Persia the principal attendants of the king, especially his military ones, seem to have had their provision from the royal table (Plut. Quaest. Conv. VII. iv. 5; Athen. iv. 26, p. 145 e, f.). The word rendered ‘delicacies’ ( pathbg) is a peculiar one, found in the O.T. only in Dan.: it is of Persian origin, and passed (like many other Persian words) into Syriac (Payne Smit [180] Thes. Syr. col. 3086 f.), as well as into late Hebrew. The Persian original would be patibga, ‘offering,’ ‘tribute’ (from pati, Sanskr. prati, Greek , , to, and bg, tribute, Sk. bhga, portion). The Sansk. pratibhga actually occurs, and means ‘a share of small articles, as fruit, flowers, &c., paid daily to the Rja for household expenditure [181] .’ The Pers. patibga originally, no doubt, denoted similarly choice food offered to the king [182] , though in Heb. and Syriac pathbg was used more widely of choice food, or delicacies, in general. The word recurs in Dan 1:8 ; Dan 1:13 ; Dan 1:15-16, Dan 9:26.

[180] yne Smith R. Payne Smith, Thesaurus Syriacus.

[181] Gildemeister, as quoted by Max Mller, ap. Pusey, p. 565.

[182] Dinon in his Persica, writing c. 340 b.c., says ( ap. Athen. xi. 503) that (which must be the same word) denoted a repast of cakes and wine, such as was prepared for the kings of Persia ( ).

and that they should be nourished ] or brought up: lit. made great: so Isa 1:2; Isa 23:4 al.

stand before the king ] as his attendants, to wait upon him: Deu 1:38; 1Ki 10:8; 1Ki 12:8.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

And the king appointed them – Calvin supposes that this arrangement was resorted to in order to render them effeminate, and, by a course of luxurious living, to induce them gradually to forget their own country, and that with the same view their names were changed. But there is no evidence that this was the object. The purpose was manifestly to train them in the manner in which it was supposed they would be best fitted, in bodily health, in personal beauty, and in intellectual attainments, to appear at court; and it was presumed that the best style of living which the realm furnished would conduce to this end. That the design was not to make them effeminate, is apparent from Dan 1:15.

A daily provision – Hebrew, The thing of a day in his day; that is, he assigned to them each day a portion of what had been prepared for the royal meal. It was not a permanent provision, but one which was made each day. The word rendered provision – path – means a bit, crumb, morsel, Gen 18:5; Jdg 19:5; Psa 147:17.

Of the kings meat – The word meat here means food, as it does uniformly in the Bible, the Old English word having this signification when the translation was made, and not being limited then, as it is now, to animal food. The word in the original – bag – is of Persian origin, meaning food. The two words are frequently compounded – pathebag Dan 1:5, Dan 1:8, Dan 1:13, Dan 1:15-16; Dan 11:26; and the compound means delicate food, dainties; literally, food of the father, i. e., the king; or, according to Lorsbach, in Archiv. f. Morgenl. Litt. II., 313, food for idols, or the gods; – in either case denoting delicate food; luxurious living. – Gesenius, Lex.

And of the wine which he drank – Margin, of his drink. Such wine as the king was accustomed to drink. It may be presumed that this was the best kind of wine. From anything that appears, this was furnished to them in abundance; and with the leisure which they had, they could hardly be thrown into stronger temptation to excessive indulgence.

So nourishing them three years – As long as was supposed to be necessary in order to develop their physical beauty and strength, and to make them well acquainted with the language and learning of the Chaldeans. The object was to prepare them to give as much dignity and ornament to the court as possible.

That at the end thereof they might stand before the king – Notes, Dan 1:4. On the arrangements made to bring forward these youths, the editor of the Pictorial Bible makes the following remarks, showing the correspondence between these arrangements and what usually occurs in the East: There is not a single intimation which may not be illustrated from the customs of the Turkish seraglio until some alterations were made in this, as in other matters, by the present sultan (Mahmoud). The pages of the seraglio, and officers of the court, as well as the greater part of the public functionaries and governors of provinces, were originally Christian boys, taken captive in war, or bought or stolen in time of peace. The finest and most capable of these were sent to the palace, and, if accepted, were placed under the charge of the chief of the white eunuchs. The lads did not themselves become eunuchs; which we notice, because it has been erroneously inferred, that Daniel and the other Hebrew youths must have been made eunuchs, because they were committed to the care of the chief eunuch.

The accepted lads were brought up in the religion of their masters; and there were schools in the palace where they received such complete instruction in Turkish learning and science as it was the lot of few others to obtain. Among their accomplishments we find it mentioned, that the greatest pains were taken to teach them to speak the Turkish language (a foreign one to them) with the greatest purity, as spoken at court. Compare this with Teach them the learning and tongue of the Chaldeans. The lads were clothed very neatly, and well, but temperately dieted. They slept in large chambers, where there were rows of beds. Every one slept separately; and between every third or fourth bed lay a white eunuch, who served as a sort of guard, and was bound to keep a careful eye upon the lads near him, and report his observations to his superior. When any of them arrived at a proper age, they were instructed in military exercises, and pains taken to make them active, robust, and brave.

Every one, also, according to the custom of the country, was taught some mechanical or liberal art, to serve him as a resource in adversity. When their education was completed in all its branches, those who had displayed the most capacity and valor were employed about the person of the king, and the rest given to the service of the treasury, and the other offices of the extensive establishment to which they belonged. In due time the more talented or successful young men got promoted to the various high court offices which gave them access to the private apartments of the seraglio, so that they at almost any time could see and speak to their great master. This advantage soon paved the way for their promotion to the government of provinces, and to military commands; and it has often happened that favorite court officers have stepped at once into the post of grand vizier, or chief minister, and other high offices of state, without having previously been abroad in the world as pashas and military commanders. How well this agrees to, and illustrates the usage of the Babylonian court, will clearly appear to the reader without particular indication. See Habescis Ottoman Empire; Taverniers Relation de lInterieur du Srail du Grand Seigneur.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Dan 1:5

A daily provision of the Kings meat.

The Unnamed Captive Royal Children

1. That we should abstain from the least appearance of evil. Daniel and his three companions, alone of the royal children, refrained from partaking of the meat that probably had been offered to idols. They would avoid the least appearance of evil. They would model their conduct so that, placed as they were in a conspicuous position, their public profession and public acts should be such as were calculated to incite in the hearts of their humbler captive fellow countrymen, a spirit of patriotism and a spirit of reverence. They determined to take their stand at the very outset on the side of the right, instead of on the side of the expedient, and to resist the very first appearance of evil, however plausible and outwardly harmless these appearances may be. The first step in the path of sin or crime, the first wandering from the path of righteousness, must be carefully guarded against, lest, inadvertently and heedlessly, if not wilfully–we do violence to the dictates of our own conscience, or cause in any way a weak brother to offend.

2. That the road to eminence is through the gate of self-denial. Their countenance appeared fairer and fatter in flesh than all the children which did eat the portion of the King s meat. So in religious matters as well as secular, it is eternally true.

3. That it is not what we receive, but what we assimilate, that enriches us. It is not what we eat, but what we digest, that nourishes the body. It is not what we read, but what we apprehend, that strengthens the mind. It is not what we profess but what we believe, that edifies the soul. Spirituality is not composed of doctrinal accuracy, or of ceremonial observances, but of practical Christian morality, and of unsullied Christian faith.

4. That the issues of events are in the hands of God. Through Gods blessing the pulse and water were rendered more powerfully nutritious than the diet provided by the king. Gods ways are not as mans ways.

5. That the education of these royal captives is typical of the course of human life. We are sent into this world as into a training school, by the King of kings, that we may be fitly taught the heavenly knowledge, and the celestial language we need to make us able duly to appreciate the beauties and to join in the hallelujahs of the strange land wherein hereafter we are destined to abide. Our great King, too, of His bounty, gives us each our daily bread for body, mind, and soul, and pours out for us freely the wine from the true vine. This heavenly food some grossly abuse, some foolishly neglect, some ascetically reject, simply from human ignorance or conceit. Asceticism in itself, any more than worldly-mindedness in itself, or sensualism in itself, cannot render anyone fit for the presence of the heavenly King. A proud, a vain, an envious, a jealous, an uncharitable heart may beat as well under the hair shirt of the self-torturing flagellist as under the purple robe of the monarch; and Antony in his dreary cell, and Simon Stylites on his lonely pillar may have been as far from the kingdom of heaven as the sensual Belshazzar at his luxurious banquet, or the worldly-minded Pilate in his tesselated hall. (R. Young.)

Wine wisely avoided

Charles Lamb, who made all the world laugh at his humour, and then afterward made all the world weep at his fate, who outwitted everybody, and was at last outwitted of his own appetites, wrote thus: The waters have gone over me; but out of the depths, could I be heard, I would cry out to all those who have set a foot in the perilous flood. Could the youth to whom the flavour of the first wine is delicious as the opening scenes of his life, or the entering upon some newly-discovered paradise–could he look into my desolation, and be made to understand what a dreary thing it is when a man shall feel himself going down a precipice with open eyes and a passive will; to see his destruction and have no power to stop it, yet feel it all the way emanating from himself; to see all godliness empty out of him, and yet not able to forget the time when it was otherwise; to bear about the piteous spectacle of his own ruin–could he see my feverish eye, feverish with last nights drinking, and feverishly looking for to-nights repetition of that folly–could he but feel the body of the death out of which I cry hourly with feeble outcry to be delivered, it were enough to make him dash the sparkling beverage to the earth in all the pride of its mantling temptation. (T. De Witt Talmage.)

The Early Life of Daniel

In the first instance there was a religious difficulty. Daniel had been brought up in the Mosaic institutions, and therefore he had been trained to abjure all meat that had been offered to idols, and all drink that had been laid on the altar of forbidden gods. He was a religious man from home! He was a man who took the commandments into captivity with him! Alas! there are some of us who can throw off our old selves, and do in Rome as the Romans do with a vengeance. Daniel, driven into captivity, took his religion with him. When we are thrown into difficult circumstances, do we take our religious faith with us? When we go to other countries, do we take the old home training? Do we repeat the commandments as they were thundered from Sinai, and do we re-pronounce the oath we took when we gave ourselves to the Saviour, as He hung upon the cross, and welcomed us to His love, and kingdom, and service? That is a poor religion which can be put off like a garment we are tired of for the time being, and can be put on again to serve occasion. How independent man is who has risen above the point of the merely animal life! Temperance all the world over is independence. Moderation means mastery. There are some men in the world who will not be pampered; Daniel was one of them; his compeers belonged to the same class. In order to hold yourselves masters of your appetites, begin early. It is no use a man of fort-five years of age beginning to say he is going to turn over a new leaf; the leaves wont be turned then. You cannot go anywhere where discipline will be a disadvantage to you, and where the the power of saying no to appetites and tastes will go against you. To the young I am a severe disciplinarian. See how right doing is always willing to be proved. Daniel was willing to take a space of ten days for the proof of the proposition which he submitted to the men who had charge of him and his companions. (J. Parker, D.D.)

Life in Babylon

The opening chapter of the Book of the Prophet Daniel contains the key and clue to all that follows, for it tells us of what stuff that man was made who gives his name to the book. The policy of Nebuchadnezzar must be admitted to have been admirable. He clearly wished to avail himself in the interest of his own kingdom, of the best talent and capability of the kingdom he had conquered. He first of all chose out the best material wad then proceeded (as he hoped) to subject it to the habits and discipline which should naturalise it in its new country. As he had poured the treasure taken from the Temple of the God of Israel into the Temple of his own god, so he hoped to adapt the human treasure he had acquired to the purposes of his religion and its institutions. He thought they might be cured, not only of all homesickness, as ordinarily understood–the wasting regret and longing for Zion, and the God of Zion, but ofthose home ideas and affections which are at the root of all patriotism worthy of the name. And among other means which the sagacity of their royal master devised for the accomplishment of this purpose, was that they should be fed, as well as taught, after a fashion to which they were not born. Nominally, the motive assigned for this special treatment of his prisoners was that they should grow physically strong and well-liking: that they should be well-nourished as befitted the attendants of a court. But can we doubt that the wily king was not regarding only the bodily condition of his pupils, but knew well enough that if he could but once acclimatise them in this respect also–if he could once foster a liking, an appetite for these flesh-pots of Babylon, and make these things, at first luxuries, to become in time necessaries, he would have gained a still closer hold upon the future services of his young counsellors and administrators? And he had no suspicion that the body and the mind, or whatever he held to be the seat and origin of wisdom, needed any separate treatment and regimen. Doubtless he honestly believed that body, soul and spirit would thrive alike, and together, upon this more generous diet. But he little knew the man with whom he was dealing. The young student in the wisdom and learning of the Chaldeans may well have felt the temptations of his novel position, for the brain is not independent of the rest of the animal economy, and the stimulant and support of the Kings meat might have seemed even necessary and allowable to sustain him in the ardent pursuit of this new learning. But he had a past experience to which he could appeal. He had laboured and striven thus far upon simpler fare, and he would make no change. Daniel, the young and wise and spiritual, was in training to be a Prophet of the Most High; and his story shows, only with more detail and circumstance, what we had already gathered from the whole prophetic class before him, that to be a prophet–in that wide sense in which the prophet is a model to the least able and cultivated, the most common-place person among us–the man must be trained upon a food, and in surroundings, which are not those of the reigning influences of the land on which he is to leave his mark The Prophets of Israel and Judah were no doubt exceptional persons–exceptional in the greatness of their intellectual gifts, as well as moral excellencies. The very mention of a prophet suggests to us one set apart from his brethren because of his superior endowments to teach and guide his fellows. But is not the truer representation of the prophet one who, because he has lived and walked with God, and has not lived the life of the world, has grown up in that wisdom and insight which form three parts of the prophetic faculty? Not chosen to be a prophet because of his eloquence and intellectual force, but because the training of his heart and conscience had fitted him to teach, and to influence by example, the men of his day and habitation. It is the prophet, nourished and growing daily in wisdom and in moral power on his homely porridge, that is the precious image and model of the life that is in a fit state and position for hearing the voice and doing the will of God. Not in the occasional pang and spur of total abstinence, but in the daily moderation; not in the excitement of a ceremonial observance, but in the habitual self-discipline, is the condition of daily growth. But I have said that this history is for us an allegory. The kings house and the kings meat have a wide-reaching moral and meaning. The very name of Babylon itself has already, in the vivid imagination of men, been seized upon to express certain modern parallels. The great metropolis was long ago nicknamed the modern Babylon, and in its wealth and splendour, in the height to which the arts and resources of human capacity have been cultivated, the parallel is ingenious and happy. But the parallel has another side to it than that of wealth and the cultivation of the liberal arts. We shall miss altogether the deeper lessons of the story of Daniel, unless we recognise strongly that Babylon, for us, is not a city, or a place at all, but a Spirit, the Spirit of our habitual surroundings. The ideals, the habits, the standards, the hopes and fears, among which we are content to live; the atmosphere of which we are content to breathe; these constitute for us, whether we are young men, just arrived like Daniel from purer, wholesomer surroundings, into the glare and glitter, the luxury and beauty, the stimulating food, and the stimulating culture and ideas, of some new centre of life and action; or whether we are living and travelling elsewhere (for we change our climate but not ourselves, for all the seas we cross), these constitute for us our Babylon. There may be no defined and concrete head and king of this country, no one building that can be called the kings house; no one diet that can be called the kings meat. Yet there is a governing power which we may be living in subjection to, though we do not see anywhere set down its rules and codes. To live in Babylon, and yet to be the true citizen of a far different country; to be in the world, yet not of it; this is for us the translation of Daniels action with regard to the kings meat. The very object and design of supporting him from the kings table was to wean him from the food of his native land. He would live apart, with the nourishment and the associations that were bound up with the service of a very different master; lest in this now world of his exile he should forget the imperial palace whence he came. The resolve of Daniel and his companions was just this: Though we are in the country and the policy and the religion of Nebuchadnezzar, we will not have this man to reign over us. And in order that they might preserve their faith in their own God, they would not live a life that was organically bound up with the god of Nebuchadnezzar. So subtle, so intangible, is this hold over us, this Babylonian sovereignty, that many a man is first awakened to a suspicion that he is in slavery to it, by discovering that his allegiance to another master once prayed to and believed in, is slipping from him. How many a young man coming from afar to live in the Babylon of London, or the Babylon of a University, has come after longer or shorter time to be aware that convictions which he had once hoped never to part with are becoming weaker, without obvious and apparent reason. Before the glitter and the enchantment of Babylon, before the interest and fascination of the new learning of the Chaldeans, the old duties and worships of the faith of his fathers seem to pale their ineffectual fires. Without apparent cause, the arguments for the truth of the old Gospel of Jesus Christ seem less valid than before. Why is this? Why is it so difficult to preserve the faiths and standards of Zion in the streets of Babylon? The answer surely is because it is so difficult for a strength that is merely human, to live in the streets of Babylon and not to imbibe the spirit of Babylon, even though the avowed philosophies and worships of Babylon are not yet by name accepted. So difficult to resist the contagion of its example, its habits, its easy toleration of things evil and debased; so difficult not to ascribe our changed relations to the faith of Christ to the cogent power of anti-religious argument, rather than to the corroding influences of the world, which do their work silently but surely, even as the noble stonework of some city cathedral crumbles beneath the acids of the mere citys breath. There are many Babylons in which it may fall to our lot to take up our abode, and make choice of our lifes gods. There are the Babylons of great cities where boundless wealth and luxury are found, and boundless pleasure for eye and ear and fancy. There are the Babylons of great centres of education, where the god of the country takes a fairer and loftier shape–the god of knowledge:–the Nebo–the god of the learning of the Chaldeans. It is not the grosser idolatries–the rites of Baal and Ashtaroth–that the nobler and better spirits among us have to guard against, but the more specious idolatry of things in themselves justly beautiful and engaging–the ever developing knowledge and culture of a still growing civilisation. Difficult it is–we know it–in any strength of our own to live in Babylon, and not to be of Babylon. So difficult, unless we set ourselves, with the ever-shadowing might of a power not our own, to walk with God. To traverse the common ways of men, and eat temperately of their common meat, and to do the duties and pursue the studies that are the immediate purpose of our being here, and yet to be strengthened by another food that the world knows not of–this is to live as Daniel lived. (Canon Ainger.)

The Saintly Captive

Realising Daniels captivity, we gather three familiar elemental and important lessons:


I.
THAT SEVERE TROUBLES BEFALL THE GOOD. All that Daniel had to endure was in strange reversal of what we might have thought the blameless, noble, devout character of a man so well-beloved, deserved or needed. This fact may well be a voice to all of us.

1. Teaching us not to regard the present state of things as final. The social wrongs of this life involve the need of a future life as a justification of a Righteous Governor of the Universe. Daniel was a captive. His coronation is to come.

2. Teaching us not to judge mens character by their circumstances. We may never conclude, because a man is healthy, affluent, famous, that he is, as a cause of all this, unselfish, humble, devout. Nor must we conclude, because a man is wasting with disease, sunk in poverty, obscure amongst even the meanest, that he is therefore false, ungenerous, Christless. You find Daniels among the captives.

3. Teaching us not to be surprised when, notwithstanding our conscious integrity, adversity befalls us. Think it not strange, etc.


II.
THAT STRENGTH OF CHARACTER CAN OVERCOME THE EVIL OF CIRCUMSTANCE. He, though a youth in a pagan and profligate court, was not overborne by its evil influences. There seem in him to have been four sources of strength.

1. His incorruptible conscience. This manifested its present vigour, and prophesied its victorious manhood, when, in his youth, it led him to refuse the kings meats. He who has and obeys a robust conscience, is before a contending world as David was before Goliath.

2. His chosen companions. The three Hebrew youths, fellows in misfortune, were evidently also his companions for counsel and prayer. Men are energized for battle with half a world by the true words, the hallowing influence of but two or three choice souls. The friends of the true heroes of history are amongst the most beautiful clusters of human lives.

3. His direct communications from heaven. A dream is from God. Daniels dreams opened another world above him, around him, before him, and under its power he became mighty to do, or to dare, or to bear.

4. His habitual prayers. Some are recorded. It is implied that it was his lifelong custom to pray three times a day. Such devotion clothed him as in asbestos garments that, no temptation could burn.


III.
THE ADVERSE EXPERIENCES OF ONE PERIOD OF LIFE QUALIFY FOR RIGHT USE OF A SUCCEEDING PERIOD. The ways in which Daniel was, in his youthful captivity, being prepared for successive stages of his life, were very like the ways in which all may be prepared by any adverse days or years for some usefuller, and it may be happier lot in coming times. Such a life as that of Daniels youth was an apprenticeship for the work of the Statesman, the Dreamer, the man he afterward became. To us this ought to be clearer than to the men of the prophetic age: for have we not read of Jesus, that he was made perfect through suffering. (Homilist)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 5. A daily provision] Athenaeus, lib. iv., c. 10, says: The kings of Persia, (who succeeded the kings of Babylon, on whose empire they had seized,) were accustomed to order the food left at their own tables to be delivered to their courtiers.

So nourishing them three years] This was deemed a sufficient time to acquire the Chaldee language, and the sciences peculiar to that people. I suppose they had good introductory books, able teachers, and a proper method; else they would have been obliged, like us, to send their children seven years to school, and as many to the university, to teach them any tolerable measure of useful and ornamental literature! O how reproachful to the nations of Europe, and particularly to our own, is this backward mode of instruction. And what is generally learned after this vast expense of time and money? A little Latin, Greek, and mathematics; perhaps a little moral philosophy; and by this they are entitled, not qualified, to teach others, and especially to teach the people the important science of salvation! To such shepherds, (and there are many such,) the hungry sheep look up, and are not fed; and if all are not such, no thanks to our plan of national education.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

Of the kings meat; such as he had at his own table, wherein his bounty and humanity appeared towards them the more conspicuous, they being captives. By this preparation they were judged fit to stand before the king. Men of ingenuity and proficiency are fit to stand before kings, Pro 22:29.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

5. king’s meatIt is usual foran Eastern king to entertain, from the food of his table, manyretainers and royal captives (Jer 52:33;Jer 52:34). The Hebrew for”meat” implies delicacies.

stand before the kingasattendant courtiers; not as eunuchs.

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

And the king appointed them a daily provision of the king’s meat,…. Every day a portion was ordered them, from the king’s table, of the richest dainties he himself ate of; which was done not only as an act of royal munificence and generosity, and in respect of their birth and breeding; but also as a bait and snare to allure and entice them, to make them in love with the country and condition in which they were, and to forget their own; as well also in order to preserve their well favoured look and good complexion, and fit them for their study of language and literature; which might be hindered for want of the necessaries of life, or by living on gross and coarse food:

and of the wine which he drank; which, as it was of various sorts, so of the best and most excellent; and which, moderately drank, conduces to the health of the body, and cheerfulness of the mind; and which are both useful to forward learned studies:

so nourishing them three years; this was the time fixed for their acquiring the learning and language of the Chaldeans; during which they were to be provided for from the king’s table, and at his expense, as above; which term of time was judged sufficient for their learning everything necessary to qualify them for the king’s service; and in which time it might be thought they would forget their own country, customs, religion, and language, and be inured to the place and persons where they were, and be satisfied and easy with their condition and circumstances:

that at the end thereof they might stand before the king; that is, at the end of three years they might be presented to the king for his examination and approbation, and be appointed to what service he should think fit; and particularly that they might be in his court, and minister to him in what post it should be his pleasure to place them. Some in Aben Ezra, and which he himself inclines to, read and interpret it, “that some of them might stand before the king”; such as he should choose out of them, that were most accomplished and most fit for his service; so Jacchiades.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

In this verse, Daniel shews that the king had ordered some youths to be brought to him from Judea, and to be so nourished as to be intoxicated with delicacies, and thus rendered forgetful of their own nation. For we know that wherever there is any cunning in the world, it reigns especially in kings palaces! So Nebuchadnezzar, when he perceived he was dealing with an obstinate people, (and we know the Jews to have been of a hard and unsubdued spirit,) wished to acquire servants spontaneously obedient, aid thus endeavored to soften them with luxuries. This was the reason why he provided for them an allotment of his own meat and drink; as at present it is the greatest honor at princes’ tables to be served with a bon-bouche, as they say. Nebuchadnezzar wished this Daniel and his companions, though but captives and exiles, to be brought up not only splendidly but royally, if of the royal race. Through his right of conquest he, had drawn them away violently from their country, as we said yesterday. Hence he does not act thus from any feeling of liberality, and his feeding those miserable exiles from his own table should not be esteemed a virtuous action; but, as we have said, he cleverly reconciles the minds of the boys to be reckoned Chaldeans rather than Jews, and thus to deny their own race. This, then, was the king’s intention; but we shall see how God governed Daniel and his companions by His Spirit, and how they became aware of these snares of the devil, and abstained from the royal diet, lest they should become polluted by it. This point will hereafter be treated in its place — we are now only commenting on the craftiness of the king. He, commanded a daily portion of diet to be distributed to them, not that the spirit of parsimony dictated this daily portion, but the king wished their food should be exactly the same as his own and that of the chiefs.

He adds, that they should be educated for three years; meaning, until they were thoroughly skilled in both the language and knowledge of the Chaldeans. Three years were sufficient for both these objects, since he had selected youths of sufficient talent to learn with ease both languages and sciences. As they were endued with such capacity, it is not surprising that the space of three years had been prescribed by the king. At length, he says, at the end of them, meaning of the three years. We have shown how this ought not to be referred to the boys, as if the king afterwards selected some of them, for we shall see in its own place that a distinct time was fixed beforehand; hence no long refutation is needed. It is certain, then, that the Prophet speaks of the close of the three years. It had been said just before, that they with stand in the palace; but this ought also to be understood of the time of which mention has been made. They did not stand before the king immediately, but were reserved for this purpose. Since the king commanded them to be brought up for the purpose of using their services afterwards Daniel twice repeats — they were splendidly educated — seeing the king wished them to become his servants at table and in other duties.

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(5) A daily portion.(Comp. Jer. 52:34.) The meat was solid food, as opposed to the wine and vegetables which formed so important a part of Babylonian diet. The food appears to have been sent from the kings table.

Three years.The king appears to have had sufficient insight into the extraordinary character of these youths, to enable him to prescribe not only the subjects of their studies, but also the length of their course of instruction. It appears that Nebuchadnezzar was a man of far higher character than many Assyrian and Babylonian kings. We shall see, in the course of the boot, that his heart was fitted for the reception of Divine truth, and that in the end he was brought to know the true God.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

5. Meat Rather, dainties.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

‘And the king appointed for them a daily portion of the king’s food, and of the wine that he drank, and that they should be nourished for three years, that at the end of that period they might stand before the king.’

The young men were put in the care of Ashpenaz so that they could be developed into strapping young men. Every luxury in food and drink was to be theirs. This was in a sense a period of probation and no doubt some might drop out. ‘Three years’ could signify any period from about one and a half years (part of a year, a year, and part of a year) to the full three. Basically they had to go though a complete course of training. The final purpose was that they might become trusted and well favoured courtiers. Both appearance and learning was considered important for a young, budding court official.

‘A daily portion of the king’s ‘food’ (an old Persian word meaning ‘assignment’, the food allocated by the king through his high officials), and of the wine that he drank.’ It was the ancient custom that such favoured people should eat and drink what the king ate and drank. It was a sign of high favour.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

Dan 1:5  And the king appointed them a daily provision of the king’s meat, and of the wine which he drank: so nourishing them three years, that at the end thereof they might stand before the king.

Dan 1:5 “And the king appointed them a daily provision of the king’s meat, and of the wine which he drank” – Comments – We read in Dan 1:8 that Daniel and his three friends chose to abstain from the king’s provision and rather ate vegetables and drank water. This is because Daniel and the Jews understood a biblical diet. The king’s diet consisted of rich, fatty foods, such as the meat referred to in this verse. Such foods are not healthy when eaten on a regular basis. We can compare this rich diet to our modern day culture. One medical doctor described rich foods as those foods that are traditionally eaten on festive occasions. For example, on Easter Americans eat eggs, on Halloween candy, on Thanksgiving turkey, and at Christmas ham. These are rich, processed foods that are in a class called delicacies. This is the type of foods that the king would have eaten and offered those in his court. But Daniel chose more healthy foods, which we know today to be vegetables and other natural, non-processed foods. In addition, it is interesting to note that Daniel lived to be a very old man. Perhaps his healthy diet played a large role in this fact.

Dan 1:5 “so nourishing them three years, that at the end thereof they might stand before the king” Comments – Zckler quotes two ancient sources that would explain how youth were trained for a three year period, ages fourteen to seventeen, in preparation to serve before the king. He refers to Plato’s comments that Persian youth began training at the age of fourteen ( Alcibiades 1.121.E), [67] and to Xenophon’s statement that no youth could serve the king before the age of seventeen ( Cyropaedia 2.8-9). [68] He finds this coincidence too remarkable to leave unnoticed. [69]

[67] Plato writes, “When the boys are seven years old they are given horses and have riding lessons, and they begin to follow the chase. And when the boy reaches fourteen years he is taken over by the royal tutors, as they call them there: these are four men chosen as the most highly esteemed among the Persians of mature age, namely, the wisest one, the justest one, the most temperate one, and the bravest one.” See Plato, Plato: Charmides, Alcibiades I & II, Hipparchus, The Lovers, Theages, Minos, Epinomis, trans. W. R. M. Lamb, in The Loeb Classical Library, eds. T. E. Page, E. Capps, W. H. D. Rouse, L. A. Post, and E. H. Warmington (London: William Heinemann Ltd, c1927, 1964), 167.

[68] Xenophon writes, “These exercises the boys practise till they are sixteen or seventeen years of age, when they enter the class of young men.” See Xenophon, The Cyropaedia, or Institutes of Cyprus, and the Hellenics, or Greacian History, trans. J. S. Watson and Henry Dale (London: George Bell and Sons, 1880), 6.

[69] Otto Zckler, The Book of the Prophet Daniel, in Lange’s Commentary on the Holy Scriptures trans. James Strong (New York: Charles Scriber’s Sons, 1876), 59.

Dan 1:6  Now among these were of the children of Judah, Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah:

Dan 1:6 Word Study on “children” – The Hebrew word for “children” ( ) (H1121) used in Dan 1:4; Dan 1:6 properly denotes someone during the age of childhood up to manhood, and is also used in the broadest sense throughout the Old Testament to refer to members of a particular group. The Enhanced Strong says it is found 4906 times in the Scriptures, being translated in the KJV as “son 2978, children 1568, old 135, first 51, man 20, young 18, young + 01241 17, child 10, stranger 10, people 5, misc 92.” It may be properly translated “boys, lads or youth.” As mentioned above in the introduction, [70] comments made by some of the early Church fathers lead us to believe these four “children of Judah” were teenagers.

[70] See above Introduction: The Life of the Prophet Daniel, by Gary Everett .

Word Study on “Daniel” The name Daniel ( ) (H1840) means, “God’s judge,” i.e., “one who delivers judgment in the name of God” ( Gesenius), “God is judging,” or “judge of God” ( Strong), “God is my judge” ( PTW). Strong says this name is derived from “Dan” ( ) (H1835), meaning “judge,” and ( ) (H410), a contraction of ( ) (H430), meaning “God.” Thus, it is possible that this name reflects the theme of the book of Daniel.

Word Study on “Hananiah” The name Hananiah ( ) (H2608) means, “whom Jehovah gave” ( Gesenius), “God has favored” ( Strong), “Jehovah is gracious,” ( PTW). Strong says this name is derived from ( ) (H2603), meaning “gracious,” and ( ) (H3050), a contraction of ( ) (H3050), meaning “YHWH.”

Word Study on “Mishael” The name Mishael ( ) (H4332) means, “God is strong,” or “who (is) that which God is” ( Gesenius), “who is what God is” ( Strong, PTW). Strong says this name is derived from ( ) (H4310), meaning “who,” ( ), a contraction of ( ) (834), meaning “which,” and ( ) (H410), a contraction of ( ) (H430), meaning “God.”

Word Study on “and Azariah” The name Azariah ( ) (H5838) means, “whom Jehovah aids” ( Gesenius), “YHWH has helped” ( Strong, PTW). This name is derived from ( ) (H5826), meaning “to help,” and ( ) (H3050), a contraction of ( ) (H3050), meaning “YHWH.”

Fuente: Everett’s Study Notes on the Holy Scriptures

Dan 1:5. So nourishing them three years That after they had been educated for three years, at the end, &c. Houbigant; or, And that they should be thus bred up three years, and at the end thereof they should stand, &c.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Dan 1:5 And the king appointed them a daily provision of the king’s meat, and of the wine which he drank: so nourishing them three years, that at the end thereof they might stand before the king.

Ver. 5. And the king appointed them a daily provision. ] A competent and comfortable subsistence and maintenance, such as whereof, in time past, those abbey lubbers had too much, and now universities and schools of learning have too little, but far less should have, might some brain-sick sectaries be heard, such as was that Weigelius, who said that in no university in the world was Christ to be found, and that Christ would not have his gospel to be preached by devils, and therefore not by academics, with a great deal more of such paltry stuff, vented by that illiterate widgeon. a

So nourishing them three years. ] Those that stay overly long in the universities, standing there till they are sour again, and preaching only now and then, to air their great learning, shall have the rust and canker of their abilities to be a swift witness against them at that great day.

a Dr Arrowsmith, Orat. Anti-Weigel. ad Calc. Tact. Sacr.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

meat = food. Hebrew. pathbag. A Persian or Aryan word. Occurs only in Daniel.

wine. Hebrew. yayin. App-27.

three years. Say 497, 496, and 495 B.C. See note on Dan 2:1. It does not say these years were concluded before the events of Dan 2took place.

stand before the king. Reference to Pentateuch (Gen 41:46).

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Dan 1:5

Dan 1:5 And the kingH4428 appointedH4487 them a dailyH3117 H3117 provisionH1697 of the king’s meat,H4480 H6598 H4428 and of the wineH4480 H3196 which he drank:H4960 so nourishingH1431 them threeH7969 years,H8141 that at the endH4480 H7117 thereof they might standH5975 beforeH6440 the king.H4428

Dan 1:5

And the king appointed them a daily provision of the king’s meat, and of the wine which he drank: so nourishing them three years, that at the end thereof they might stand before the king.

Jerusalem as well as most of the large cities at this time in history was surrounded by walls to help protect them against invaders. The common method of overthrowing a walled city was to besiege it and deny food to its inhabitants until they are starved out. Consequently when the besieged city has been conquered, the inhabitants have been starved down to a state of emaciation. Nebuchadnezzar did not want his court servants to look like they were starved to death so he appointed them a three year regimen of the king’s food so that they could appear sleek and healthy before the king at the end of this time period. It was during this three year period that they received their Babylonian education.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

a daily: Atheneus says the kings of Persia were accustomed to order for their courtiers the food left at their tables. 1Ki 4:22, 1Ki 4:23, 2Ki 25:30, Mat 6:11, Luk 11:3

which he drank: Heb. of his drink

stand: Dan 1:19, Gen 41:46, 1Sa 16:22, 1Ki 10:8, 2Ch 9:7, Jer 15:19, Luk 1:19, Luk 21:36

Reciprocal: Psa 141:4 – and let me

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Dan 1:5. The schedule as to their bodies consisted of a special provision of food and drink taken out of the store that was brought in for the king’s personal use. Having been selected for the special use of the monarch, these articles of diet were supposed to possess unusual qualities for the developing of bodily strength and appearance. This schedule was to be followed for three years after which the men were to be presented to the king for his approval.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Dan 1:5. The king appointed them a daily provision of the kings meat Such as he had at his own table; wherein his humanity and bounty appeared toward them the more conspicuous, they being captives. So nourishing them, &c. The Vulgate renders it, Ut enutriti, &c.; that, being nourished three years, they might afterward stand in the presence of the king. It seems from what is here said, that the Chaldeans entertained a notion that a diet of the best sort contributed both to the beauty of the body and the improvement of the mind.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

1:5 And the king appointed them a {h} daily provision of the king’s meat, and of the wine which he drank: so nourishing them {i} three years, that at the end thereof they might stand {k} before the king.

(h) That by their good entertainment they might learn to forget the mediocrity of their own people.

(i) With the intent that in this time they might learn both the manners of the Chaldeans, and also their language.

(k) As well as to serve at the table as in other offices.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes