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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Daniel 12:9

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Daniel 12:9

And he said, Go thy way, Daniel: for the words [are] closed up and sealed till the time of the end.

9. Go, Daniel, &c.] i.e. do not inquire further: for the words are shut up and sealed ( Dan 12:4) till the time of the end: if Daniel does not understand them, it does not signify; they are not intended for him, but for readers in a distant future, viz. in the age of Antiochus Epiphanes, when they will first be divulged.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

And he said, Go thy way, Daniel – That is, make no further inquiries. All has been disclosed that is to be. At the close of his communication Dan 12:4, he had told Daniel to shut up, and seal the book, for his revelations were ended. He here repeats substantially the same thing, and he assures him that no more could be imparted on the subject.

For the words are closed up and sealed until the time of the end – He had finished his communication, and had directed Daniel to close up the record which he made of it, and to affix a seal to the volume, Dan 12:4. He regarded the whole, therefore, as closed and sealed, until the end should come. The events themselves would unfold the meaning of the prediction more fully, and would confirm its truth by their exact correspondence with it. Yet, though the revelation was closed, and all that the angel had designed to say had been said, he does, in the subsequent verses, throw out some suggestions as to the time, or as to some important events which were to mark the termination of the wonders referred to. They are bare hints, however, the meaning of which was to be reserved until the time when the predictions would be accomplished, and they are not of such a nature that they can be supposed to have furnished any additional light to Daniel, or to have done anything to relieve the perplexity of his mind in the case.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Dan 12:9

For the words are closed

The Sealed Book

Daniel, having heard of the great troubles and afflictions that the Church was to meet with in the last days, was desirous to know how long they should continue, and to have some more particular information concerning the issue of them.

The angel said, Go thy way, Daniel; for the words are closed up and sealed till the time of the end. As if it had been said, Daniel, what hath been revealed to you already is enough to support your faith and hope, and the faith and hope of my people in future ages, amidst all the troubles and trials that they may be exercised with, and this you must be contented with in the meantime; for a full explication of the mysteries of Divine providence, of Gods dispensations towards the Church made her members, such an explication of them as will leave no darkness, doubt, or difficulty remaining, is not to be expected during the present state of things. In these words We have:


I.
A SEASONABLE ADMONITION. Go thy way, Daniel. Mind your own business; apply yourself to the performance of your present duty.

1. A needful caution. Not to indulge an unwarrantable curiosity of prying into those things which God hath not seen meet to reveal, into the secrets of His government and providence.

2. A. suitable exhortation. To apply himself to his present work, and set about the performance of present duty, leaving events to the Lord.


II.
THE REASON FOR THE ADMONITION. For the words are sealed up, etc. There was something intricate and mysterious in the prophecy concerning the Churchs troubles and deliverance that would not be fully unfolded until it was accomplished. By the time of the end may be understood the time when the several predictions concerning the troubles and trials that the Church was to meet with should be fulfilled. In every future period new discoveries would be made of the gracious designs and mystery of Providence respecting the Church till all were finished and unfolded. The end of time may be meant. A seal denotes security, as well as secrecy or concealment. When, therefore, it is said that the words were sealed till the time of the end, it might imply that there would be an exact accomplishment of all Gods promises concerning the Church, whatever difficulties appeared to be in the way.

1. Let us observe some things in general concerning those discoveries that God is pleased to make of His mind and will to His people in this world.

(1) All true believers are privileged with some discoveries of the mind of God that others are unacquainted with. They are all taught of God; not doctrinally, or externally, by the word only, but internally, effectually, and savingly, by the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit shows them many things concerning Christ; concerning His person and undertaking, righteousness, grace and salvation, which are bid from the rest of mankind.

(2) The discoveries God makes to His people He ordinarily makes to them by means of His Word. The Holy Scriptures are sufficient to make the man of God perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works. The work of the Spirit now is, not to make any new revelations of the will of God, but to open the understandings and enlighten the minds of men to perceive, and make a suitable improvement of, what is already revealed in the written word.

(3) God doth not reveal His mind to His people all at once, but gradually, and as He sees meet.

(4) The discoveries which God makes of His mind and will to His people in this world are still imperfect

(5) Even saints of God are too apt to indulge a sinful curiosity in prying into those things which God hath not been pleased to reveal, and which it is not necessary for them to know in their present state.

(6) However dark and intricate the dispensations of Divine providence may be, so much is made known as is sufficient to support faith and hope, and to encourage behavers in the way of duty.

2. Some of the discoveries which God makes to His people, which are sufficient to direct them in the way of duty. These discoveries may concern the people of God themselves. That He loves them. That the covenant He has made is ordered in all things and sure, immutable and everlasting. That there is a fulness of grace deposited in Christ as the Mediator of the New Covenant. That He will never leave them. That all dispensations shall turn to their advantage. These discoveries may concern the Church in general. Such as that all future troubles of the Church were foreknown and appointed by God. That they would only continue for a limited time. That all the promises would certainly be accomplished. That all the Churchs sufferings would have a glorious issue.

3. Many things are still dark to Gods people, and must remain so as long as they continue in the world. There are still things dark in the Churchs troubles, in the promises of God concerning His Church. Believers have but imperfect views of the privileges conferred upon them; and of the truths and doctrines taught in the Word of God. There is mystery in that gracious work which God has begun, and is carrying on, in souls. There is a veil upon that glory and happiness reserved for them in the other world. There are reasons why we should attend to present day, and not pry into the unrevealed.

(1) Inquiries into those things which God hath not been pleased to reveal are unprofitable and vain.

(2) What God hath clearly revealed is sufficient for their direction and encouragement in the way of duty.

(3) It is the will of God that His people, while they are in this world, should live by faith, and walk by faith.

(4) When the people of God mind their present duty, they greatly honour God. They give Him the glory due unto His name.

(5) All that is now dark and mysterious either in the purposes or promises of God, or in the dispensations of His providence, will at last be clearly manifested and unfolded. (D. Wilson.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 9. The words are closed up] The prophecy shall not be understood, but in its accomplishment; and then the depth of the wisdom and providence of God will be clearly seen in these matters. See on Da 12:4. We must wait “till the time of the end;” and this, it appears from the following calculations, will not arrive before the TWENTIETH CENTURY. We here see the reason why these prophecies are at present so imperfectly understood. God has sealed them.

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

They shall not be clearly understood till the event make them good: see Dan 12:4, and Dan 8:26. God is choice in keeping the keys of time at his own girdle, Act 1:7.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

9. Daniel’s desire of knowingmore is thus deferred “till the time of the end.” John’sRevelation in part reveals what here is veiled (see on Da12:4; Da 8:26).

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

And he said, go thy way, Daniel,…. About thy business; attend to civil affairs, the affairs in which he was concerned in the king’s court, and ask no more questions concerning this matter; but be content with the prophecies that have been delivered to thee, and with what knowledge thou hast of them: or he is bid to go and write in a book the several visions he had seen, and the predictions related to him; that he might read them, and meditate on them at his leisure, and transmit them to future posterity, for their use: or go the way of all flesh, prepare for death and eternity; for in the present state he was not to expect a full revelation of these things; but should rest satisfied with what he knew, and assure himself with the full performance of them, and that he should have his share of the blessed times in the Millennium, and of the ultimate glory, as in Da 12:13.

For the words are closed up, and sealed till the time of the end; that is, till the time comes, or draws near, that they shall be accomplished; till then they would not be clearly understood, but remain in a great measure dark and obscure, though sure and certain: it is suggested they would not always remain so; time is the best interpreter of prophecy, and, the nearer the time of the accomplishment of it is, the clearer it appears, things leading the way to it being gradually fulfilled; but clearest of all when it is accomplished; then it is no more shut and sealed, but open and manifest; [See comments on Da 12:4].

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

The answer, , go thy way, Daniel, is quieting, and at the same time it contains a refusal to answer; yet it is not wholly a refusal, as is clear from Dan 12:11, Dan 12:12. The disclosure regarding the end which is given to him in these verses shows distinctly that the end of the things is not so revealed as that men shall be able to know it beforehand with certainty.

(Note: On this Calvin has well remarked: Quamvis Daniel non stulta curiositate inductus quaesierit ex angelo de fine mirabilium, tamen non obtinet, quod petebat, quia scilicet voluit Deus ad modum aliquem intelligi quae praedixerat, sed tamen aliquid manere occultum usque dum veniret maturum plenae revelationis tempus. Haec igitur ratio est, cur angelus non exaudiat Danielem. Pium quidem erat ejus votum (neque enim optat quicquam scire plus quam jus esset), verum Deus scit quod opus sit, ideo non concessit quod optabat .)

signifies neither go hence, i.e., depart, die (Bertholdt, Hvernick), nor go away, instead of standing waiting for an answer (Hitzig), for the angel does give him an answer; but as the formula dimittentis ut excitantis ad animi tranquillitatem (C. B. Michaelis), it has the meaning: vade Daniel, h. e. mitte hanc praesentem tuam curam . “Be at peace, leave this matter alone” (Geier and others, and similarly v. Lengerke, Kranichfeld, Kliefoth). The clause assigning the reason for the command ( for the words are shut up, etc.), is chiefly interpreted as referring the closing and sealing up to the incomprehensibility of the prophecy. Thus e.g., Ewald explains it: “For hidden and sealed up are the words, all the things contained in these prophecies, till the time of the end; then shall they be easily unsealed and deciphered.” But since, according to Dan 12:4, Daniel himself must shut up and seal the book, the participles in the clause, assigning the reason for the command , cannot have the meaning of the perfect, but only state what is or shall be done: shut up – they shall be (remain) till the time of the end; thus they only denote the shutting up and sealing which must be accomplished by Daniel. But Daniel could not make the prophecy unintelligible, since (Dan 12:8) he himself did not understand it; nor could he seal it up till the time of the end, since he did not live to see the end. The shutting up and sealing which was commanded to the prophet can therefore only consist in this, that the book should be preserved in security against any defacement of its contents, so that it might be capable of being read at all times down to the time of the end, and might be used by God’s people for the strengthening of their faith; cf. Dan 8:26. “Thus Daniel is calmed in regard to his not understanding it by the fact that this whole prophecy ( as in Dan 12:4) shall be guarded and placed in safety, and shall continue through all times down to the end” (Kliefoth). For the use of it in all times is supposed in Dan 12:10.

Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament

Although Daniel was not induced by any foolish curiosity to inquire of the angel the issue of these wonderful events, yet he did not obtain his request. God wished some of his predictions to be partially understood, and the rest to remain concealed until the full period of the complete revelation should arrive. This is the reason why the angel did not reply to Daniel. The wish in truth was pious, and, as we have previously stated, it did not contain anything unlawful; but God, knowing what was good for him, did not grant his request. He is dismissed by the angel, because the words were shut up and sealed The angel uses this expression in a sense different from the former one. For he ordered Daniel to close and seal the words like precious treasures, as they would be set at naught by many disbelievers, and by almost the whole people. Here then, he says, the words were closed up and sealed, as there was no fitting occasion for revealing them. As if he had said, nothing has been predicted either vainly or rashly, but the full blaze of light has not yet been thrown upon the prediction: hence we must wait until the truth itself is proved by the event, and thus the divine utterance of the angel is made manifest. This is the summary. He then says, until the time of the end Some one might possibly object; then for what purpose was this prediction delivered? For Daniel himself, who was instructed by the angel, could not thoroughly comprehend his own message, and the rest of the faithful, although versed in these prophetic studies, felt themselves in a labyrinth here. The answer is at hand, until the time of the end; and we must also remember that neither Daniel nor the rest of the faithful were deprived of all the advantage of this prophecy, for God explained to them whatever was sufficient for the necessities of their own times. I must pass over some points slightly, with the view of finishing today. It follows —

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(9) Go thy way.That is, be at peace. Observe that the matter is not explained to Daniel any further. He is assured that the end will most certainly come. Compare another gentle rebuke that was addressed to one who wished to see further than was fitting into the future (Joh. 21:21-22).

Closed up and sealed.To be explained as in Dan. 12:4. The book is to be carefully preserved till the end of time.

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

9. See note Dan 12:4. Even prophets like Daniel cannot know all that they wish to know. Mysteries must remain. It is enough for man that all the struggles and seeming failures of the saints are known to God and that he has planned for them all a glorious future. The sun now obscured by the clouds shall shine some day with great glory, but only for the “wise” and in the “last time.”

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

Dan 12:9 And he said, Go thy way, Daniel: for the words [are] closed up and sealed till the time of the end.

Ver. 9. And he said, Go thy way, Daniel. ] Quiesce, tibi satis esto q.d., Though dearly beloved, yet of some things thou must be content to be ignorant. It should suffice thee to be of God’s court, though not altogether of his council. See Dan 12:13 . There is a laudable and learned ignorance, as of unnecessaries, of impossibles, or of unprofitables; such as are the term of our lives, the end of the world, the reprobation of others, &c.

For the words are closed up, ] viz., Till future ages, which are more concerned in them, and till which these things shall be concealed.

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

Dan 12:9

Dan 12:9 And he said,H559 Go thy way,H1980 Daniel:H1840 forH3588 the wordsH1697 are closed upH5640 and sealedH2856 tillH5704 the timeH6256 of the end.H7093

Dan 12:9

And he said, Go thy way, Daniel: for the words are closed up and sealed till the time of the end.

Daniel is told that it is time now for him to be on his way. The complete understanding of the words given him will not be revealed until the time of the end. The end in view here being the scattering of the holy people at the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 AD.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

Go: Dan 12:13

closed: Dan 12:4, Dan 8:26, Isa 8:16, Isa 29:11, Rev 10:4

Reciprocal: Psa 102:13 – the set Ecc 3:17 – for Ecc 3:22 – who Isa 40:2 – warfare Dan 7:28 – the end Dan 10:1 – but Dan 10:14 – the vision 1Co 15:24 – cometh 1Pe 1:12 – that not Rev 5:4 – because Rev 22:10 – Seal

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Dan 12:9. The spokesman rather put Daniel off with an indefinite reply for the same reason as expressed in verse 4 where be was told to seal the book because the fulfillment was to be in the long future.

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

The second answer 12:9-13

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)

The Lord reminded Daniel that much of what he had received would remain obscure until the end time (cf. Dan 12:4). Then people will be able to look back, marvel at the total fulfillment of prophecy, and glorify the sovereign Most High God.

"God in His infinite wisdom has revealed to us only that which it is needful for us to have in order that we may know what He requires of us. He does not reveal that which does not directly contribute toward this end. Scripture is not a body of esoteric mystery given to satisfy idle curiosity. It is given that we ’might not sin against Thee’ (Psa 119:11 b). It is a thoroughly practical Book." [Note: Young, pp. 260-61. Cf. 2 Timothy 3:16-17.]

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)