THE PASSING OF DANIEL
Daniel was old, too old to take in any more, too old to do
any more writing. He began to realize that now. He had to accept the fact that
his life’s work was finished and he must lay down the responsibility and wait
for the call. Now he was ready to yield himself to the care of God whom he had
served so faithfully. He prepared himself for the rest of death, knowing of a
surety that at the end of the days he would stand in the resurrection of the
just and see with his own eyes the reality of the visions he had just now
recorded. With that, he was content.
Thus, the
old man closed his eyes in complete confidence that it would surely come. He
knew, and had proved it throughout a long life the faithfulness of God. Perhaps
his mind went back to the early days of boyhood, when he first learned of God
and his plans for eventual world deliverance, at the feet of his mentor,
Jeremiah the prophet. Maybe he recalled dimly, because it was a long time ago,
the journey to Babylon as a youth of eighteen or so with his companions
Azariah, Hananiah and Mishael. Together with him, they had refused the rich
foods of the palace and because of their abstemiousness had eventually found
the king’s favor and attained high office in the State. That would have brought
before his failing eyes the picture of the arrogant king whom he had been able
to serve so faithfully. There was the king’s family that he had known so well,
the gentle Queen Amytis, and Nitocris, the king’s daughter who had remained so
staunch a friend through all the phases of a lifetime and into old age. They
were all dead now and only he was left. He remembered the king’s dream of the
image and how God had given him the interpretation and the understanding that
four great empires were to rule on earth and then the kingdom of God would come.
He visualized the leaping flames of the fiery furnace flickered before his
eyes, and the awed voice of the king, “I see four men, loose, and the
form of the fourth is like a son of the gods.” The thin hands moved
restlessly. Again, he was in spirit
endeavoring, with Queen Amytis, to restrain the mad king as he sought to
emulate the beasts of the earth. Once more, he knew the thrill of hearing the
voice of Nebuchadnezzar, restored to sanity, professing allegiance to the God
of heaven. The days of dreams and visions passed across his mind, the visits of
the revealing angel, the years of study and reflection when he lived as a
private citizen waiting in patience for the revelation of God from heaven. The shadows in the room gathered and he
entered again into the darkness of Babylon’s last night, when the Persians besieged the city. He saw the blaze
of light at the palace banquet, the writing on the wall,
the end of the empire. He saw too, his brief time of service under the Median
King Darius and his deliverance from the lion’s den. Rapidly, the pictures
passed before his mental vision and at the end of them all, in a golden glory
in the background, he saw the fair beauty of the world that is yet to be, the
world for which he had waited all his life, the world in which he himself was
to stand, in his lot, at the end of the days.
He could
see them more plainly now, those friends and companions of days so long ago.
They had all gone before him; he had not seen them for a long time. They were
there, waiting for him. In the land yet to be, in the end of the days, he would
take up his task with renewed strength and ability, would once more serve God
to whom he had been faithful, and who had been so faithful to him. He would
serve him in that transcendent glory that will never pass away.
The room
was getting very dark now, and it was quiet, quieter than Daniel had ever known
it. The golden visions flickered on, beckoning him ... He was going to rest
now, as the angel had promised ... but he would stand in his lot at the end of
the days.
A.O. Hudson
A
Blessed Way to Live
I will try
this day to live a simple, sincere and serene life, repelling promptly every
thought of discontent, anxiety, discouragement, impurity, self-seeking while
cultivating cheerfulness, generosity, love to all and the habit of holy
silence; exercising economy in expenditure, generosity in giving, carefulness in
conversation, diligence in appointed service, fidelity in every relationship,
and a childlike faith in God.
In
particular, I will try to be faithful in those habits of prayer, work, physical
exercise, eating and sleep, which I believe the Holy Spirit has shown me to be
right.
That all my powers with all their might
To
God’s sole Glory may unite.
George Eliot.