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Daniel’s Prophecy of the
Seventy Weeks
By Wayne Jackson
(Christian Courier: Archives
Monday, November 9, 1998)
Jesus Christ emphatically declared that the
Old Testament Scriptures contained prophecies He would fulfill
(Luke 24:27,44). Biblical scholars have catalogued more than 300
amazing prophecies that find precise fulfillment in the life and
labor of the Son of God. One of these predictive declarations is
found in Daniel 9:24-27, commonly referred to as the prophecy of
“Daniel’s Seventy Weeks.” In this article, I
would like to consider this important Old Testament oracle.
A proper analysis of Daniel 9:24ff. involves several factors.
First, one should reflect upon the historical background out of
which the prophetic utterance arose. Second, consideration should
be given to the theological aspects of the Messiah’s work
that are set forth in this passage. Third, the chronology of the
prophecy must be noted carefully; it represents a prime example
of the precision of divine prediction. Finally, one should
contemplate the sobering judgment that was to be visited upon the
Jewish nation in the wake of its rejection of the Christ. Let us
give some attention to each of these issues.
The Historical Context
Because of Israel’s apostasy, the prophet Jeremiah had
foretold that the Jews would be delivered as captives to Babylon.
In that foreign land they would be confined for seventy years
(Jeremiah 25:12; 29:10). Sure enough, the prophet’s
warnings proved accurate. The general period of the Babylonian
confinement was seventy years (Daniel 9:2; 2 Chronicles 36:21;
Zechariah 1:12; 7:5). But why was a seventy-year captivity
decreed? Why not sixty, or eighty? There was a reason for this
exact time frame.
The law of Moses had commanded the Israelites to acknowledge
every seventh year as a sabbatical year. The ground was to lie at
rest (Leviticus 25:1-7). Apparently, across the centuries Israel
had ignored that divinely-imposed regulation. In their
pre-captivity history, there seems to be no example of their ever
having honored the sabbath-year law. Thus, according to the
testimony of one biblical writer, the seventy years of the
Babylonian captivity was assigned “until the land had
enjoyed its sabbaths” (2 Chronicles 36:21).
If each of the seventy captivity-years represented a violation of
the sabbatical-year requirement (every seventh year), as 2
Chronicles 36:21 appears to suggest, this would indicate that
Israel had neglected the divine injunction for approximately 490
years. The captivity era therefore looked backward upon five
centuries of sinful neglect. At the same time, Daniel’s
prophecy telescoped forward to a time — some 490 years into
the future — when the “Anointed One” would
“make an end of sins” (9:24). Daniel’s prophecy
seems to mark a sort of “mid-way” point in the
historical scheme of things.
In the first year of Darius, who had been appointed king over the
realm of the Chaldeans (c. 538 B.C.), Daniel, reflecting upon the
time-span suggested by Jeremiah’s prophecies, calculated
that the captivity period almost was over (9:1-2). He thus
approached Jehovah in prayer. The prophet confessed his sins, and
those of the nation as well. He petitioned Jehovah to turn away
His wrath from Jerusalem, and permit the temple to be rebuilt
(9:16-17). The Lord responded to Daniel’s prayer in a
message delivered by the angel Gabriel (9:24-27). The house of
God would be rebuilt. A more significant blessing would come,
however, in the Person of the Anointed One (Christ), Who is
greater than the temple (cf. Matthew 12:6). This prophecy was a
delightful message of consolation to the despondent Hebrews in
captivity.
The Messiah’s Mission
This exciting context sets forth the primary purpose of
Christ’s mission to Earth. First, the Messiah would come to
deal with the problem of human sin. He would “finish
transgression,” make an “end of sins,” and
effect “reconciliation for iniquity.” That theme is
developed gloriously throughout the New Testament (see Matthew
1:21; 20:28; 26:28; 1 Corinthians 15:3; 2 Corinthians 5:21;
Galatians 1:4; Ephesians 1:7; Colossians 1:20; 1 Peter 2:24;
Revelation 1:5 — passages that are but a fractional
sampling of the New Testament references to this exalted
topic).
The advent of Christ did not put an “end” to sin in
the sense that wickedness was eradicated from the Earth. Rather,
the work of the Savior was to introduce a system that could
provide effectually and permanently a solution to the human sin
predicament. This is one of the themes of the book of Hebrews.
Jesus’ death was a “once-for-all” event (see
Hebrews 9:26). The Lord never will have to return to the Earth to
repeat the Calvary experience.
It is interesting to note that Daniel emphasized that the
Anointed One would address the problems of
“transgression,” “sin,” and
“iniquity” — as if to suggest that the Lord is
capable of dealing with evil in all of its hideous forms.
Similarly, the prophet Isaiah, in the 53rd chapter of his
narrative, revealed that the Messiah would sacrifice Himself for
“transgression” (5,8,12), “sin” (10,12),
and “iniquity” (5,6,11).
It is worthy of mention at this point that Isaiah 53 frequently
is quoted in the New Testament in conjunction with the
Lord’s atoning work at the time of His first coming. Since
Daniel 9:24ff. quite obviously has an identical thrust, it, too,
must focus upon the Savior’s work at the cross, and not
upon Jesus’ second coming — as is alleged by
premillennialists.
Second, in addition to His redemptive work in connection with
sin, Daniel showed that the Messiah would usher in an era of
“everlasting righteousness.” This obviously is a
reference to the Gospel dispensation. In the pages of the New
Testament, Paul forcefully argued that Heaven’s plan for
accounting man as “righteous” was made known
“at this present season” (Roman 3:21-26) through the
Gospel (Romans 1:16-17).
Third, the angel’s message suggested that as a result of
the Messiah’s work, “vision and prophecy” would
be sealed up. The Hebrew term denotes that which is brought to a
“conclusion” or is finished (Gesenius, 1979, p. 315).
It should be emphasized that the major burden of the Old
Testament was to proclaim the coming of God’s Son. Peter
declared that the prophets of ancient times heralded the
“sufferings of Christ and the glories that should follow
them.” He affirmed that this message now is announced in
the Gospel (1 Peter 1:10-12). Here is a crucial point. With the
coming of the Savior to effect human redemption, and with the
completion of the New Testament record which sets forth that
message, the need for “vision and prophecy” became
obsolete. As a result, “prophecy” (and other
revelatory gifts) have “ceased” (see 1 Corinthians
13:8-13; Ephesians 4:11-16). There are no supernatural
“visions” and “prophecies” being given by
God in this age. [For further study, see Judisch (1978, Chapter
5), and Jackson (1990, pp. 114-124).]
Fourth, Daniel stated that the “most holy” would be
anointed. What is the meaning of this expression? Dispensational
premillennialists interpret this as a reference to the rebuilding
of the Jewish temple during the so-called
“millennium.” But the premillennial concept is not
supported by the facts.
Any view that one adopts regarding this phraseology must be
consistent with other biblical data. The expression “most
holy” probably is an allusion to Christ Himself, and the
“anointing” a reference to the Lord’s endowment
with the Holy Spirit at the commencement of His ministry (Matthew
3:16; Acts 10:38). Consider the following factors.
1. While it is possible that the grammar can
reflect a “most holy” thing or place (i.e., in a
neuter form), it also can yield a masculine sense —
“Most Holy One.” The immediate context tips the
scales toward the masculine since the “anointed one, the
prince” is mentioned in verse 25.
2. The “anointing” obviously belongs to the same time
frame as the events previously mentioned, hence is associated
with the Lord’s first coming, not the second one.
3. Thompson has observed that the act of anointing never was
associated with the temple’s “most holy” place
in the Old Testament (1950, p. 268).
4. Anointing was practiced in the Old Testament period as a rite
of inauguration and consecration to the offices of prophet (1
Kings 19:16), priest (Exodus 28:41), and king (1 Samuel 10:1).
Significantly, Christ functions in each of these roles (see Acts
3:20-23; Hebrews 3:1; Matthew 21:5).
5. The anointing of Jesus was foretold elsewhere in the Old
Testament (Isaiah 61:1), and, in fact, the very title,
“Christ,” means anointed.
Fifth, the Anointed One was to “make a firm
covenant with many” (Daniel 9:27a, ASV). A better rendition
would be: “Make a covenant firm . . . .” The meaning
seems to be: the Messiah’s covenant surely will remain
firm, i.e., prevail, even though He is killed. The
“covenant,” as E.J. Young observed, “is the
covenant of grace wherein the Messiah, by His life and death,
obtains salvation for His people” (1954, p. 679).
Sixth, as a result of Christ’s death, “the sacrifice
and the oblation” would cease (9:27a). This is an allusion
to the cessation of the Jewish sacrifices as a consequence of
Jesus’ ultimate sacrificial offering at Golgotha. When the
Lord died, the Mosaic law was “nailed to the cross”
(Colossians 2:14). That “middle wall of partition”
was abolished (Ephesians 2:13-17), and the “first
covenant” was replaced by the “second” one
(Hebrews 10:9-10). This was the “new covenant” of
Jeremiah’s famous prophecy (Jeremiah 31:31-34; cf. Hebrews
8:7ff.), and was ratified by the blood of Jesus Himself (Matthew
26:28). This context is a rich depository of truth concerning the
accomplishments of Christ by means of His redemptive work.
The Prophetic Chronology
The time element of this famous prophecy enabled the studious
Hebrew to know when the promised Messiah would die for the sins
of humanity. The chronology of this prophetic context involves
three things: (a) a commencement point; (b) a duration period;
and (c) a concluding event.
The beginning point was to coincide with a command to
“restore and rebuild Jerusalem.” The time span
between the starting point and the concluding event was specified
as “seventy weeks.” This would be seventy weeks of
seven days each — a total of 490 days. Each day was to
represent a year in prophetic history. Most conservative scholars
hold that the symbolism denotes a period of approximately 490
years (Payne, 1973, p. 383; Archer, 1964, p. 387; cf. RSV).
Finally, the terminal event would be the “cutting
off,” (i.e., the death) of the Anointed One (9:26). [NOTE:
Actually, the chronology is divided into three segments, the
total of which represents 486½ years. This would be the
span between the command to restore Jerusalem, and the
Messiah’s death.]
If one is able to determine the date of the commencement point of
this prophecy, it then becomes a relatively simple matter to add
to that the time-duration specified in the text, thus concluding
the precise time when the Lord was to be slain. Let us therefore
narrow our focus regarding this matter.
There are but three possible dates for the commencement of the
seventy-week calendar. First, Zerubbabel led a group of Hebrews
out of captivity in 536 B.C. This seems to be an unlikely
beginning point, however, because 486 years from 536 B.C. would
end at 50 B.C., which was eighty years prior to Jesus’
death. Second, Nehemiah led a band back to Canaan in 444 B.C. Is
this the commencement point for computing the prophecy? Probably
not, for 486 years after 444 B.C. ends at A.D. 42 — a dozen
years after the death of Christ. However, in 457 B.C., Ezra took
a company from Babylon back to Jerusalem. Does this date work
mathematically? Indeed. If one starts at 457 B.C., and goes
forward for 486½ years, the resulting date is A.D. 30
— the very year of Christ’s crucifixion! This is the
common view (Scott, 1975, 5:364).
The strongest objection to this argument is the claim that Ezra
issued no charge to rebuild the city of Jerusalem, and so the
starting point of the prophecy could not date from the time of
his return. Noted scholar Gleason Archer has responded to this
allegation by affirming that Ezra’s commission:
“. . . apparently included authority to restore and build
the city of Jerusalem (as we may deduce from Ezra 7:6,7, and also
9:9, which states, “God . . . hath extended lovingkindness
unto us in the sight of the kings of Persia, to give us a
reviving, to set up the house of God, and to repair the ruins
thereof, and to give us a wall in Judea and in Jerusalem,”
ASV). Even though Ezra did not actually succeed in accomplishing
the rebuilding of the walls till Nehemiah arrived thirteen years
later, it is logical to understand 457 B.C. as the terminus a quo
for the decree predicted in Daniel 9:25” (1964, p. 387,
emp. in orig.). In “the midst” of the seventieth
week, i.e., after the fulfillment of the 486½ years, the
Anointed One was to be “cut off.” This is a reference
to the death of Jesus. Isaiah similarly foretold that Christ
would be “cut off out of the land of the living”
(Isaiah 53:8).
But why are the “seventy weeks” of Daniel’s
prophecy divided into three segments — seven weeks, 62
weeks, and the “midst” of one week? There was purpose
in this breakdown.
The first division of “seven weeks” (literally,
forty-nine years) covers that period of time during which the
actual rebuilding of Jerusalem would be underway, following the
Hebrews’ return to Palestine (9:25b). This was the answer
to Daniel’s prayer (9:16). That reconstruction era was to
be one of “troublous times.” The Jews’ enemies
had harassed them in earlier days (see Ezra 4:1-6), and they
continued to do so in the time of Ezra and Nehemiah. [For further
discussion of this circumstance, see Whitcomb (1962, p.
435).]
The second segment of sixty-two weeks (434 years), when added to
the previous forty-nine, yields a total of 483 years. When this
figure is computed from 457 B.C., it terminates at A.D. 26. This
was the year of Jesus’ baptism and the beginning of His
public ministry.
Finally, the “midst of the week” (3½ years)
reflects the time of the Lord’s preaching ministry. This
segment of the prophecy concludes in A.D. 30 — the year of
the Savior’s death.
The Consequences Of Rejecting Christ
No historical revisionism can alter the fact that the Lord Jesus
was put to death by His own people, the Jews (John 1:11). This
does not sanction any modern-day mistreatment of the Jewish
people; it does, however, acknowledge that Israel, as a nation,
suffered a serious consequence as a result of its role in the
death of the Messiah.
Daniel’s prophecy depicted the Roman invasion of Jerusalem
and the destruction of the Jewish temple. The prophet spoke of a
certain “prince that shall come,” who would
“destroy the city and the sanctuary” like an
overwhelming flood (9:26b). All of this was
“determined” (see 9:26b, 9:27b) by God because of the
Jews’ rejection of His Son [Matthew 21:37-41; 22:1-7; see
Young (1954, p. 679)].
The interpretation of this portion of the prophecy is beyond
dispute. Jesus, in His Olivet discourse concerning the
destruction of Jerusalem (Matthew 24:1-34), talked about
“the abomination of desolation, which was spoken of through
Daniel the prophet” (24:15). The Lord was alluding to
Daniel 9:27. The “abomination that makes desolate”
was the Roman army, under its commander, Titus (“the
prince” — 9:26b), who vanquished Jerusalem in A.D.
70. [NOTE: The “prince” of verse 26a is not the same
as the anointed “prince” of verse 25a. The
“prince” of verse 26 comes after the anointed Prince
has been cut off.]
The historical facts are these. In A.D. 66, the Jews, who were
subject to Rome, revolted against the empire. This plunged the
Hebrews into several years of bloody conflict with the Romans.
Titus, son and successor of the famous Vespasian, overthrew the
city of Jerusalem (after a five-month siege) in the summer of
A.D. 70. The holy city was burned (cf. Matthew 22:7), and the
“sanctuary” (temple) was demolished. Christ had
informed His disciples that the day was coming when the
Jews’ “house” would be left desolate (Matthew
23:38); indeed, not one stone would be left upon another (Matthew
24:2). Significantly, only one stone from that temple, and parts
of another, have been identified positively by archaeologists
(Frank, 1972, p. 249). J.N. Geldenhuys summarized this situation
by noting that Titus
“. . . overran the city with his army, destroyed and
plundered the temple, and slew the Jews-men, women and
children-by tens of thousands. When their lust for blood had been
sated, the Romans carried off into captivity all the able-bodied
remnant of the Jews (for they had done away with all the
weaklings and the aged), so that not a single Jew was left alive
in the city or its vicinity. Only on one day in the year-the day
of remembrance of the destruction of the temple-were they allowed
to mourn over the city from the neighboring hill-tops”
(1960, 3:141).
This event was referred to by Daniel as the “abomination of
desolation” because the city of David was desolated by the
Roman army — an abominable force because of its idolatrous
fabric. It is not without considerable interest that apparently
even the Jews recognized that the destruction of the Hebrew
nation was a fulfillment of Daniel’s remarkable prophecy.
Josephus, the Jewish historian, stated that “Daniel also
wrote concerning the Roman government, and that our country
should be made desolate by them” (Antiquities,
X.XI.7).
Conclusion
Daniel’s inspired record regarding the “seventy
weeks” isa profound demonstration of the validity of
scriptural prophecy. It foretells the coming of the Messiah, and
details His benevolent work. The prophecy pinpoints the very time
of Jesus’ crucifixion. Finally, it reveals the disastrous
consequences of rejecting the Son of God. How thankful we should
be to Jehovah for providing this rich testimony.
SOURCES
Archer, Gleason L. (1964), A Survey of Old Testament Introduction
(Chicago: Moody).
Frank, Harry Thomas (1972), An Archaeological Companion to the
Bible (London: SCM Press).
Geldenhuys, J. Norval (1960), “Luke,” The Biblical
Expositor, ed. Carl F. H. Henry (Philadelphia, PA: Holman).
Gesenius, William (1979 reprint), Hebrew-Chaldee Lexicon to the
Old Testament (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker).
Jackson, Wayne (1990), “Miracles,” Giving a Reason
for Our Hope, ed. Winford Claiborne (Henderson, TN:
Freed-Hardeman University).
Judisch, Douglas (1978), An Evaluation of Claims to the
Charismatic Gifts (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker).
Payne, J. Barton (1973), The Encyclopedia of Biblical Prophecy
(New York: Harper & Row).
Scott, J.B. (1975), “Seventy Weeks,” Zondervan
Pictorial Encyclopedia of the Bible, ed. Merrill C. Tenney (Grand
Rapids, MI: Zondervan).
Thompson, J.E.H. (1950 reprint), “Daniel,” The Pulpit
Commentary, ed. H.D.M. Spence and Joseph Exell (Grand Rapids, MI:
Eerdmans).
Whitcomb, John C., Jr. (1962), “Nehemiah,” The
Wycliffe Bible Commentary (Chicago: Moody).
Young, Edward J. (1954), “Daniel,” The New Bible
Commentary, ed. F. Davidson (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans).
(This article comes from CHRISTIAN COURIER.COM and
we use it with the express permission of Wayne Jackson MA)
WITNESS
TO THE WORD MENU

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