Daniel
American Standard Version · 12 Chapters
Overview and commentary for this book
Open book commentary
Authorship, setting, and audience
The book is linked to Daniel and combines court narratives with apocalyptic visions. Its setting is exile under Babylonian and Persian power where covenant faithfulness is tested in public life. It teaches God's people how to remain loyal under pressure and how to interpret empire without fear.
How the book moves
The book moves from public stories of witness and deliverance into visions that reinterpret history under God's rule.
Why this book matters
Daniel matters because it teaches that earthly empires are never the final horizon of reality.
Questions for this book
- What injustice, idolatry, or compromise is being confronted?
- Where does the book hold out hope, renewal, or future restoration?
How to use this overview
Treat this overview as orientation for careful reading. It is meant to illuminate the text, not replace the work of observing the book for yourself.
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Themes this book opens
Browse all topicsBible passages about suffering
A curated Bible hub for readers searching for suffering, endurance, comfort, discipline, and hope under pressure.
Bible passages about holiness
A curated Bible hub for readers searching for holiness, consecration, obedience, and life set apart for God.
Bible passages about hope
A curated Bible hub for readers searching for hope, endurance, resurrection certainty, and final restoration.
Bible passages about salvation
A curated Bible hub for readers searching for salvation, grace, new birth, rescue from sin, and life in Christ.
If you want to keep going with this book
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John 3
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