Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Daniel 7:2 - 7:2

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Jamieson Fausset Brown Commentary - Daniel 7:2 - 7:2


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This Chapter Verse Commentaries:

the four winds - answering to the “four beasts”; their several conflicts in the four quarters or directions of the world.

strove - burst forth (from the abyss) [Maurer].

sea - The world powers rise out of the agitations of the political sea (Jer 46:7, Jer 46:8; Luk 21:25; compare Rev 13:1; Rev 17:15; Rev 21:1); the kingdom of God and the Son of man from the clouds of heaven (Dan 7:13; compare Joh 8:23). Tregelles takes “the great sea” to mean, as always elsewhere in Scripture (Jos 1:4; Jos 9:1), the Mediterranean, the center territorially of the four kingdoms of the vision, which all border on it and have Jerusalem subject to them. Babylon did not border on the Mediterranean, nor rule Jerusalem, till Nebuchadnezzar’s time, when both things took place simultaneously. Persia encircled more of this sea, namely, from the Hellespont to Cyrene. Greece did not become a monarchy before Alexander’s time, but then, succeeding to Persia, it became mistress of Jerusalem. It surrounded still more of the Mediterranean, adding the coasts of Greece to the part held by Persia. Rome, under Augustus, realized three things at once - it became a monarchy; it became mistress of the last of the four parts of Alexander’s empire (symbolized by the four heads of the third beast), and of Jerusalem; it surrounded all the Mediterranean.