5.0- Daniel's Vision of a Ram and a Goat
In Daniel 8 verses 1
through 14 we read:
“1 In the third year that Belshazzar was king, I saw a second
vision. 2 In the vision I suddenly found
myself in the walled city of Susa in the province of Elam. I was standing by
the Ulai River, 3 and there beside the river I saw a ram that had two
long horns, one of which was longer and newer than the other. 4 I watched the
ram butting with his horns to the west, the north, and the south. No
animal could stop him or escape his power. He did as he pleased and grew
arrogant.
5 While I was wondering what this meant, a goat
came rushing out of the west, moving so fast that his feet didn't touch the
ground. He had one prominent horn between his eyes. 6 He came toward the ram,
which I had seen standing beside the river, and rushed at him with all his
force. 7 I watched him attack the ram. He was so angry that he smashed into him
and broke the two horns. The ram had no strength to resist. He was thrown to
the ground and trampled on, and there was no one who could save him.
8 The goat grew more and more arrogant, but at
the height of his power his horn was broken. In its place four prominent horns
came up, each pointing in a different direction. 9 Out of one of these four
horns grew a little horn, whose power extended toward the south and the east
and toward the Promised Land. 10 It grew strong enough to attack the army of
heaven, the stars themselves, and it threw some of them to the ground and
trampled on them. 11 It even defied the Prince of the heavenly army, stopped
the daily sacrifices offered to him, and ruined the Temple. 12 People sinned
there instead of offering the proper daily sacrifices, and true religion was
thrown to the ground. The horn was successful in everything it did.
13 Then I heard one angel ask another, “How
long will these things that were seen in the vision continue? How long will an
awful sin replace the daily sacrifices? How long will the army of heaven and
the Temple be trampled on?”
14 I heard the other angel answer, “It will
continue for 2,300 evenings and mornings, during which sacrifices will not be
offered. Then the Temple will be restored.”