
Jesus in the Old Testament is a series of posts that will offer my readers a chance to consider pictures or shadows of Jesus in the Old Testament. As mentioned in the introduction to this series, some may be obvious, some may be not so obvious, and some may simply be a facet of the Lord those reading may not have considered previously.
I hope as we venture through this series, we will see the Lord in many wonderful pictures throughout the Old Testament.
| SEEING JESUS IN |
| Daniel |
| Sentenced to Death out of Envy |
| Daniel 6:4-5 Then the high officials and the satraps sought to find a ground for complaint against Daniel with regard to the kingdom, but they could find no ground for complaint or any fault, because he was faithful, and no error or fault was found in him. Then these men said, “We shall not find any ground for complaint against this Daniel unless we find it in connection with the law of his God.” |
| Matthew 12:13-14 Then he said to the man, “Stretch out your hand.” And the man stretched it out, and it was restored, healthy like the other. But the Pharisees went out and conspired against him, how to destroy him. |
If there is anything in the life of Daniel that reflects the life of the Lord Jesus, this one aspect stand out!
Daniel was a stellar man. The enemies of God admitted they could find nothing of a convictible nature in this man’s life. They would have to create a law that drove Daniel away from his God, and therefore corrupt him, or better yet, use the law to condemn him, and put him to death.
It had to be a trap that included a capital offence. Nothing less would do, for these men were frustrated with this Hebrew. He was rising through the ranks, and was fast becoming a favorite of the King. Take him out and the paying field is leverls out again.
It is amazing the twistedness of envy, for as envy sinks it’s hooks in a mind, the resulting thinking is completely without reason. These men would risk their own standing before the king in an effort to condemn a good man, a man favored by the king, and that would become obvious to the king of their intent after the trap had been laid.
This is absolutely crazy on the part of these “wise” men, but they had had enough. Envy had gripped thier minds and they were committed to killing Daniel in any way availalbe, and since they could not find a just reason, an unjust conviction suited them just fine!
Centuries later, the Greater Daniel was not rising in the ranks amongst government officials. That was not a condition Jesus ever experienced. But in the midst of rising in the ranks of the peoples admiration, the Pharisees of His day also sought a way to kill Jesus.
It was right after Jesus had healed the withered hand of a man, that the Pharisees had had enough. They let the demon of envy eat away at all sense they may have had, throwing caution and reason out the door, and ventured onto the path of lunacy.
They killed him using the Roman laws, twisting Pilate to their will by fear of exposing his lack of loyalty to Caesar. Political power. Religious envy. A righteous man. These three are always destined to a conflict, resulting in death.
May we be on the right side!
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