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												Verse 1Daniel 5:1. Belshazzar — The son 
												of Evil-merodach, and grandson 
												of Nebuchadnezzar; made a great 
												feast to a thousand of his lords 
												— To the principal officers and 
												great men of his court, and was 
												himself present at it. This 
												feast was made at a time of 
												public rejoicing, being an 
												annual festival, when the whole 
												night was spent in revelling; of 
												which season Cyrus took the 
												advantage to make himself master 
												of the city, as Herodotus and 
												Xenophon relate, and as was 
												foretold by Jeremiah 50:24; 
												Jeremiah 51:39; Jeremiah 51:57, 
												where see the notes.
 
 Verses 2-4
 Daniel 5:2-4. Belshazzar, while 
												he tasted the wine — When he 
												grew warm with wine, Houb. 
												Commanded to bring the golden 
												and silver vessels, &c. 
												Triumphing thereby over God and 
												his people. They drank wine — 
												Made themselves merry with wine. 
												And praised the gods of gold, 
												&c. — Praised, as gods, 
												senseless images of gold, 
												silver, brass, iron, &c.; thus 
												insulting the great God of 
												heaven and earth, as if these 
												images were more powerful than 
												he, and had enabled them to 
												prevail against him and his 
												people. This their conduct was 
												the more sinful, because 
												Nebuchadnezzar had, not long 
												before, prohibited, by a solemn 
												decree, that any one should 
												speak lightly of the God of the 
												Jews. The Alexandrine and Coptic 
												versions, after mentioning their 
												praising their false gods, add, 
												“But the everlasting God they 
												praised not.” Such a wanton and 
												sacrilegious insult deserved and 
												called for exemplary punishment.
 
 Verse 5-6
 Daniel 5:5-6. In the same hour — 
												At the very time; came forth 
												fingers of a man’s hand — The 
												likeness of a man’s hand; and 
												wrote over against the 
												candlestick — The angel Gabriel, 
												say the rabbins, directing this 
												hand, and writing by it. 
												Belshazzar seems to have filled 
												up the measure of his iniquity, 
												by this act of gross impiety and 
												dishonour done to the true God. 
												And the king saw — It seems, 
												first saw; the part of the hand 
												that wrote — It is probable this 
												candlestick was a hanging 
												sconce, near the king, and that 
												the light it cast made him see 
												the hand while it was writing, 
												as well as the writing which 
												remained on the wall. His seeing 
												the hand, but not the person 
												whose hand it was, made the 
												thing more frightful. Then the 
												king’s countenance was changed, 
												&c. — His face became pale with 
												terror: for although he could 
												not read the writing, and 
												therefore did not know what was 
												its purport, yet a sense of 
												guilt made him forebode that the 
												words had some dreadful meaning; 
												and his thoughts troubled him — 
												His remorse of conscience 
												respecting the past, and his 
												fearful apprehensions with 
												regard to the future; so that 
												the joints of his loins were 
												loosed — He discovered the 
												disorder of his mind by the 
												trembling which seized his whole 
												body. And his knees smote one 
												against another — So soon can 
												the terrors of God shake the 
												loftiest cedars, and terrify the 
												tyrants of the earth! Thus can 
												the Lord spoil the mad mirth of 
												drunken atheists in a moment! 
												“The expressions in this verse, 
												in a collected view, contain 
												such a description of terror as 
												is rarely to be met with; the 
												dead change of the countenance, 
												the perturbation of the 
												thoughts, the joints of the 
												loins becoming relaxed, and the 
												knees smiting against each 
												other, are very strong 
												indications of horror. Horace 
												has, ‘Et corde et genibus tremit;’ 
												and Virgil, ‘Tarda trementi 
												genua labant;’ but these are far 
												inferior to the picturesque 
												description of Daniel.” — Wintle.
 
 Verse 7
 Daniel 5:7. The king cried aloud 
												— Manifesting at once great fear 
												and great impatience; to bring 
												in the astrologers, &c. — In 
												this he imitated Nebuchadnezzar 
												his grandfather: it seems indeed 
												to have been the general 
												practice of these heathen kings, 
												in all unexpected emergencies, 
												to apply to these their wise men 
												for help. But the ill success of 
												Nebuchadnezzar, in such 
												applications, might have taught 
												Belshazzar a better lesson. The 
												king said, Whosoever shall read 
												this writing, &c. — To engage 
												these wise men to exert the 
												utmost of their skill in this 
												matter, he promises that 
												whosoever would give him a 
												satisfactory account of this 
												writing should be dignified with 
												the highest honours of the 
												court; and be the third ruler in 
												the kingdom — “Grotius considers 
												the king as the first, the 
												king’s son as the second, and 
												the interpreter of the vision to 
												be the third. Or it may mean, 
												that there should be a 
												triumvirate appointed to govern 
												the kingdom, as was the case in 
												the beginning of the reign of 
												Darius, and the interpreter 
												should be one of these. Mr. 
												Bruce (vol. 4. p. 32) speaks of 
												a person who was suddenly 
												advanced to a command, the third 
												in the kingdom of Abyssinia for 
												rank, power, and riches; and 
												that, at his public investiture, 
												he had a circle of gold put upon 
												his head, was clothed with a 
												white and blue mantle, and made 
												the king’s lieutenant-general in 
												the provinces allotted to him.” 
												— Wintle.
 
 Verse 8-9
 Daniel 5:8-9. Then came in all 
												the king’s wise men — Ambitious 
												of the honour, and desirous to 
												gratify the king. But they could 
												not read the writing — Because, 
												says Houbigant, it was written 
												in the ancient Samaritan 
												characters, which were very 
												unlike the Chaldean letters. Or 
												perhaps only the initial 
												letters, M.T.P. were written. 
												But God, for his own glory, 
												reserved the honour of reading 
												and interpreting it for his 
												servant Daniel. Mr. Wintle 
												renders the clause, “They were 
												unable to read the writing, so 
												as to make known the 
												interpretation to the king.” 
												Then was King Belshazzar greatly 
												troubled — His consternation and 
												distress were renewed and 
												increased, his last hope having 
												failed him; and his lords were 
												astonished — His associates in 
												sin shared in the consternation; 
												and notwithstanding their 
												number, mirth, and wine, were 
												dismayed and terrified 
												exceedingly.
 
 Verses 10-12
 Daniel 5:10-12. Now the queen, 
												&c. — The king’s wives and 
												concubines sat with him at the 
												feast, Daniel 5:2; therefore the 
												person here called the queen, 
												and said to come into the 
												banqueting-house on this solemn 
												occasion, must have been the 
												queen-mother, the widow of 
												Evil-merodach, named Nitocris, a 
												lady, according to Herodotus, 
												eminent for her wisdom, and who 
												had the chief direction of 
												public affairs. The queen said, 
												Let not thy thoughts trouble 
												thee — Be not so distressed, nor 
												yield to terror and despondency. 
												There is a man in thy kingdom — 
												Some persons are apt to wonder 
												that Daniel was unknown to 
												Belshazzar, which others have 
												accounted for from the abandoned 
												and indolent character of this 
												prince; but there is a further 
												reason: which Mr. Harmer, vol. 
												1. p. 166, has hinted, from Sir 
												John Chardin, namely, that he 
												had been mazouled, as they 
												express it in the East, that is, 
												displaced at the death of a 
												prior king; since, in the East, 
												when the king dies, the 
												physicians and astrologers are 
												removed: the former for not 
												having driven away death, and 
												the latter for not having 
												predicted it. It is probable, 
												however, that Daniel was not 
												totally unknown to the king; but 
												being perhaps in no esteem, or 
												not employed in any considerable 
												department of the state, in the 
												early part of his reign, he was 
												not readily recollected. In whom 
												was the spirit of the holy gods 
												— See note on Daniel 4:8. And in 
												the days of thy father — That 
												is, of thy grandfather, 
												Nebuchadnezzar, light and 
												understanding, &c. — That is, an 
												enlightened understanding, or 
												supernatural illumination, as 
												the next words show. Such an 
												insight he had into things 
												secret, and such a foresight of 
												things to come, that it was 
												evident he was divinely 
												inspired, and possessed of 
												extraordinary wisdom, given him 
												from above. Forasmuch as an 
												excellent spirit and knowledge, 
												&c., were found in the same 
												Daniel — His excellent 
												disposition, his humble, holy, 
												heavenly spirit, was both a 
												great ornament to his wisdom, 
												and fitted him for the reception 
												and increase of that 
												extraordinary gift of God. Now 
												let Daniel be called, and he 
												will show the interpretation — 
												She speaks with confidence; for, 
												being aged, and Nebuchadnezzar 
												having been dead not above 
												twenty-four years, she no doubt 
												well remembered the 
												extraordinary events which had 
												occurred in the latter part of 
												his life, and the supernatural 
												inspiration, and extraordinary 
												wisdom, which Daniel had 
												manifested on these occasions. 
												And she speaks as if she knew 
												where to find Daniel, though 
												Belshazzar probably did not.
 
 Verses 13-17
 Daniel 5:13-17. Then was Daniel 
												brought in before the king — 
												Daniel was now near ninety years 
												of age; so that his years and 
												honours, and former preferments, 
												might have entitled him to a 
												free admission into the king’s 
												presence; yet he was willing to 
												be introduced, as a stranger, by 
												the king’s servants. The king 
												said unto Daniel, Art thou that 
												Daniel — This question of the 
												king shows, that if he was at 
												all acquainted with Daniel, it 
												was very imperfectly; and that 
												in however high esteem that 
												extraordinary man had been held 
												in the days of Nebuchadnezzar, 
												and whatever offices of trust 
												and honour he had then filled, 
												he was now sunk into neglect, 
												Belshazzar being a weak and 
												vicious prince, according to the 
												character historians give of 
												him, and one who interested 
												himself very little in public 
												affairs, leaving the care of 
												them to his mother, and himself 
												minding nothing but his 
												pleasures. Now if thou canst 
												read the writing, &c., thou 
												shalt be clothed with scarlet — 
												He promises him the same rewards 
												if he could read and interpret 
												the writing as he had promised 
												his wise men on condition of 
												their doing it. Then Daniel 
												answered, Let thy gifts be to 
												thyself — As Daniel was now in 
												years, and Belshazzar young, he 
												therefore seems to take a 
												greater liberty, and to deal 
												more plainly with him, than he 
												had done upon the like occasions 
												with Nebuchadnezzar. He 
												addresses him as a very aged and 
												eminent person would address one 
												much younger than himself. When 
												he was consulted by 
												Nebuchadnezzar, and was allowed 
												the liberty of conversing with 
												him and giving him counsel, he 
												foresaw that the Chaldean 
												monarchy would continue for some 
												time, and that his being 
												preferred would give him an 
												opportunity of being useful to 
												his brethren; but he now knew 
												that that empire was about to 
												terminate, and Belshazzar’s 
												reign and life to come to a 
												period. Nebuchadnezzar, though 
												an idolater and a tyrant, yet 
												had great abilities, attended to 
												the affairs of his kingdom, and 
												was, in many respects, very 
												eminent as a monarch; but 
												Belshazzar was every way base, 
												odious, and contemptible. “Above 
												all, he had that night been 
												insulting the God of heaven in 
												the most daring manner, by 
												profaning the sacred vessels in 
												his revels, and extolling his 
												own idols. Daniel therefore knew 
												that his doom was irreversible, 
												and immediately to be put in 
												execution; and he did not speak 
												to him as a subject to his 
												prince, but as the delegate of 
												heaven he denounced sentence 
												against him as a condemned 
												criminal.” — Scott. Some 
												commentators have been puzzled 
												to account for Daniel’s 
												rejecting the king’s presents 
												here, and afterward accepting 
												them, as is mentioned Daniel 
												5:29; but his intention in what 
												he now says is only modestly to 
												decline the honours, and to 
												intimate that they could have no 
												influence on his mind, which 
												yet, at the king’s command, 
												afterward he could not but 
												accept. In other words, he means 
												to say, that he was ready to do 
												whatever the king enjoined, 
												without any respect to a 
												recompense: see Calmet. Yet will 
												I read the writing unto the king 
												— Daniel seems to have made this 
												declaration in consequence of a 
												persuasion wherewith he was 
												inspired of God, before he even 
												cast his eye upon the writing.
 
 Verse 18-19
 Daniel 5:18-19. O thou king — 
												Before Daniel reads the writing, 
												he judges it proper to remind 
												the king of God’s dealings with 
												Nebuchadnezzar, his progenitor, 
												and of those remarkable 
												instances of divine providence, 
												both in mercy and in judgment, 
												which were intended to be an 
												instructive lesson, as to all 
												princes that should hear of 
												them, so especially to all the 
												descendants of that great 
												monarch. He also, with great 
												fidelity and seriousness, sets 
												Belshazzar’s profane conduct 
												before him, that he might be 
												humbled and brought to 
												repentance. The most high God 
												gave Nebuchadnezzar thy father a 
												kingdom, &c. — His great power, 
												and vast extent of empire, were 
												the gifts of God to him, and 
												were not acquired by his own 
												policy or bravery, or those of 
												his generals and armies. Grotius 
												explains the different terms of 
												this verse thus: A kingdom, that 
												is, a widely-extended empire; 
												majesty, or magnificence among 
												his subjects; glory from his 
												victories; and honour from the 
												enlargement of the city, the 
												building of its walls, temple, 
												and palace. And for the majesty 
												that he gave him — For the vast 
												power, riches, and victorious 
												hand which he gave him; all 
												people, nations, &c., trembled 
												and feared before him, &c. — We 
												have here a strong picture of 
												the absolute and independent 
												power of these princes; they 
												regarded their subjects only as 
												slaves. Xerxes, having assembled 
												the great men of his kingdom, 
												when he had determined to 
												undertake the war against 
												Greece, said to them, “I have 
												assembled you that I might not 
												seem to act solely by my own 
												counsel; but remember that I 
												expect obedience, not advice 
												from you.” — Calmet.
 
 Verses 20-23
 Daniel 5:20-23. But when his 
												heart was lifted up — The 
												expressions here have a peculiar 
												force, in marking the haughty 
												insolence of King 
												Nebuchadnezzar. His authority, 
												as mentioned in the last verse, 
												had been raised to the highest 
												pitch; and on that account we 
												find here that his mind was 
												elated, and his spirit grown 
												obdurate in pride and arrogance; 
												instead of his ascribing all his 
												honours and advantages to the 
												real giver of them, the true 
												God, whom he had been brought to 
												acknowledge, and to the neglect 
												of whom, and of improving by his 
												grandfather’s sufferings, the 
												prophet justly and judiciously 
												attributes Belshazzar’s fate. 
												Thou his son, &c., hast not 
												humbled thy heart — Thou hast 
												not been made sensible of thy 
												own utter weakness, and thy 
												absolute dependance on Jehovah, 
												the true God, who thus abased 
												thy father in the midst of his 
												power and pride. But hast lifted 
												up thyself against the Lord of 
												heaven — As if thou hadst been 
												equal, or even superior to him 
												in wisdom and power. He 
												instances in four particulars: 
												1st, They have brought the 
												vessels of his house before thee 
												— To profane them in your 
												idolatrous feasts: 2d, Thou hast 
												praised the gods of silver and 
												gold, &c., which see not, &c. 
												3d, Thou hast not glorified the 
												true God, in whose hands thy 
												breath is, and all thy ways: 
												yea, 4th, Thou hast highly 
												dishonoured, affronted, and 
												reproached him.
 
 Verses 24-28
 Daniel 5:24-28. Then was part of 
												the hand sent from him — The 
												LXX. read, δια τουτο εκ προσωπου 
												αυτου απεσταλη αστραγαλος 
												χειρος, και την γραφην ταυτην 
												ενεταξε. “On this account hath 
												the joint, or part of a hand, 
												been sent from his presence, and 
												hath formed this writing.” The 
												reading in the Vulgate is to the 
												same purpose. Houbigant 
												translates the verse, “Therefore 
												is the hand sent from him, the 
												fingers whereof have formed this 
												writing.” And this is the 
												writing, MENE, &c. — In the 
												Arabic the three words are 
												considered as participles, 
												Mensuratum, Appensum, Divisum, 
												“Measured, Weighed, Divided.” 
												The words are fully explained by 
												Daniel in the following verses. 
												MENE God hath numbered thy 
												kingdom, &c. — God hath numbered 
												the days of thy reign, and put 
												an end to it. The word MENE is 
												doubled in the foregoing verse, 
												to show that the thing was 
												certain, and established by God, 
												as Joseph tells Pharaoh in a 
												like case, Genesis 41:32. TEKEL 
												Thou art weighed in the 
												balances, &c. — The reason that 
												an end is put to thy reign so 
												soon is, that thou art found 
												light in the scales of divine 
												equity. Wicked men are often 
												compared to silver adulterated, 
												and alloyed with baser metals, 
												which makes it too light when 
												weighed in the balances: such 
												was Belshazzar when weighed in 
												the scales of divine justice. 
												The same comparison is used by 
												Homer, when Hector’s fatal day 
												approaches, Iliad, xxii, and by 
												Virgil, at the death of Turnus, 
												Æn. 12. And so Milton, in the 
												war of the angels,
 
 “ — — — — — Long time in even 
												scale The battle hung.”
 
 Par. Lost, b. 6. 50:245.
 
 PERES Thy kingdom is divided — 
												Or broken from thee. The word 
												PERES signifies broken; and it 
												also signifies the nation of the 
												Persians, for they were called 
												Paros, by the Chaldeans: so that 
												this word not only signified 
												that the Babylonish kingdom 
												should be broken, but also by 
												whom it should be broken. 
												UPHARSIN, the other word in the 
												writing, is a participle of the 
												same verb from whence PERES is 
												derived, and literally 
												signifies, And they divide it. 
												Concerning Belshazzar’s 
												destruction, see notes on Isaiah 
												14.
 
 Verse 29
 Daniel 5:29. Then commanded 
												Belshazzar, and they clothed 
												Daniel — The king was so struck 
												with his superior wisdom, and 
												conceived himself so bound by 
												the promise he had made before 
												his nobles, that he ordered the 
												prophet to be rewarded 
												immediately with the honours he 
												had promised him, which he was 
												forced to accept, and which 
												probably prepared him for a more 
												easy reception by the succeeding 
												monarch. “Nor let it be matter 
												of wonder that Daniel is said to 
												be clothed as it were 
												immediately, for these habits 
												were always at hand for the 
												eastern monarchs to reward their 
												friends or favourites with; and 
												Mr. Harmer tells us, from Sir 
												John Chardin, that the kings of 
												Persia have great wardrobes, 
												where there are always many 
												hundreds of habits ready, 
												designed for presents, and 
												sorted. — Obs., vol. 2. p. 87. 
												It seems likewise that, on some 
												occasions, the great men of the 
												East were accustomed to carry 
												with them, on their journeys, a 
												variety of habits and vestments, 
												in order to distribute them as 
												presents to those whom they 
												wished to honour and reward. And 
												this will account for the 
												changes of garments which Naaman 
												the Syrian had with him, when he 
												returned from the Prophet 
												Elisha, some of which were given 
												to his perfidious servant, 2 
												Kings 5.” — Wintle.
 
 
 Verse 30-31
 Daniel 5:30-31. In that night 
												was Belshazzar the king of the 
												Chaldeans slain — He and all his 
												nobles were slain together, in 
												the midst of their feasting and 
												revelling, as Herodotus, lib. 
												1., and Xenophon, inform us. The 
												latter relates the story thus, 
												Cyropæd., lib. 7. — “That two 
												deserters, Gadatas and Gobryas, 
												having assisted some of the 
												Persian army to kill the guards, 
												and seize upon the palace, they 
												entered into the room where the 
												king was, whom they found 
												standing up in a posture of 
												defence; but they soon 
												despatched him, and those that 
												were with him.” It seems not 
												improbable, likewise, that they 
												burned the houses of the city, 
												or at least the advanced 
												buildings, in their progress, 
												and forced the citizens to quit 
												them in the greatest 
												consternation; for they came 
												upon them with such surprise, 
												that, according to Herodotus, 
												“they had passed through the 
												gates, which were left open in 
												this riotous night, and had 
												taken the extreme parts of the 
												city, before those who inhabited 
												the middle parts knew of the 
												capture,” lib. 1. p. 77. Thus 
												the prophecy of Jeremiah was 
												accomplished, that Babylon 
												should be taken at the time of a 
												public feast, while her princes 
												and great men, &c., should be 
												drunken, and should sleep a 
												perpetual sleep, and not awake: 
												see notes on Jeremiah 51:32; 
												Jeremiah 51:39; Jeremiah 51:57. 
												Respecting the method practised 
												by Cyrus to surprise the city, 
												by draining that part of the 
												Euphrates which ran through it, 
												together with many other curious 
												particulars relating to Babylon, 
												see notes on Isaiah 13. And 
												Darius the Median took the 
												kingdom — This Darius is said to 
												be one of the seed of the Medes, 
												Daniel 9:1, and is supposed, by 
												the most judicious chronologers, 
												to be the same with Cyaxares, 
												the son of Astyages; him Cyrus 
												made king of the Chaldeans, as 
												being his uncle by the mother’s 
												side, and his partner in 
												carrying on the war against the 
												Babylonians; and left him the 
												palace of the king of Babylon, 
												to live there whenever he 
												pleased, as Xenophon relates, 
												Cyropæd., lib. 8. As Darius 
												succeeded to the empire through 
												Cyrus’s permission, or 
												appointment, and was dependant 
												upon him for it, Ptolemy’s canon 
												supposes Cyrus to be the 
												immediate successor of 
												Nabonnedus, or Belshazzar, and 
												allots nine years to his reign; 
												whereas Xenophon reckons two of 
												these years to Darius, and seven 
												to Cyrus. The Chaldee phrase, 
												rendered here took the kingdom, 
												is translated, possessed the 
												kingdom, Daniel 7:18, and means 
												the same with succeeding in the 
												kingdom. — Lowth.
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