During these times the emperor Nebuchadnessar gave orders to erect in his likeness -- an huge statue, to which it was decreed to accord the honors befitting a god. For their refusal to do this, the three holy lads -- Ananias, Azarias and Misael -- were thrust into a burning fiery furnace. The flames shot out over the furnace 49 cubits, felling the Chaldeans standing about, but the holy lads walked amidst the flames, offering up prayer and psalmody to the Lord (Dan 3:26-90). The Angel of the Lord in appearing made cool the flames, and the lads remained unharmed. The emperor, upon seeing this, commanded them to come out, and was converted to the True God. Under the following emperor Balthasar, Saint Daniel interpreted a mysterious inscription ("Mene, Takel, Phares"), which had appeared on the wall of the palace during the time of a banquet (Dan 5:1-31), which foretold the downfall of the Babylonian realm. Under the Persian emperor Darius, Saint Daniel was slandered by his enemies, and was thrown into a den with hungry lions, but they did not touch him, and he remained unharmed. The emperor Darius then in rejoicing over Daniel gave orders throughout all his realm to worship the God of Daniel, "since that He is the Living and Ever-Existing God, and His Kingdom is unbounded, and His sovereignty is without end" (Dan 6:1-29). The holy Prophet Daniel sorrowed deeply for his people, who then were undergoing righteous chastisement for a multitude of sins and offenses, for transgressing the laws of God, resulting in the grievous Babylonian Captivity and the destruction of Jerusalem: "My God, incline Thine ear and hearken, open Thine eyes and look upon our desolation and upon the city, in which is spoken Thine Name; wherefore do we make our supplication before Thee, trusting in hope not upon our own righteousness, but upon Thy great mercy" (Dan 9:18). By his righteous life and prayer for the redeeming of the iniquity of his people, there was revealed to the holy prophet the destiny of the nation of Israel and the fate of all the world. During
the interpretation of the dream of the emperor Nebuchadnessar,
the Prophet Daniel declared about the kingdoms replacing one another
and about the great final kingdom -- the Kingdom of our Lord Jesus
Christ (Dan 2:44). The prophetic vision about the seventy of weeks
(Dan 9:24-27) tells the world about the signs of the First and
the Second Comings of the Lord Jesus Christ and is connected with
those events (Dan 12:1-12). Saint Daniel interceded for his people
before the successor to Darius, the emperor Cyrus, who esteemed
him highly, and who decreed freedom for the Israelite people.
Daniel himself and his fellows Ananias, Azarias and Misael, all
survived into old age, but died in captivity. According to the
testimony of Sainted Cyril of Alexandria (commemorated 9
June), Saints Ananias, Azarias and Misael were beheaded on
orders of the Persian emperor Chambyses.
The Monk Daniel the Confessor, in the schema Stephen,
was a Spanish dignitary, and ruler of the island of Niverta. Disdaining
worldly glory, he accepted monasticism at Rome and set out to
the holy places at Constantinople and Jerusalem, where he became
a schema-monk. For his refusal to accept Islam he perished as
a martyr under the Saracens in the X Century. |