Daniel 8
Daniel 8 narrates a vision of a ram and goat—representing the Median-Persian and Greek empires—wherein the goat (Greece) destroys the ram and grows great until its horn is broken and replaced by four horns from which emerges a small horn that grows toward heaven and casts down stars. The vision cryptically references "2,300 evenings and mornings" before the sanctuary is restored, a timeframe that interpreters have connected to Antiochus IV's desecration of the Jerusalem temple and the subsequent Maccabean restoration. The theology here becomes explicitly historical: the visions are not merely cosmic but engaged with recognizable political succession (Persian to Greek dominion) and the specific trials of the Jewish community under Seleucid oppression. The angel Gabriel's interpretation emphasizes that the visions point to "the end of the age," suggesting that present persecution, however severe, constitutes a penultimate phase before divine intervention restores the sanctuary and vindicates God's people. The imagery of the horn "cast down" and replaced, of heaven being challenged and cosmic order restored, reflects the dualistic theology characterizing the latter portions of Daniel wherein earthly history is understood as the visible manifestation of invisible heavenly conflict. The vision's emphasis on the sanctuary's restoration—repeated several times—locates covenant hope in the recovery of Israel's capacity to worship, making temple and cult central to apocalyptic restoration. Daniel 8 thus connects visionary theology to concrete historical circumstances, teaching persecuted communities that their specific trials are known to God and incorporated into the predetermined sequence of history moving toward ultimate restoration.