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Daniel 5

Weighed and Found Wanting: The Fall of Proud Babylon

God weighs proud rulers and idolatrous kingdoms, and those who refuse to humble themselves before the Lord of heaven will be found wanting.

Chapter Summary

God weighs proud rulers and idolatrous kingdoms, and those who refuse to humble themselves before the Lord of heaven will be found wanting.

Overview

Daniel 5 argues that God holds kings accountable for known truth, that pride against the Lord of heaven brings judgment, that idolatry is exposed as lifeless folly, and that Babylon's fall occurs by divine verdict rather than historical accident.

Context
Author

Danielic court narrative tradition presenting Babylon's final judgment through Daniel's faithful witness.

Audience

God's covenant people in exile and later readers who must learn that the Lord judges proud kingdoms and holds rulers accountable for revealed truth.

Setting

The Babylonian palace during Belshazzar's feast on the night Babylon falls to Medo-Persian power.

The Biblical World

Chapter At A Glance

Chapter Movement

Belshazzar profanes the temple vessels in idolatrous revelry, the handwriting terrifies the king, Babylon's wisdom fails, Daniel indicts the king for pride despite knowledge, interprets the divine sentence, and Babylon falls that very night.

Covenant Significance

Daniel 5 returns to the temple vessels introduced in Daniel 1:2. Their presence at Belshazzar's feast reminds the reader that Babylon had once carried off holy articles from Jerusalem, but Babylon did not thereby defeat the Lord. When Belshazzar profanes those vessels and praises idols, the Lord of heaven judges Him and brings Babylon's rule to an end. The chapter thus vindicates God's holiness, exposes Babylon's sacrilege, and advances the covenant story from Babylonian domination toward Medo-Persian rule, under which return from exile will become historically connected.

Gospel Clarity

Daniel 5 does not directly proclaim the gospel, but it exposes why the gospel is necessary. Belshazzar is weighed and found wanting, and this verdict stands over every proud sinner apart from grace. The chapter shows that human life is held in God's hand, that idolatry is folly, that known truth rejected brings judgment, and that no earthly status can protect from God's verdict.

The gospel resolution is found in Christ, the faithful King who was not found wanting, who bore judgment for sinners, and who grants righteousness, forgiveness, and life to those who humble themselves before God.

Focus Points

  • Accountability for Known Truth
  • The Lord of Heaven
  • Sacrilege and Profanation
  • Idolatry Exposed
  • Divine Judgment
  • Sovereignty over Kingdoms
  • Faithful Witness before Power
  • Doctrine of God: Sovereignty
  • Doctrine of Judgment
  • Doctrine of Revelation
  • Doctrine of Human Accountability
  • Doctrine of Idolatry
  • Doctrine of Holiness
  • Doctrine of Providence
  • Doctrine of Sin

Book Arc