<h2><SPAN name="THE_STORY_OF_DANIEL_IN_THE_LIONS_DEN" id="THE_STORY_OF_DANIEL_IN_THE_LIONS_DEN"></SPAN>THE STORY OF DANIEL IN THE LIONS' DEN</h2>
<p>The lands which had been the Babylonian or Chaldean empire,
now became the empire of Persia; and over these Darius was the
king. King Darius gave to Daniel, who was now a very old man, a
high place in honor and in power. Among all the rulers over the
land, Daniel stood first, for the king saw that he was wise and
able to rule. This made the other princes and rulers very
jealous, and they tried to find something evil in Daniel, so
that they could speak to the king against him.</p>
<p>These men saw that three times every day Daniel went to his
room and opened the window that was toward the city of
Jerusalem, and looking toward Jerusalem, made his prayer to
God. Jerusalem was at that time in ruins, and the Temple was no
longer standing; but Daniel prayed three times each day with
his face toward the place where the house of God had once
stood, although it was many hundreds of miles away.</p>
<p>These nobles thought that in Daniel's prayers they could
find a chance to do him harm, and perhaps cause him to be put
to death. They came to King Darius, and said to him:</p>
<p>"<SPAN name="Page_163"
id="Page_163"></SPAN>All the rulers have agreed together to
have a law made that for thirty days no one shall ask
anything of any god or of any man, except from you, O king;
and that if any one shall pray to any god, or shall ask
anything from any man during the thirty days, except from
you, O king, he shall be thrown into the den where the lions
are kept. Now, O king, make the law, and sign the writing,
so that it cannot be changed, for no law among the Medes and
the Persians can be altered."</p>
<p>The king was not a wise man; and being foolish and vain, he
was pleased with this law which would set him even above the
gods. So without asking Daniel's advice, he signed the writing;
and the law was made, and the word was sent out through the
kingdom, that for thirty days no one should pray to any
god.</p>
<p>Daniel knew that the law had been made, but every day he
went to his room three times, and opened the window that looked
toward Jerusalem, and offered his prayers to the Lord, just as
he had prayed in other times. These rulers were watching near
by, and they saw Daniel kneeling in prayer to God. Then they
came to the king, and said:</p>
<p>"O King Darius, have you not made a law, that if any one in
thirty days offers a prayer, he shall be thrown into the den of
lions?"</p>
<p>"<SPAN name="Page_164"
id="Page_164"></SPAN>It is true," said the king. "The law has
been made, and it must stand."</p>
<p>They said to the king: "There is one man who does not obey
the law which you have made. It is that Daniel, one of the
captive Jews. Every day Daniel prays to his God three times,
just as he did before you signed the writing of the law."</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN name="THROWN_INTO_THE_DEN_OF_LIONS"
id="THROWN_INTO_THE_DEN_OF_LIONS"><ANTIMG src="./images/figure43_th.jpg"
title="Thrown into the den of lions"
alt="Thrown into the den of lions" /></SPAN><br/>
<i>Thrown into the den of lions</i>
</div>
<p>Then the king was very sorry for what he had done, for he
loved Daniel, and knew that no one could take his place in the
kingdom. All day, until the sun went down, he tried in vain to
find some way to save Daniel's life; but when evening came,
these men again told him of the law that he had made, and said
to him that it must be kept. Very unwillingly the king sent for
Daniel, and gave an order that he should be thrown into the den
of lions. He said to Daniel:<SPAN name="Page_165"
id="Page_165"></SPAN> "Perhaps your God, whom you serve so
faithfully, will save you from the lions."</p>
<p>They led Daniel to the mouth of the pit where the lions were
kept, and they threw him in; and over the mouth they placed a
stone; and the king sealed it with his own seal, and with the
seals of his nobles; so that no one might take away the stone
and let Daniel out of the den.</p>
<p>Then the king went again to his palace; but that night he
was so sad that he could not eat, nor did he listen to music as
he was used to listen. He could not sleep, for all through the
night he was thinking of Daniel. Very early in the morning he
rose up from his bed and went in haste to the den of lions. He
broke the seal and took away the stone, and in a voice full of
sorrow he called out, scarcely hoping to have an answer:</p>
<p>"O Daniel, servant of the living God, has your God been able
to save you from the lions?"</p>
<p>And out of the darkness in the den came the voice of Daniel,
saying:</p>
<p>"O king, may you live forever! My God has sent his angel and
has shut the mouths of the lions. They have not hurt me,
because my God saw that I had done no wrong. And I have done no
wrong toward you, O king!"</p>
<div class="figcenter"
style="width:400px">
<SPAN href="./images/265.jpg"
name="DANIELS_ANSWER_TO_THE_KING"
id="DANIELS_ANSWER_TO_THE_KING"><ANTIMG width-obs="400"
src="./images/265_th.jpg"
title="DANIEL'S ANSWER TO THE KING"
alt="DANIEL'S ANSWER TO THE KING" /></SPAN>
<p><b>DANIEL'S ANSWER TO THE KING</b>—Then said
Daniel unto the King, O King, live forever. My God hath
sent his angel, and hath shut the lions' mouths, that they
have not hurt me.—(Daniel 6: 21-22.)</p>
</div>
<p>Then the king was glad. He gave to his servants orders to
take Daniel out of the den. Daniel <SPAN name="Page_166"
id="Page_166"></SPAN><SPAN name="Page_167"
id="Page_167"></SPAN>was brought out safe and without harm,
because he had trusted fully in the Lord God. Then by the
king's command, they brought those men who had spoken
against Daniel, and with them their wives and their
children, for the king was exceedingly angry with them. They
were all thrown into the den, and the hungry lions leaped
upon them, and tore them in pieces, so soon as they fell
upon the floor of the den.</p>
<p>After this king Darius wrote to all the lands and the
peoples in the many kingdoms under his rule:</p>
<p>"May peace be given to you all abundantly! I make a law that
everywhere among my kingdoms men fear and worship the Lord God
of Daniel; for he is the living God, above all other gods, who
only can save men."</p>
<p>And Daniel stood beside king Darius until the end of his
reign, and afterward while Cyrus the Persian was king over all
the lands.</p>
<p><br/>
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id="Page_168"></SPAN></p>
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