Episode 101

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Published on:

17th Nov 2024

Weighed And Found Wanting | Daniel 5:1-31

The narrative in Daniel 5 portrays the end of the Babylonian Empire through the lens of a divine judgment. King Belshazzar, amidst a Persian siege, hosts a feast not out of despair but in a desperate, hopeful appeal to multiple gods, including the God of Israel, by using sacred vessels from Jerusalem's temple. This act of syncretism is seen as a counterfeit sacrament, challenging the true God amidst a spiritual battle where only He responds by inscribing a judgment on the wall: "Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upharsin," interpreted by Daniel to signify the end of Belshazzar's reign due to his failure to acknowledge God's sovereignty. The story concludes with Belshazzar's death and the rise of Darius the Mede, underscoring the lesson that divine rule over the world is exclusive, and those in power must submit to God alone or face judgment. The passage parallels contemporary issues of secularism and idolatry, urging a return to exclusive worship of Jesus Christ as the true sovereign.

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About the Podcast

Contra Mundum
Right Wing; Classically Protestant; Subversive of the Effeminate Regime
Weekly Dissident Christian Analysis

About your hosts

Andrew Isker

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Gab: @BonifaceOption
Twitter: @BonifaceOption
Writing: https://news.gab.com/tag/andrew-isker/

CJay Engel

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CJay has written for Chronicles Magazine and most recently contributed an essay to The Paleoconservative Anthology, edited by Paul Gottfried.
Twitter: @contramordor
Substack: cjayengel.substack.com