
Text -- Daniel 4:3 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Dan 4:3
Wesley: Dan 4:3 - -- Nothing less than a real change of heart could cause such a confession as this! Nebuchadnezzar was now old, had reigned above forty years, and seen as...
Nothing less than a real change of heart could cause such a confession as this! Nebuchadnezzar was now old, had reigned above forty years, and seen as much of the world as most men ever did. And yet never 'till now, did he admire surprizing events, as the signs and wonders of the high God!
Clarke -> Dan 4:3
Clarke: Dan 4:3 - -- How great are his signs! - There are no preternatural signs like his! His wonders - miraculous interferences, are mighty - they surpass all human po...
How great are his signs! - There are no preternatural signs like his! His wonders - miraculous interferences, are mighty - they surpass all human power. He is the Sovereign of all kings, and his dominion is everlasting; and every generation is a proof of his all-governing influence. These are very fine sentiments, and show how deeply his mind was impressed with the majesty of God.
Calvin -> Dan 4:3
Calvin: Dan 4:3 - -- In fine, this preface might seem a proof of an important conversion; but we shall directly see how far Nebuchadnezzar was from being entirely purged ...
In fine, this preface might seem a proof of an important conversion; but we shall directly see how far Nebuchadnezzar was from being entirely purged of his errors. It ought, indeed, to affect us exceedingly to behold the king wrapt up in so many errors, and yet seized with admiration of the Divine virtue, since he cannot express his thoughts, but exclaims, — His signs how mighty! his wonders how powerful! He added, His kingdom is a perpetual kingdom, and his dominion is from age to age Here he confesses God’s power not to be dependent upon man’s will, since he had just before said, the statue which he had erected was to be worshipped, because he had chosen so to decree it. Now, however, he remits much of this pride by confessing God’s kingdom to be a perpetual one. The narrative now follows. Thus far we have merely a preface, because the edict was diffused among his subjects to render them attentive to the most important subjects.
Defender -> Dan 4:3
Defender: Dan 4:3 - -- Finally, through the humiliating experience of which he testifies in this chapter, the arrogant king acknowledged God as "the high God" (Dan 4:2), who...
TSK -> Dan 4:3
TSK: Dan 4:3 - -- great : Dan 6:27; Deu 4:34; Psa 71:19, Psa 71:20, Psa 72:18, Psa 77:19, Psa 86:10, Psa 92:5, Psa 104:24, Psa 105:27; Isa 25:1, Isa 28:29; Rom 11:33; H...
great : Dan 6:27; Deu 4:34; Psa 71:19, Psa 71:20, Psa 72:18, Psa 77:19, Psa 86:10, Psa 92:5, Psa 104:24, Psa 105:27; Isa 25:1, Isa 28:29; Rom 11:33; Heb 2:4
his kingdom : Dan 4:17, Dan 4:34, Dan 4:35, Dan 2:44, Dan 6:26, Dan 7:14, Dan 7:27; Psa 66:7, Psa 145:13; Isa 9:7; Jer 10:10; Luk 1:32, Luk 1:33; 1Ti 1:17; Heb 1:8; Rev 11:15

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Dan 4:3
Barnes: Dan 4:3 - -- How great are his signs! - How great and wonderful are the things by which he makes himself known in this manner! The allusion is doubtless to ...
How great are his signs! - How great and wonderful are the things by which he makes himself known in this manner! The allusion is doubtless to what had occurred to himself - the event by which a monarch of such state and power had been reduced to a condition so humble. With propriety he would regard this as a signal instance of the Divine interposition, and as adapted to give him an exalted view of the supremacy of the true God.
And how mighty are his wonders! - The wonderful events which he does; the things fitted to produce admiration and astonishment. Compare Psa 72:18; Psa 86:10; Isa 25:1.
His kingdom is an everlasting kingdom - Nebuchadnezzar was doubtless led to this reflection by what had occurred to him. He, the most mighty monarch then on earth, had seen that his throne had no stability; he had seen that God had power at his will to bring him down from his lofty seat, and to transfer his authority to other hands; and he was naturally led to reflect that the throne of God was the only one that was stable and permanent. He could not but be convinced that God reigned over all, and that his kingdom was not subject to the vicissitudes which occur in the kingdoms of this world. There have been few occurrences on the earth better adapted to teach this lesson than this.
And his dominion is from generation to generation - That is, it is perpetual. It is not liable to be arrested as that of man is, by death; it does not pass over from one family to another as an earthly scepter often does. The same scepter; the same system of laws; the same providential arrangements; the same methods of reward and punishment, have always existed under his government, and will continue to do so to the end of time. There is, perhaps, no more sublime view that can be taken of the government of God than this. All earthly princes die; all authority lodged in the hands of an earthly monarch is soon withdrawn. No one is so mighty that he can prolong his own reign; and no one can make his own authority extend to the next generation. Earthly governments, therefore, however mighty, are of short duration; and history is made up of the records of a great number of such administrations, many of them exceedingly brief, and of very various character. The scepter falls from the hand of the monarch, never to be resumed by him again; another grasps it to retain it also but a little time, and then he passes away. But the dominion of God is in all generations the same. This generation is under the government of the same Sovereign who reigned when Semiramis or Numa lived; and though the scepter has long since fallen from the hands of Alexander and the Caesars, yet the same God who ruled in their age is still on the throne.
Poole -> Dan 4:3
Poole: Dan 4:3 - -- How great are his signs! and how mighty are his wonders! these two words signify in their roots, admiration and astonishment; it seems these works of...
How great are his signs! and how mighty are his wonders! these two words signify in their roots, admiration and astonishment; it seems these works of God had that impression upon this king; a great cause whereof was his ignorance of the true God, together with his own excessive pride and epicurism. God by this following dream, and Daniel’ s instruction, had told him his fate, and that no kingdom but God’ s kingdom was everlasting, which he had told him once before this, Dan 2:44 .
This confession of the king was upon conviction, and it looks somewhat like repentance, but the sequel proves him to be no changeling, though God made prodigious mutations in his kingdom, and in the form of his person, as ye see, Dan 4:31,32 of this chapter; he was metamorphosed to a monstrous beast, and then to a man again, and yet no convert.
Gill -> Dan 4:3
Gill: Dan 4:3 - -- How great are his signs! and how mighty are his wonders!.... They are great, very great, exceeding great; so great that it cannot be said, nor even co...
How great are his signs! and how mighty are his wonders!.... They are great, very great, exceeding great; so great that it cannot be said, nor even conceived how great they are, what a display of wisdom, power, and goodness is in them; they are wonderful beyond expression and conception; and so strong and mighty as not to be resisted and made void by all the powers of nature, earth, or hell; and if this may be said of his works of providence, and his miracles of that, how much more of his works and miracles of grace!
his kingdom is an everlasting kingdom; Nebuchadnezzar's reign, though a long one, had an end, and so have all others; but the kingdom of God is for ever; the kingdom of providence, and also of grace; the kingdom of his Son, the Messiah, as in Dan 2:44 from whence Nebuchadnezzar had learnt this:
and his dominion is from generation to generation; or, "with generation and generation" a; it goes along, and continues with all generations, and will do so to the end of time.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Dan 4:1-37
TSK Synopsis: Dan 4:1-37 - --1 Nebuchadnezzar confesses God's kingdom,4 makes relation of his dreams, which the magicians could not interpret.8 Daniel hears the dream.19 He interp...
MHCC -> Dan 4:1-18
MHCC: Dan 4:1-18 - --The beginning and end of this chapter lead us to hope, that Nebuchadnezzar was a monument of the power of Divine grace, and of the riches of Divine me...
Matthew Henry -> Dan 4:1-3
Matthew Henry: Dan 4:1-3 - -- Here is, I. Something of form, which was usual in writs, proclamations, or circular letters, issued by the king, Dan 4:1. The royal style which Nebu...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Dan 4:1-3
Keil-Delitzsch: Dan 4:1-3 - --
(3:31-33)
These verses form the introduction
(Note: The connection of these verses with the third chapter in the Hebrew, Greek, and Latin Bibles is...
Constable: Dan 2:1--7:28 - --II. The Times of the Gentiles: God's program for the world chs. 2--7
Daniel wrote 2:4b-7:28 in the Aramaic langu...

Constable: Dan 4:1-37 - --C. Nebuchadnezzar's pride and humbling ch. 4
We have seen that in the first three chapters of Daniel Kin...
