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Ní leabhar a spreag Dia é seo agus ní cuid de chanóin na Críostaíochta ná de Tanach na nGiúdach é. Taispeántar é chun críocha stairiúla agus staidéir amháin. Féach ar an míniú iomlán

Bel and the Snake 1_1 - Contemporary English Version Interconfessional Edition


Daniel Defeats the Priests of Bel

1 When King Astyages was buried in the tomb with his ancestors, Cyrus the Persian took his place as king.

2 Daniel was a friend and advisor of King Cyrus, and the king honored him more than anyone else.

3 Every day, the Babylonians took food to the idol of their god Bel. They brought 272 kilograms of the best wheat flour, 190 liters of wine, and the meat from 40 sheep.

4 King Cyrus believed that Bel was a powerful god, and he worshiped the idol every day, but Daniel worshiped only his own God. One day, Cyrus asked Daniel, “Why don't you worship Bel?”

5 Daniel answered, “I refuse to worship idols—they are made by humans. Instead, I worship the living God, because he created heaven and earth, and he rules everyone who lives.”

6 “But, Daniel,” the king replied, “isn't Bel a living god? Haven't you seen how much he eats and drinks each day?”

7 Daniel laughed and said, “Don't be fooled, Your Majesty. That idol is merely clay on the inside and bronze on the outside! It never ate or drank anything.”

8 This made the king angry. So he called in his priests and told them, “Prove to me that Bel is eating all this food! If you can't, then you will die.

9 But if you can prove that Bel really is eating the food, then Daniel will die, because he has insulted the god Bel.” Daniel said, “Your Majesty, that sounds fair enough to me.”

10 Now there were 70 priests of Bel, and they and their wives had lots of children. The king went with Daniel into the temple of Bel,

11 and the priests said, “Your Majesty, we will go outside now. Please set out the food and the wine yourself, then shut the door. Drip some hot wax along the edge of the door and press your ring into the wax to leave your special mark. This will show that only you are allowed to open the door.

12 When you come back in the morning, if you find that Bel hasn't eaten everything, then you can put us to death. But if the food is gone, this will prove Daniel has been lying, and you can put him to death.”

13 The priests were not worried at all. They had a secret trap door under the table, and that was how they sneaked into the temple every night to eat the food.

14 The priests left, and the king arranged Bel's food on the table. Then Daniel told his servants to scatter ashes over the temple floor. The king was the only other person who saw them do this. They shut the door as they went outside, and the king placed his special mark on some hot wax along the edge of the door so that they could tell if the door had been opened. Then they all left.

15 Later that night, the priests and their wives and children went to the temple as they always did, and they ate and drank everything.

16 Early the next morning, the king brought Daniel to the temple

17 and asked him, “Daniel, has the wax been broken? Has the door been opened?” “No, Your Majesty,” Daniel answered.

18 As soon as the door was opened, the king looked at the empty table and shouted, “Bel, you are a great god, and you always tell the truth!”

19 Daniel just laughed. He kept the king from entering the temple and said, “Look at the floor—I wonder who left all those footprints?”

20 The king said, “I can see the footprints of men, women, and children!”

21 He was furious and told his guards to arrest the priests along with their wives and children. Then the priests showed him the secret door they used when they sneaked into the temple to eat the food that was on Bel's table.

22 The king told his guards to kill the priests and their families. Then he gave the temple and the idol of Bel to Daniel, who had them destroyed.


Daniel Kills the Dragon

23 The Babylonians also worshiped a huge dragon as a god,

24 and the king of Babylonia said to Daniel, “You can't say this god isn't alive! So you ought to worship it.”

25 Daniel answered, “I worship the Lord, because he is the living God.

26 Your Majesty, if you will give me permission, I will kill this dragon, without striking it with a sword or a club.” “I give you permission to try,” the king replied.

27 Daniel put some tar and animal fat and hair in a pot and boiled them together. Then he shaped the mixture into cakes that looked something like loaves of barley bread and fed them to the dragon. It swelled up and burst open, and Daniel said, “Take a look at what you Babylonians worship.”

28 But when the Babylonians heard what had happened, they were so upset with the king that they began plotting against him. “Has the king become a Jew?” they asked each other. “First he destroyed our idol Bel and killed its priests. And now he has killed our dragon-god.”

29 The Babylonians went to the king and said, “Hand Daniel over to us. If you don't, we will kill you and everyone in your family!”

30 The king saw that he really had no choice, and so he was forced to let them have Daniel.

31-32 The Babylonians kept seven lions in a large pit and fed them two people and two sheep each day. Daniel was thrown into this pit, and for the next six days the lions were given no other food. The Babylonians wanted to make sure the lions would eat Daniel.

33 Meanwhile, far away in Judea, the prophet Habakkuk had made a pot of stew and put some pieces of bread into a bowl. He was about to take it to the workers who were harvesting wheat in the fields,

34 when an angel told him, “Take this meal to the lion pit in Babylon, and give it to Daniel.”

35 Habakkuk replied, “But, sir, I've never been to Babylon, and I don't know where the lion pit is.”

36 The angel lifted up Habakkuk by his hair and carried him to Babylon as fast as the wind. He set Habakkuk down at the edge of the lion pit,

37 and Habakkuk shouted, “Daniel, take this food God has sent you.”

38 Daniel prayed, “Thank you, God, for remembering me. You always take care of those who love you.”

39 Daniel got up and ate the food, while God's angel quickly returned Habakkuk to his home.

40 Seven days later, the king came to the lion pit to mourn for Daniel. But when he looked into the pit, he saw Daniel sitting there, alive.

41 Then the king shouted out this prayer: “You, the Lord God of Daniel, are powerful! You alone are the true God!”

42 The king ordered Daniel to be pulled up out of the pit, then he arrested the men who had tried to have Daniel killed. The king had them thrown into the pit, and he watched the lions gobble them up.

Contemporary English Version, Second Edition (CEV®)

© 2006 American Bible Society. All rights reserved.

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