Digital Logos Edition
Stephen Nelson Haskell’s Story of Daniel the Prophet is written with the firm belief that “the Bible is the most interesting of all books.” Breaking out of the “heavy, somber style” that too often accompany analysis of God’s Word, Haskell’s volume is aimed at families and schools. This straightforward work reveals the interest the Bible holds for all people—young and old, scholar and lay person.
“There is then a blessing pronounced upon those who are living in 1843 (508 + 1335 == 1843), for the seal has been removed from the prophecies,* and they are understood.” (Page 301)
“The last three chapters of the book of Daniel are inseparable” (Page 176)
“as every group of heavenly bodies with its suns revolves around one spot in the heavens” (Page 292)
“And again,* ‘The words are closed up and sealed till the time of the end.’ But the time of the end has come. It began in 1798, and though ‘none of the wicked shall understand,’ yet ‘the wise shall understand.’” (Page 16)
“The time of the end, the period in which we now live, is a time when knowledge shall increase;* and as the worldly wise trust more and more to their own wisdom, the faithful followers of God will separate entirely from worldly education.” (Page 298)
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