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  1. In contrast to the earlier pattern of four distinct animals used to represent four realms or kingdoms, the vision of ch. 8 features only two animal figures symbolizing but two earthly empires. The setting of the vision shifts as well, presumably from Babylon (7:1) to Susa (8:2).

  2. I. Structure of Daniel 8. Prologue (v. 1) Vision (vs. 2–14) Ram, goat, and little horn (earthly dimension—vs. 3–9) Little horn (heavenly dimension—vs. 10–12) Audition (vs. 13–14), including a time element. Interpretation (vs. 15–26) Call to interpret the vision (vs. 15–16) Daniels reaction (vs. 17–18), including a short interpretation (v. 17b)

  3. Between the banks of the Ulai: Daniel was still in the midst of his vision when he saw himself on the shores of this Persian river. He heard someone instruct Gabriel to explain the vision to Daniel. b. The vision refers to the time of the end: Gabriel assured Daniel that this vision had to do with end times, with the latter time of the ...

  4. In chapter 8, Daniel has another vision about the final two beasts from the previous chapter. This time, they are symbolized by a ram (which we’re told is an image of the empire of the Medes and Persians) and a goat (an image of ancient Greece).

  5. In Daniel chapter 8, the account tells us that during the reign of BelShazzar the king of Babylon, DaniEl had a vision of a two-horned ram. It was then explained to him that this animal represented the empire of the Medes and Persians.

  6. www.takilmabiblechurch.org › wfweb › danielchaptereightDaniel – Chapter 8

    • Time of Daniel's vision Daniel 8:1 In the third year of King Belshazzar's reign, I, Daniel, had a vision, after the one that had already appeared to me. This vision was given to Daniel two years after the one we studied in the previous chapter twelve years before the banquet in Belshazzar’s palace where the handwriting on the wall appeared.

  7. The vision, the eighth chapter, begins, and that, the tenth through twelfth chapters, concludes, the account of the Antichrist of the third kingdom. Between the two visions the ninth chapter is inserted, as to Messiah and the covenant-people at the end of the half millennium (seventy weeks of years).