by Ezekiel is not the righteous and wise servant of Jehovah who authored the
book of Daniel and who is compared to Noah and Job as comparable righteous
worshippers of Jehovah, all three of whom are mentioned in the Hebrew Bible,
but is an ungodly worshipper of the god Baal called Dan’el who is referenced in
a ancient legend, is surely an argument made out of desperation in order to
avoid the obvious implications of Ezekiel’s validation of the Jewish prophet
Daniel and his inspired Book. Archer
comments:
referred to in Ezekiel must have been the ancient hero named Dan’el, whose life
story is narrated in the Ugaritic legend of Aqhat (dating from about the
fifteenth century B.C.) . . . [has extremely] serious difficulties[.] . . [T]he
Lord’s declaration quoted in Ezekiel 14:14, 20 and 28:3 amounts to this: Even
though such godly leaders as Noah (at the dawn of history), and Job (in the
time of Moses or a little before), and Daniel (from the contemporary scene in
Ezekiel’s own generation) should all unite in interceding for apostate Judah,
God could not hear their prayers on behalf of that rebellious nation. . . . The
. . . difficulty with identifying the Daniel of Ezekiel 14 with the Dan’el of
the Ugaritic epic is found in the character and spiritual condition of Dan’el
himself. When the legend of Aqhat is studied in its full context, which relates the
story of Dan’el, the father of young Aqhat, it is found that he is
praised as being a faithful idol-worshiper, principally occupied with seven-day
periods of sacrifices to the various gods of the Canaanite pantheon, such as
Baal and El. His relationship to Baal was especially close, and he made bold to
petition him for a son, so that when Dan’el became so drunk at a wild party
that he could not walk by himself, his son might assist him back to his home
and bed, to sleep off his drunken stupor. Later on, after the promised son (Aqhat) is born, and is later killed at the behest of the spiteful goddess
Anath, Dan’el lifts up his voice in a terrible curse against the vulture
(Samal) which had taken his son’s life. He prevails on Baal to break the wings
of all the vultures that fly overhead, so that he can slit open their stomachs
and see whether any of them contains the remains of his dead son. At last he
discovers the grisly evidence in the belly of Samal, queen of the vultures. He
then kills her and puts a curse on Abelim, the city of the vultures. The next
seven years he spends in weeping and wailing for his dead son, and finally
contrives to have his own daughter (Paghat) assassinate the warrior Yatpan,
who was also involved in Aqhat’s murder seven years before.
portrayal of Dan’el it is quite apparent that he could never have been associated
with Noah and Job as a paragon of righteousness and purity of life. Nothing
could be more unlikely than that a strict and zealous monotheist like Ezekiel
would have regarded with appreciation a Baal-worshiper, a polytheistic pagan
given to violent rage and unremitting vengefulness, a drunken carouser who
needed assistance to find his way home to his own bed. Apart from a passing
mention of Dan’el’s faithful fulfillment of his duties as a judge at the city
gate—a requirement expected of all judges according to the Torah—there is no
suggestion in the Ugaritic poem that he is any outstanding hero of the faith,
eligible for inclusion with Noah and Job. It is therefore quite hopeless to
maintain this identification of Ezekiel’s “Daniel” with the Dan’el of Ugaritic
legend. (Ibid).
Dan’el’s worship of Baal, frequently connects Dan’el and drunkenness,
emphasizes Dan’el’s son Aquat disobeying the goddess Anath, who kills Aqhat for
his impiety, and speaks of a plot with Dan’el and his daughter to deceive and
commit murder. The Legend of Aqhat never even once uses the adjectives “righteous” or
“wise” for Dan’el. A simple reading of
Ezekiel 14:14, 20; 28:3 and the pagan Legend
makes any identification of the person spoken of by Ezekiel and the person
specified in the Legend an instance
of insanity. Only the extreme difficulty
for anti-supernaturalism contained in Ezekiel’s reference to the man Daniel,
author of the inspired book of Daniel, explains anyone’s affirming what is so
obviously false. The fact that such
extreme measures must be pursued in order to attempt to eliminate Ezekiel’s
testimony illustrates how powerful an evidence it is in favor of Daniel’s sixth
century authorship of the book bearing his name, and thus of the reality of
predictive prophecy.
I've never understood the purpose behind the atheist vs theist argument (actually I do, it's egotistical; as are most abstract debates). It's literally apples and oranges (apples and cinder blocks would be more accurate). Christianity is a belief system based on faith (Hebrews 11:1 defines faith). Atheism is a religion in nothingness, which is absurdity when you ponder it (atheists would probably make the argument that they are logical; logic is the God of the Godless). The Russian novelist Dostoevsky refers to atheism as a belief in zero. Belief should always be rooted in something, not nothing. That alone debunks atheism. Agnosticism is the more logical position.
The argument comes down to logic vs faith, which are polar opposites. Or more simply put, logic is the enemy of faith.
Dear HEM,
Thanks for the comment. The purpose for an obedient Christian in doing a debate is not ego, but love for the Triune God and obedience to 1 Peter 3:15; Mark 16:15; and other texts. I cannot see inside the minds of atheist debaters, so I will not make a blanket judgment on their motivations. I will remain agnostic on that during this comment.
Furthermore, Biblical faith is not the opposite of logic at all. The same God who commands all men to trust in Him also says "Come, let us reason together" (Isaiah 1:18). The Biblical worldview is coherent and logical in a way both atheism and agnosticism are not, and the indubitable evidence that the God of Scripture has done miracles, such as repeatedly and specifically predicting the future in a manner that is fantastically improbable apart from Divine acts in history, make both atheism and agnosticism unjustified systems of faith, in contrast to the logical and justifiable Christian faith. The idea that faith and logic are opposite is influence on you (direct or indirect, most probably the latter) from Emmanuel Kant, not the Biblical definition of faith.
I would encourage you to read the work on Daniel, watch both debates, and read the debate review at faithsaves.net.
Also, when I wrote this post the 2nd debate with Barker over prophecy and archaeology was not yet available, but between the time I wrote it and when this post went live the 2nd debate also went live, so both debates are available. I have updated the content of the post to reflect this reality.