13. above . . . God--In
Da 8:10,
"stars" express earthly potentates. "The stars" are often also
used to express heavenly principalities
(Job 38:7).
mount of the congregation--the place of solemn meeting between
God and His people in the temple at Jerusalem. In
Da 11:37,
and 2Th 2:4,
this is attributed to Antichrist.
sides of the north--namely, the sides of Mount Moriah on which the
temple was built; north of Mount Zion
(Ps 48:2).
However, the parallelism supports the notion that the Babylonian king
expresses himself according to his own, and not Jewish opinions (so in
Isa 10:10)
thus "mount of the congregation" will mean the northern mountain
(perhaps in Armenia) fabled by the Babylonians to be the common
meeting-place of their gods. "Both sides" imply the angle in
which the sides meet; and so the expression comes to mean "the
extreme parts of the north." So the Hindus place the Meru, the
dwelling-place of their gods, in the north, in the Himalayan mountains.
So the Greeks, in the northern Olympus. The Persian followers of
Zoroaster put the Ai-bordsch in the Caucasus north of them. The
allusion to the stars harmonizes with this; namely, that those near the
North Pole, the region of the aurora borealis (compare see on
Job 23:9;
Job 37:22)
[MAURER, Septuagint, Syriac].
JFB.
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