Book of Daniel Resources

Movie or TV Productions

The Book of Daniel

This is a TV movie production of the stories from the Book of Daniel, released in 2013.

Historical Documents

Letter from Birmingham Jail

Martin Luther King Jr's famous letter to clergymen compares the trials and sufferings that the people working for civil rights will need to undergo to those of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego.

Calvin's Commentaries on Daniel

The famous Protestant reformer wrote a great deal about Daniel, authoring an extensive commentary on the book.

Video

The Bunny Song

Okay, you have one last chance to watch this video. It burrows its way into your brain with its charm and its strangeness—a talking pickle, playing Nebuchadnezzar, sings a hymn to his preferred idol: a giant chocolate bunny.

Louis Armstrong Plays the (Biblical) Hits

This jazz hit from the 1930s narrates the story of the whole fiery furnace episode.

"The Fourth Man in the Fire"

Johnny Cash's country song—performed here with June Carter and John Prine—is another pretty straightforward retelling of the fiery furnace story.

Audio

Britten's Burning Furnace

This is a performance of the twentieth-century British classical composer Benjamin Britten's musical parable about the fiery furnace story. It originally aired on the BBC, with singers from the English Opera Group.

"Belshazzar's Feast"

Here's a really recent performance of William Walton's choral piece on the "Writing on the Wall" incident. (Walton was another famous twentieth-century British composer.)

Images

Lions' Den

The nineteenth-century British artist, Briton Reviere, painted this picture of Daniel in the Lions' Den, which is more accurate than a lot of other ones since it shows Daniel as an old man (which would've been the case.)

The Statue Dream

Here's a painting from an anonymous medieval artist, dating to around the fourteenth century. The statue appears to be supporting some sort of weird stone wheel between its knees.

The Fiery Furnace

Simeon Solomon was an eccentric British artist—one of the nineteenth-century "Pre-Raphaelites" who were known for their dangerous and outlandish lifestyles. Solomon was of Jewish descent, and liked to paint subjects from the Hebrew Bible—like this one of the fiery furnace scene.

Another Fiery Furnace (Sort Of)

Here's is another depiction of the fiery furnace, from a manuscript belonging to a Byzantine Emperor (dating to sometime around the 1st Millenium, CE).

Four Beasts

Hans Holbein the Younger's, a famous fourteenth-century German artist, painted his own interpretation of the four beasts from Daniel's first vision.

Rembrandt's Feast

Rembrandt's excellent painting captures Belshazzar's shock and surprise at the feast.

Napoleon as Belshazzar

This political cartoon from the early nineteenth-century ties the Belshazzar story into events from the artist's own time, showing the Emperor Napoleon as a man forced to see the "writing on the wall."

Rubens' Den

Peter Paul Rubens paints Daniel as a somewhat younger man in the lions' den—not all that historically accurate, but a really powerful image.

Delacroix's Den

Here's another classic painting of the lions' den scene, this time from Eugene Delacroix, another heavy-hitter in the art world.

Michelangelo's Daniel

This is Michelangelo's version of Daniel, from the walls of the Sistine Chapel.

"The Ancient of Days"

William Blake's painting of "The Ancient of Days" from Daniel's first vision isn't meant to depict God, surprisingly. It's actually meant to depict the human mind's tendency to try to cut everything down to its own size and make it measurable (in a bad way), which is why the Ancient is holding a compass. Nevertheless, it's become known as one of the classic paintings of God the Father, despite Blake's intentions.