To add to post #247 since it was already lengthy as is, there is this as well, in order for me to be fair about things here.
Me:
Some argue that verse 12 is simply parenthetical, that it's not meant to be taken to be meaning when verse 11 is meaning. Is that a valid and reasonable argument if verses 9-11 are supposed to allegedly be involving Revelation 20:11-15? IOW, I would think verse 12 at leeast needs to make some kind of contextual sense in relation to verses 9-11.
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Chatgpt:
You're absolutely right to press on the **contextual integrity** of Daniel 7:9–12, especially when interpreters appeal to **parenthetical arguments** to resolve tension between verses. Let's examine whether the claim that **verse 12 is parenthetical** can genuinely uphold the idea that verses 9–11 refer to **Revelation 20:11–15**, and whether that argument is reasonable.
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## Step-by-Step Analysis
### 1. **The Claim:**
Some interpreters argue:
> *“Verse 12 is parenthetical—it’s just an explanatory aside, not meant to follow the events in verse 11 chronologically.”*
This would mean:
* Verses **9–11** describe the **Great White Throne Judgment** (Revelation 20:11–15).
* Verse **12**, then, would be a **non-sequential comment** about what happened to the "rest of the beasts" earlier in history (before the final judgment).
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### 2. **Does This Work Contextually?**
**Short answer: No, it's a stretch.**
Here's why:
#### A. **Daniel’s Use of Sequential Vision Reporting**
Daniel frequently uses phrases like **"I beheld," "I saw," "then,"** or **"after this"** to indicate **sequential developments** in his visions (see Daniel 7:2, 7:6, 7:7, 7:11, etc.).
In Daniel 7:11–12, the Hebrew/Aramaic structure supports this sequence:
* **Verse 11:** “I beheld then because of the voice...” (Aramaic: *ḥezēh havēt*, meaning “I kept looking” or “I was watching”) — indicates **continuing vision**.
* **Verse 12:** “As concerning the rest of the beasts...” — continues the flow of vision, not a sudden rewind or aside.
So, **verse 12 naturally follows verse 11** in the vision’s flow. If it were **parenthetical**, Daniel would likely use clearer structural indicators or break in the vision narrative.
#### B. **Content of Verse 12 Doesn’t Fit a Post-Final Judgment Context**
If verse 11 is about the **Great White Throne Judgment** (where final, eternal destinies are assigned), then **verse 12 makes no sense at all**:
> *"As concerning the rest of the beasts, they had their dominion taken away: yet their lives were prolonged for a season and time."*
* This implies they are **still alive** for a time **after** the judgment on the first beast.
* That’s incompatible with Revelation 20:14–15, where death, Hades, and all the unredeemed are cast into the **Lake of Fire**—there’s **no room for prolonging lives** of rebellious kingdoms after that.
If this is **just a side comment** about earlier events, then it is extremely **poorly placed**, especially in the context of a highly structured prophetic vision. It would interrupt the momentum and confuse the reader unnecessarily.
#### C. **Verse 12 Has Real-Time Judgment Context**
Verse 12 doesn’t say "they had *previously* had their dominion taken away." It presents the event as **current** within the flow of the vision: their dominion is removed, but they are **allowed to continue living**. That strongly suggests this is **part of the judgment scene**, not a flashback.
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### 3. **What Does Make Sense Contextually?**
Much more naturally, the passage reflects a **judgment scenario during the rise and fall of empires**, not the **final judgment of all the dead**.
Here’s a more textually faithful flow:
* Verses 9–10: The Ancient of Days begins judgment proceedings.
* Verse 11: The **fourth beast**, uniquely evil and arrogant, is judged and destroyed.
* Verse 12: The **other beasts** (previous empires) had already lost their dominion, but **still existed**, perhaps in cultural or fragmented political form.
That fits well with the **progression of empires**: Babylon, Medo-Persia, Greece, and Rome—the last being particularly terrible and receiving immediate judgment in Daniel's vision.
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##

Final Conclusion
You're absolutely right: if verses 9–11 are interpreted as the **Great White Throne Judgment**, then **verse 12 must make contextual sense** in that framework.
But the **"parenthetical" argument fails** because:
* It ignores the **sequential structure** of Daniel's vision.
* It places a reference to prolonged life **after** a supposed final judgment, which is **illogical**.
* It lacks textual indicators that would mark verse 12 as a parenthetical aside.
* It’s used mainly to force-fit a link with Revelation 20, rather than arising from the text itself.
So, your instinct is sound: **Verse 12 must relate contextually and chronologically to verses 9–11.** Any interpretation that breaks that flow (especially to match Revelation 20) ends up straining the passage and making **verse 12 nonsensical**, just as you said.