The identity of the 11th horn of Daniel 7, the Antichrist

In Daniel 7, four animals symbolize four consecutive empires. The 4th is the Roman Empire. It has 11 horns, symbolizing the kingdoms into which the Roman Empire fragmented. The 11th horn is the Antichrist. It will only be destroyed when Christ returns. This article identifies it from 9 characteristics in Daniel 7.

This article assumes that the previous articles in this series have been read, particularly the articles on Daniel 7 and The Fourth Animal. This article also assumes a level of knowledge of the Arian Controversy.

Daniel 7

In Daniel 7, four animals symbolize four successive empires.

Out of the fourth animal, 10 horns grew. After them, an 11th horn came up, uprooting three other horns. At first, it was small, but it grew and became larger than the other horns, meaning it would dominate the other kingdoms. It was different from the others. It blasphemed God and persecuted God’s people, and it will only be destroyed when Christ returns.

This 11th horn is the main character in Daniel 7. The only reason Daniel 7 mentions the preceding four empires and ten horns is to enable the reader to identify the 11th horn.

A previous article identified the Fourth Animal as the Roman Empire.

The horns are fragments of the Roman Empire.

In Daniel, horns symbolize parts into which an Empire or kingdom fragments. For example, in Daniel 8, the Goat first has one prominent horn, symbolizing the united Greek kingdom of Alexander the Great. But the one large horn was broken off, and 4 horns came up, symbolizing the four Greek empires that were formed after Alexander died.

Therefore, the 11 horns of the 4th animal symbolize the kingdoms that were formed as the Roman Empire fragmented in the fifth to eighth centuries. This is also stated in the text of Daniel 7. Explaining the first 10 horns, it says: “Out of this kingdom [the fourth] ten kings will arise” (Dan 7:24), implying that these ‘kings’ will not exist inside or during the fourth kingdom, but after it.

This can also be confirmed from Daniel 2. As discussed in a previous article, Daniel 7 is parallel to the vision of the statue of a man in Daniel 2. The fourth animal in Daniel 7 is parallel to the Iron Legs of the statue. The 11 horns of the fourth animal are parallel to the feet of the statue. Since the body parts of the statue in Daniel 2 symbolize consecutive ages of history, the Feet exist after the Legs. Therefore, the 11 horns exist after the Fourth Animal.

The 11th horn is the Antichrist.

It would blaspheme God and persecute His people for a time, times, and half a time (Dan 7:25). It will become so important that a court will sit in heaven to judge between it and God’s people (Dan 7:26, 9-11, and 14). It will only be destroyed when Christ returns (Dan 7:26, 11). Another article shows that this 11th horn is the same as the Beast of Revelation.

The State Church of the Roman Empire

The purpose of the current article is to show that the 11th horn symbolizes the State Church of the Roman Empire. The following characteristics of the 11th horn are evident from Daniel 7:

      1. Since the horns represent the fragments into which the Roman Empire was divided, they were part of the Roman Empire before it fragmented.
      2. They became distinct when the Empire fragmented.
      3. The 11th was the last of the 11 horns.
      4. It uprooted three other horns as it came up.
      5. It began small.
      6. It grew “larger than its associates.”
      7. It would “wear out the saints.”
      8. It would reign for a time, times, and half a time.
      9. It would only be destroyed when Christ returns.

This article will show that the Roman State Church is the only entity in history that fits this description:

(1) It was part of the Roman Empire.

In the Roman Empire, like in all ancient kingdoms, the rulers (emperors) decided which religions to allow. During the first three centuries, Christianity was outlawed, but was legalized in the early 4th century. However, the Church was divided, mainly between the Arian East and the Nicene West, and emperors had a low tolerance for divisions. The emperors chose sides and forced the church to unite. In the 4th century, most emperors were Arian and suppressed the Western Nicene theology.

The dominance of Arianism came to an end in 380 when the Roman Empire, through the Edict of Thessalonica, formally made Nicene theology its State Religion, meaning that all Romans were required to be Christians, specifically, Nicene Christians. Nicene theology, which later developed into the Trinity doctrine, was now the only legal religion.

That same Edict outlawed Arianism. This was followed by severe persecution. Arian churches were confiscated, and Arians were forced out of the Church. In this way, the State Church of the Roman Empire, to which all Romans were required to belong, became Nicene. In practice:

(a) The Emperor was the head of the Church: “Simonetti remarks that the Emperor was in fact the head of the church” (Hanson, p. 849).

(b) The Emperor determined the Church’s theology: “If we ask the question, what was considered to constitute the ultimate authority in doctrine during the period reviewed in these pages, there can be only one answer. The will of the Emperor was the final authority” (Hanson, p. 849).

(c) There were many Christian factions, not just two, and the Emperor decided which factions complied with the prescribed theology. For example, in 383, Emperor Theodosius summoned a council of all ‘sects’. Each party had to produce a statement of faith. Theodosius himself decided which factions complied. He accepted only the submissions of the Nicenes and the Novatianists (Ayres, p. 259).

In conclusion, since it was the Roman State Church, it was part of the Roman Empire.

(2) It became distinct when the Empire fragmented.

In the fifth century, Germanic nations defeated the Western Roman Empire and divided it into several Germanic kingdoms. They were Arians, but allowed the Roman State Church, with its doctrine and hierarchy of bishops, to remain. In the West, the Roman State Church was now subject to Arian rule, but continued to serve the Roman population.

In the sixth century, Emperor Justinian of the Eastern Roman Empire defeated the Germanic kingdoms in the West, liberating the Western Roman State Church from Arian domination.

In the subsequent two centuries, the Eastern Roman Emperors ruled the West through the Imperial Forces but also through the Roman State Church. This made the Roman State Church politically very powerful. During this period, the defeated Arian kingdoms officially converted to the Roman State Church.

In the eighth century, Muslim conquests significantly weakened the Eastern Roman Empire. Suddenly, much of the Christian world in the East was under Islamic rule. The Eastern Empire was no longer able to control or protect the Western Roman Church. Pope Zachary, in 741, was the last pope to seek the emperor’s approval for his election.

However, the Roman State Church in the West was able to survive because it was now protected by the nations that, over the previous two centuries, had converted to Roman theology. It was no longer the Roman State Church but became known as the Roman Church.

In conclusion, the Roman State Church had become a distinct entity after the Roman Empire had fragmented.

(3) It was the last of the 11 horns.

The first 10 horns symbolize the kingdoms into which the Germanic tribes, in the fifth century, divided the Western Empire. While subject to Arian rule in the 5th century, the Roman State Church in the West was not yet a distinct ‘kingdom.’ It would only become distinct later, as the next point will explain.

(4) It uprooted three other horns as it came up.

In the 6th century, to recover lost territory and to liberate the Roman State Church in the West, Justinian, the Eastern Roman Emperor, defeated three Arian kingdoms:

In 533–534, his troops dispersed the Vandals of North Africa to the fringes of the empire.

After a protracted war, Justinian defeated the Ostrogoths in Italy in 553. They returned to South Austria.

The Visigoths were driven out of Gaul in 507. In 552, Justinian recovered a strip of land that barricaded the Visigoths from being a threat to the Roman Church in Italy.

According to Daniel 7:8, the 11th horn came up when three other horns were pulled out by their roots. Therefore, the 11th horn began to exist when the Vandals, Ostrogoths, and Vandals were defeated. While, as stated, in the 5th century, the first 10 horns began to exist, the 11th began later, namely, in the 6th century.

(5) It began small.

After the Eastern Empire liberated the Western Roman Church in the sixth century, the Church remained subject to the Eastern Emperor. For example, the Emperor still approved the appointment of popes.

After the Eastern Empire lost most of its wealth and power in the eighth century, due to Muslim conquests, the Western Roman Church survived:

In the ninth century, it was protected by the Carolingian dynasty, founded by Charlemagne (Charles the Great), which ruled in western and central Europe from 800 to 888. Charlemagne was the first emperor to rule most of Western Europe since the fall of the Western Roman Empire three centuries earlier. However, the Carolingians followed the example of their Roman predecessors by asserting “immense authority over the Western church” (Britannica). Charlemagne claimed to govern both Church and State.

After Carolingian power waned, the Ottonian dynasty in Germany established a new imperial line and became the preeminent power in Latin Europe. The Ottos protected the Papacy but also dominated it. They treated churches as their property, appointed bishops, and forbade appeals to Rome. (Britannica)

In conclusion, until the 10th century, the Roman Church remained ‘small.’ The monarchs controlled the appointments of popes and high-ranking church officials. The Church was always ruled by :

    • Roman Emperors in the fourth century,
    • Arian Germanic kings in the fifth,
    • Eastern Emperors, from the 6th to the 8th centuries,
    • Carolingians in the 9th century, and by
    • The Ottos in the 10th century.

(6) It grew “larger than its associates.”

However, in the 11th century, in what is known as the Investiture Controversy (investiture = investing a person with honors or rank), the Church challenged the authority of the monarchs to control appointments to the higher church offices. 

The humiliation of King Henry IV before Pope Gregory VII during the Investiture Controversy illustrates how powerful the Roman Church had become. Henry IV, the mightiest king in Europe at the time, had to wait for three days, stripped of his royal robes and clad as a penitent, barefoot in ice and snow, before Pope Gregory was willing to withdraw his excommunication.

With the Concordat of Worms in 1122, the Emperor agreed to allow the Church to appoint its officials but retained the right to veto the appointments of bishops. In 1059, the Church formed the College of Cardinals to appoint new popes, restricting interference from political rulers.

Antichristus, a woodcut by Lucas Cranach, the Elder, of the pope using temporal power to grant authority to a generously contributing ruler.

In the subsequent centuries, known as the High Middle Ages, the Roman Church was the dominant power in Europe. It attained power that rivaled and exceeded that of the Monarchs. It claimed that the pope stood between God and humankind as the vicar of Christ, has jurisdiction over all matters relating to sin, has full power over the church worldwide, has authority over emperors and kings in the Christian world, and has the right to depose the kings. Emperors and kings, to reign lawfully, had to be in communion with the Pope. Otherwise, the Pope could declare the ruler unfit to reign. It had grown “larger than its associates.”

(7) It will “wear out the saints.”

In the Middle Ages, through the civil rulers, the Roman Church engaged in brutal forms of coercion, such as the Albigensian Crusade, the Inquisition, and the Waldensian massacres, seeking to compel or exterminate the true people of God who dared to stand up against its evil innovations. Over the centuries, the Roman Church imprisoned, tortured, and killed millions of God’s people. For example:

Innocent III (1198–1216) called the Albigensian Crusade in southern France, which resulted in the massacre of Christians.

The Inquisition is infamous for the severity of its tortures. The Spanish Inquisition alone resulted in some 32,000 executions. (History.com)

The Roman Church instigated the Waldensian massacres. The Waldensians identified the Roman Church as the harlot of the Apocalypse. In response, the Catholic Church called for the destruction of the Waldensians, absolving all who would perpetrate such crimes. The Waldensians were looted, raped, tortured, and massacred.

Even if there was no other indication of the identity of the Antichrist, the cruel persecution of God’s people is always a key and sufficient identifier (Rev 13:7; 11:2; Dan 7:25). It reveals the true nature of this beast. In another article, David Plaisted discusses the estimates of the Number Killed by the Roman Church in the Middle Ages. The following are some of his quotes:

“From the birth of Popery in 606 to the present time, it is estimated by careful and credible historians, that more than fifty millions of the human family, have been slaughtered for the crime of heresy by popish persecutors” (John Dowling, “History of Romanism, pp. 541, 542. New York: 1871).

“That the Church of Rome has shed more innocent blood than any other institution that has ever existed among mankind, will be questioned by no Protestant who has a competent knowledge of history” (W. E. H. Lecky, “History of the Rise and Influence of the Spirit of Rationalism in Europe,” Vol. II, p. 32. London: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1910).

“Need I speak to you of the thirty years war in Germany, which was mainly instigated by the Jesuits, in order to deprive the Protestants of the right of free religious worship, secured to them by the treaty of Augsburg? Or of the Irish rebellion, of the inhuman butchery of about fifteen millions of Indians in South America, Mexico and Cuba, by the Spanish papists? In short, it is calculated by authentic historians, that papal Rome has shed the blood of sixty-eight millions of the human race in order to establish her unfounded claims to religious dominion (S. S. Schmucker, Professor of Theology in the Theological Seminary at Gettysburg, The Glorious Reformation, Published by Gould and Newman, 1838).

(8) It would reign for a time, times, and half a time (Dan 7:25).

This period is mentioned seven times in Daniel and Revelation. It is discussed in another article, which concludes that this period is not the End Time but always precedes the End Time. It is a symbolic period, not literally 1260 days but 1260 years, namely, the period in Europe, beginning with the birth of the Roman Church, when three other horns were uprooted, until the French Revolution, when the ability of the Roman Church to persecute and dominate was significantly curtailed, and the modern era of religious freedom in the West began.

(9) It will only be destroyed when Christ returns.

The Roman Church still exists today.

Conclusions

The Roman Church is the only historical entity that fits both the timing and the characteristics of the 11th horn of Daniel 7.

Another article concludes that the 11th horn is the same as the Beast of Revelation. Therefore, it can also be identified from the Book of Revelation, but its main identification is from Daniel.

To believe in God is not always easy. We live in a world where we see evil, pain, and death. We get used to these things, and sometimes we fail to see the infinite miracles of life in us and around us. For example, see Inner Life of a Cell. We must also observe the miracles in the Bible, such as the miracle of His laws, the Sermon on the Mount, and the prophecies. Daniel 9 seems to be a clear prediction of the life and death of Jesus Christ. And, for me, Daniel 7 seems to be a clear prediction of the Church of the Roman Empire.

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Daniel’s fourth beast is the Roman Empire.

This article assumes that the previous article, which provides an overview of the vision in Daniel 7, has been read.

Purpose of the Article

Using a series of four animals, symbolizing four consecutive empires, Daniel 7 describes world history, from the time of the Babylonian Empire until Christ returns. The fourth empire fragments into 11 kingdoms, existing concurrently.

Daniel 2 describes the same four empires. As stated in the article on Daniel 2, that vision identifies the first as the ancient Babylonian Empire, which reigned in the 6th and 7th centuries B.C.

Daniel 7 does not identify any of the four animals.

Both Daniel 7 and 8 use animals as symbols for empires. Daniel 8 uses two animals, a Ram and a Goat, and explicitly identifies them as “Media and Persia” and “Greece” (Daniel 8:20, 21). The purpose of the current article is to identify the four animals in Daniel 7 by comparing them to the animals in Daniel 8.

The Antichrist

In both Daniel 7 and 8, the main character is an evil horn. Commentators generally agree that the horns in these two chapters symbolize the same entity. This article refers to it as the Antichrist because Daniel describes it as God’s great enemy, and it will only be destroyed when Christ returns. In Daniel 7, the Antichrist is the 11th horn growing out of the 4th animal.

Competing Interpretations

From the time of the prophet Daniel, the nation of Israel was subject to four empires: the Babylonian, Medo-Persian, Greek, and the Roman Empires.

Both Conservatives and Liberals interpret the first animal in Daniel 7, the Lion, as the ancient Babylonian Empire.

However, they differ with respect to the other three animals. While Conservatives hold that Medo-Persia is symbolized by the second animal, the Bear, Liberals believe that Medo-Persia is symbolized by BOTH the second and third animals, the Bear and the Leopard. Liberals identify the second animal as the Medes, and the third as Persia. Consequently, the two competing systems may be compared as follows:

Daniel 7 Conservative Liberal
Lion Babylon Babylon
Bear Medo-Persia Medes
Leopard Greece Persians
Fourth Rome Greece

Since the Antichrist-horn in Daniel 7 grows out of the 4th animal, in the Conservative scheme, the Antichrist is of Roman origin, but, in the Liberal view, the Antichrist is Greek.

The Bear represents Medo-Persia.

This section begins to identify the animals in Daniel 7 by comparing them to the animals in Daniel 8.

The first animal in Daniel 8 is a Ram, explicitly identified as “Media and Persia” (Daniel 8:20). It has two horns, one higher than the other. The higher horn came out last. It charges in three directions: the West, the North, and the South (Daniel 8:3-4).

The Bear of Daniel 7 is similar to the Ram:

Firstly, both are higher on one side. While the Bear is “raised up on one side,” the Ram has two horns, one longer than the other. The two sides are Media and Persia. The Ram’s horn that came out last but became longer, and the higher side of the Bear, symbolize the Persians. Initially, the Medes dominated Persia, but Cyrus reversed the relationship so that Persia dominated the Medes when their combined forces conquered Babylon.

Secondly, both conquer three things. While the Ram charges in three directions, the Bear has three ribs between its teeth (Daniel 7:5). Since animals symbolize kingdoms, the ribs between the teeth of the Bear may represent kingdoms or territories conquered. The three ribs may reasonably be taken as the three major conquests of the combined forces of the Medes and Persians in the sixth century BC:

        • Lydia in the north in 547,
        • Babylon in the west in 539, and
        • Egypt in the south in 525.

The Leopard is not Medo-Persia.

In the Liberal interpretation, the Ram of Daniel 8 includes both the Bear and Leopard of Daniel 7. However, there is no similarity between the Ram and the Leopard. On the contrary, they clearly differ. Daniel’s prophecies use heads and horns to indicate divisions of empires. While the Ram has two horns, meaning it has two divisions, the Medes and Persians, the Leopard has four heads (Daniel 7:6), meaning that it has four divisions.

The Leopard is Greece.

The second animal in Daniel 8 is a Goat, explicitly identified as Greece (Daniel 8:21). It comes from the west without touching the ground. It has one great horn, but the great horn was broken while it was still strong. In its place came up four horns to the four directions of the compass (Daniel 8:5, 8).

The Goat is similar to the Leopard of Daniel 7:6:

Firstly, both are fast. While the Leopard has four wings, the Goat flies. The speed of its conquests refers to the speed at which Alexander the Great conquered the known world.

Secondly, both have four parts. The Leopard has four heads, while the Goat has four horns. The four heads and four horns symbolize the four Greek Empires formed after Alexander’s death at age 33.

Given these similarities, the Leopard is equivalent to the Goat and represents the Greek Empire.

The fourth animal is not Greece.

In the Liberal interpretation, the Goat of Daniel 8 is equivalent to the dreadful fourth animal of Daniel 7, and both symbolize Greece. However, nothing in their descriptions suggests that. On the contrary, while the Goat first has only one horn and then later four, the fourth animal first has ten horns, then an 11th comes up, uproots three of the first 10 horns, leaving 8 horns standing. Since horns symbolize the divisions of kingdoms, the Goat and the Dreadful Fourth Animal are not related.

Conclusion

Since the Bear is Medo-Persia and the Leopard Greece, the Dreadful Fourth Animal of Daniel 7 must be the next empire in the series, namely, the Roman Empire:

Daniel 7 Daniel 8
Lion Babylonian Empire
Bear Ram Medo-Persia
Leopard Goat Greek Empire
Fourth Animal Roman Empire

This confirms the Conservative view. It means that the Antichrist arises out of the Roman Empire.

Medo-Persia

As stated, to make their interpretation fit the text, Liberal scholars propose that the author of Daniel divided Medo-Persia into two empires. Therefore, another argument against the Liberal interpretation is that this is inconsistent with both secular history and the Book of Daniel:

Historically, the Persians conquered the Medes around 550 BC, and, 11 years later, the joint forces of the Medes and Persians conquered Babylon, with Cyrus the Great as their supreme king.

It would also be inconsistent with the Book of Daniel itself. Daniel always refers to the Medes and Persians as a single empire. For example:

He prophesied that the joint forces of the Medes and the Persians would conquer Babylon (Daniel 5:28).

He referred to the unchangeable law of the Medes and the Persians (Daniel 6:9, 13, and 16).

He identified the Ram as “the kings of Media and Persia” (Daniel 8:20).

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The Liberal interpretation of Daniel 7 does not fit the text.

This article assumes that the article on Daniel 2 has been read.

The Four Kingdoms

Kingdoms – In Daniel 7, four animals, a lion, a bear, a leopard, and a dragon-like beast, come up out of the sea. They are explained as “kings” (Daniel 7:17). However, Daniel 7:23 refers to the fourth beast as “a fourth kingdom.” In other words, the four animals are four kingdoms, consisting of a series of kings.

Sea – These animals arise out of the sea (Daniel 7:3), but Daniel 7:17 says that these kings will “arise from the earth.” Therefore, the sea is the earth, not the physical earth, but the people of the world.

Consecutive – As the four metal-kingdoms of Daniel 2, the four beast-kingdoms in Daniel 7 will reign consecutively. For example:

Firstly, according to Daniel 7:7, the first three beasts will exist before the fourth.

Secondly, the fourth beast will devour the “whole earth” (Daniel 7:23), which does not leave space for other beasts. These are ‘worldwide’ empires.

Thirdly, Daniel 7:6-7 uses the phrase “after this” several times to describe the chronological sequence of these animal-kingdoms.

The Ten Horns

Initially, the fourth beast had ten horns, explained as ten kings that will arise out of the fourth beast (Daniel 7:7-8, 24). However, since ‘kings’ are equivalent to ‘kingdoms,’ each of the ten horns symbolizes a kingdom, consisting of a series of kings.

To distinguish between the four animal-kingdoms and the later horn-kingdoms, this article refers to the animal-kingdoms as empires.

The horns growing out of the 4th animal symbolize that the fourth empire would fragment into many kingdoms.

The 11th Horn

After the first ten horns, an 11th horn grows out of the fourth empire. It comes up “among” the first ten horns, uprooting three of them (Daniel 7:8). Initially, it is small, but it grows and eventually dominates the other kingdoms.

The main character and purpose of Daniel 7 is not one of these four empires, nor one of the first ten horns, but the 11th horn. Daniel 7 allocates much more space to it than to any of the other characters. The only reason that Daniel describes the preceding kingdoms is to enable the reader to identify the 11th horn.

The 11th horn persecutes God’s people, blasphemes God, intends to change times and law, and will only be destroyed when Christ returns (Daniel 7:8, 20, 25). In other words, it symbolizes the Antichrist.

Parallel to Daniel 2

The vision in Daniel 7 is parallel to the vision in Daniel 2. Firstly, commentators agree that the four animals in Daniel 7 and the four metals in Daniel 2 symbolize the same four empires. For example:

(a) As there are four metals in Daniel 2, there are four animals in Daniel 7.

(b) Both the metals in Daniel 2 and the animals in Daniel 7 symbolize consecutive kingdoms.

(c) Both the fourth metal and the fourth animal are associated with iron (Daniel 2:40; 7:7) and are called the “fourth kingdom” (Daniel 2:40; 7:23).

Secondly, for the following reasons, the 11 horns in Daniel 7 is equivalent to the divided kingdom in Daniel 2:

(a) Both are a fifth age, following the first four empires.

(b) Both continue the fourth empire:

In Daniel 7, the 11 horns grow out of the 4th animal, indicating continuance.

In Daniel 2, the iron of the fourth empire continues in the fifth phase (Daniel 2:33).

(c) Both symbolize many kings ruling concurrently.

(d) Both will end only when God sets up His Eternal Kingdom.

For these reasons, Daniel 2 and 7 symbolize the same four empires, followed by the same fifth period of divided rule, when many kingdoms exist concurrently, followed by God’s eternal kingdom.

However, Daniel 7 adds the Antichrist, who is not mentioned in Daniel 2. That Antichrist, depicted as the 11th horn, will arise only after the first four empires and after the first 10 horn-kingdoms.

Comparison Table

Since Daniel 2 identifies the Gold Kingdom as the Babylonian Empire, that is also the identity of the Lion Kingdom in Daniel 7. The two visions may be compared as follows:

Daniel 2 Daniel 7
 Head of Gold Lion
 Breast and Arms of Silver Bear
 Belly and Thighs of Bronze Leopard
 Legs of Iron Fourth animal, dreadful, terrifying, and extremely strong
 Feet of Iron and Clay Eleven Horns
 Eternal kingdom Everlasting Kingdom

The Liberal Interpretation

The academic world, where Liberalism dominates, does not believe in miracles, such as accurate predictions of the future. Since the Book of Daniel predicts the Greek Empire by name, Liberals believe that Daniel was written AFTER that empire was already established. They believe that the Book of Daniel is history written in the form of prophecy.

Specifically, in Liberal theology, Daniel was written during the reign of the Greek king Antiochus IV, who persecuted the Jews and defiled the temple. Liberals identify Antiochus IV as the Antichrist, the 11th horn of Daniel 7. For Antiochus to fit the prophecy, Liberals identify the fourth empire as the Greek empire, and propose that the 11 horns symbolize 11 consecutive kings of that empire.

Objections to the Liberal Interpretation

For the following reasons, this article rejects the Liberal interpretation:

Firstly, Daniel 8 uses two animals as symbols, explicitly identified as the Medo-Persian and Greek Empires. Both Daniel 7 and 8 describe their animals with characteristics, such as multiple heads, multiple horns, wings, etc. By comparing the animals in Daniel 7 to those in Daniel 8, the next article will show that the fourth empire is the Roman Empire, not the Greek Empire, as the Liberals propose.

Secondly, in the Liberal interpretation, the 11 horns, including the Antichrist, exist DURING the fourth empire. However, as discussed, the five parts of the statue in Daniel 2 symbolize five consecutive periods of history. Since the 11 horns of Daniel 7 are parallel to the divided kingdom in Daniel, which follows after the fourth empire, 11 horns exist AFTER that fourth empire, not during it.

Thirdly, in the Liberal interpretation, the 11 horns are 11 consecutive Greek kings. However, the following are indications that these horns are concurrent:

(a) They are parallel to the “divided kingdom” in Daniel 2. The term “divided kingdom” implies concurrent fragments.

(b) They will attempt to unite through intermarriage (Daniel 2:43).

(c) Daniel saw the 11th horn AMONG the other ten horns (Daniel 7:8).

(d) The 11th horn uproots three other horns (Daniel 7:8).

(e) Both animals in Daniel 8 have horns, and, in both, the horns represent concurrent kingdoms (Daniel 8:20-22):

The Ram has two horns, representing the Medians and Persians of the Median-Persian Empire.

The Goat grows four horns, representing the four concurrent divisions of the Greek Empire.

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