Daniel 2:10
Amharic Tigrinya 2011
እቶም ከለዳውያን ከአ ኣብ ቅድሚ ንጉስ፡ ንጉስሲ፡ ምንም እኳ ዓባይን ብርቱዕን እንተ ኾነ፡ ንፈላጥን ጠቢብን ከለዳውን ከምዚ ዝበለ ነገር ዝጠየቐ የልቦን እሞ፡ ነቲ ነገር ንጉስ ዜፍልጥ ሰብ ኣብ ምድሪ ከቶ ኣይርከብን እዩ። እቲ ንጉስ ዚደልዩ ነገር ዜሸግር እዩ እሞ ኣማልኽቲ እንተ ዘይኮይኖም፡ ነዚ ኣብ ቅድሚ ንጉስ ኬፍልጦ ዚኽእል የልቦን፡ ማሕደሮም ንጉስ ኬፍልጦ ዚኽእል የልቦን፡ ማሕደሮም ድማ ምስ ስጋ ዝለበሱ ኣይኮነን፡ ኢሎም መለሱ።
What Does This Mean?
In this verse from Daniel 2:10, the Chaldeans (wise men) are speaking to King Nebuchadnezzar. They tell the king that no one can reveal the dream he had because no ruler has ever asked for such a thing from a magician, astrologer, or Chaldean.
Explained for Children
Imagine you have a really good friend who tells you they had a dream but can't remember it. They ask you to tell them what it was about, but you can't because dreams are private. That's kind of like what's happening here, but with a king and his smart friends.
Historical Background
This verse is from the book of Daniel, written around the 6th century BC by the prophet Daniel. It's set in Babylon, and the audience is the Babylonian people and future generations of Jews. The cultural setting is one where wise men and magicians were highly respected and consulted for divine revelations and guidance.
Living It Out Today
In a modern scenario, if a colleague at work asks for a specific piece of advice that no one has ever asked before, and you're unsure how to help, you might feel like the Chaldeans did here. It's a reminder that sometimes we need to rely on faith and the guidance of someone more knowledgeable.
Topics
wisdomdreamskingshipfaithguidancedivine revelation
Related Verses
Frequently Asked Questions
What does Daniel 2:10 say about the limits of human knowledge?
Daniel 2:10 highlights that even the wise men of the time acknowledged their limits, showing that there are things beyond human understanding that require divine intervention.
How does this verse relate to the theme of divine revelation?
This verse sets up the contrast between human limitations and divine revelation, which is crucial to the story as Daniel later receives divine insight from God.
What can we learn about leadership from this verse?
Leadership, as seen through King Nebuchadnezzar, requires not only wisdom but also the recognition of the limits of that wisdom and the need for divine guidance.
How can this verse be applied to everyday life?
It reminds us to recognize our limitations and seek guidance from a higher power when faced with problems that seem insurmountable by our own efforts.
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