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Trustees of the British Museum, 1961), 73.
5 For an excellent presentation on this historical background, see William H. Shea, “Daniel 3:
Extra-Biblical Texts and the Convocation on the Plain of Dura,” Andrews University Seminary
Studies 20 (Spring 1982), 29–52.
6 H. C. Leupold, Exposition of Daniel (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1949), 136–37.
7 Ibid., 137; cf. Edward J. Young, The Prophecy of Daniel (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1949), 83–
85; and Carl Friedrich Keil, Biblical Commentary on the Book of Daniel, M. G. Easton, trans.
(Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1955), 118–19.
8 James A. Montgomery, A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Book of Daniel, The
International Critical Commentary (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1927), 195.
9 Leon Wood, A Commentary on Daniel (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1973), 80.
10 Goldingay, Daniel, 70.
11 Cf. Leupold, Daniel, 137; and Keil, Daniel, 119.
12 Young, Daniel, 85.
13 Wood, Daniel, 80.
14 Young, Daniel, 85.
15 Ibid., 86.
16 Charles Dyer, “The Musical instruments in Daniel 3,” Bibliotheca Sacra 147 (October–
December 1990), 427.
17 Shea, “Daniel 3,” 37.
18 Dyer, “Musical instruments,” 427.
19 K. A. Kitchen, “The Aramaic of Daniel,” in Notes on Some Problems in the Book of Daniel, D. J.
Wiseman et al., eds. (London: Tyndale, 1965), 43. For the entire discussion, see 35–50.
20 Keil, Daniel, 120–21.
21 Gleason L. Archer Jr., A Survey of Old Testament Introduction, rev. ed. (Chicago: Moody
Publishers, 2007), 375.
22 Edwin M. Yamauchi, “The Archaeological Background of Daniel,” Bibliotheca Sacra 137, no. 3
(January–March 1980), 16.
23 Robert Dick Wilson, “The Aramaic of Daniel,” in Biblical and Theological Studies (New York:
Scribner, 1912), 296. Cf. Leupold, Daniel, 143.
24 William F. Albright, From the Stone Age to Christianity, 2nd ed. (New York: Anchor Books,