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Daniel 12:12
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- CondensedParallel Translations
Happy is the one who waits for and reaches 1,335 days.
Blessed is he who waits, and comes to the one thousand three hundred thirty-five days.
Blessed is he that waiteth, and cometh to the thousand three hundred and five and thirty days.
Blessed is he who waits and arrives at the 1,335 days.
"Blessed is the one who is patient and attains to the 1,335 days!
Those who wait for the end of the 1,335 days will be happy.
"How blessed [happy, fortunate, spiritually prosperous] and beloved is he who waits expectantly [enduring without wavering for the period of tribulation] and comes to the 1,335 days!
Blessed is he that waiteth & commeth to the thousand, three hundreth & fiue & thirtie daies.
"How blessed is he who keeps waiting and attains to the 1,335 days!
Blessed is he who waits and reaches the end of the 1,335 days.
God will bless everyone who patiently waits until one thousand three hundred thirty-five days have gone by.
How blessed will be anyone who waits and arrives at the 1,335 days.
Blessed is he that waiteth, and cometh to the thousand three hundred and thirty-five days!
Blessed is he who waits and reaches to the thousand three hundred and thirty-five days.
Happy are those who remain faithful until 1,335 days are over!
Happy is the one who is persevering, and attains to the one thousand three hundred and thirty-five days.
Blessed is he who waits and comes to the thousand, three hundred and thirty five days.
O well is him, that waiteth, & commeth to the thousande iij.C. & xxxv.dayes.
Blessed is he that waiteth, and cometh to the thousand three hundred and five and thirty days.
A blessing will be on the man who goes on waiting, and comes to the thousand, three hundred and thirty-five days.
Happy is he that waiteth, and cometh to the thousand three hundred and five and thirty days.
Blessed is he that waiteth, and commeth to the thousand, three hundred and fiue and thirtie dayes.
Blessed is he that wayteth and commeth to the thousande, three hundred, and fiue and thirtie dayes.
Blessed is he that waits, and comes to the thousand three hundred and thirty-five days.
Blessed is he that waiteth, and cometh to the thousand three hundred and five and thirty days.
Blessed is he who waits, and comes to the one thousand three hundred thirty-five days.
He is blessid, that abideth, and cometh fulli, til a thousynde daies thre hundrid and fyue and thritti.
Blessed is he that waits, and comes to the thousand three hundred and five and thirty days.
Blessed [is] he that waiteth, and cometh to the thousand three hundred and five and thirty days.
Blessed is the one who waits and attains to the 1,335 days.
Blessed is he who waits, and comes to the one thousand three hundred and thirty-five days.
And blessed are those who wait and remain until the end of the 1,335 days!
How happy is he who waits and comes to the end of the 1,335 days!
Happy are those who persevere and attain the thousand three hundred thirty-five days.
Happy! is he that waiteth, and attaineth to one thousand three hundred and thirty-five days.
Blessed is he that waitedth, and cometh unto a thousand three hundred thirty-five days.
Blessed is he who waits and comes to the thousand three hundred and thirty-five days.
O the blessedness of him who is waiting earnestly, and doth come to the days, a thousand, three hundred, thirty and five.
"Blessed are those who patiently make it through the 1,335 days.
Contextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
Romans 11:15, Revelation 20:4
Reciprocal: Psalms 102:13 - the set Ezekiel 4:6 - each day for a year Daniel 7:25 - a time Daniel 12:7 - that it Matthew 10:22 - but Mark 13:13 - but John 13:7 - What Revelation 1:3 - Blessed Revelation 11:2 - forty Revelation 15:1 - is filled Revelation 20:6 - Blessed Revelation 22:14 - Blessed
Cross-References
Then he left that place and traveled to the mountains east of Bethel. He set up his tent there. Bethel was to the west, and Ai was to the east. Abram built another altar at that place to honor the Lord , and he worshiped the Lord there.
During this time there was not enough food in the land, so Abram went down to Egypt to live.
Then Abraham said, "I thought no one in this place respected God. I thought someone would kill me to get Sarah.
His wife Rebekah was very beautiful. The men of that place asked Isaac about Rebekah. He said, "She is my sister." He was afraid to tell them Rebekah was his wife. He was afraid the men would kill him so that they could have her.
But David thought to himself, "Saul will catch me some day. The best thing I can do is to escape to the land of the Philistines. Then Saul will give up looking for me in Israel. That way I will escape from Saul."
Fear can be a trap, but if you trust in the Lord , you will be safe.
"Don't be afraid of people. They can kill the body, but they cannot kill the soul. The only one you should fear is God, the one who can send the body and the soul to be destroyed in hell.
Gill's Notes on the Bible
Blessed is he that waiteth, and cometh to the one thousand three hundred five and thirty days. Which is an addition of forty five days or years more, beginning at the end of one thousand two hundred and ninety, and make up this sum; during which time the vials will be poured out upon all the antichristian states, and the Turkish empire be destroyed, and all the enemies of Christ and his church removed, and clear way made for the setting up of his kingdom in the world in a more visible and glorious manner; and therefore happy is the man that will be found waiting for these times, and live to enjoy them. There are various ways taken in the computation and application of these one thousand three hundred and thirty five days by Jews and Christians. Lipman p the Jew makes them to be the same with "time", and "times", and "half a time", Daniel 12:7, "time" he supposes, designs the space of four hundred and eighty years, from the Israelites going out of Egypt to the building of the first temple; times the space of four hundred and ten years which is as long as that temple stood; and "half a time" half of these two spaces, that is, four hundred and forty five years; all which make up one thousand three hundred and thirty five; but strange it is that time should signify a larger space than "times". Much more ingenious is the computation of Jacchiades on the text, who makes the account to describe the space of time from the days of Daniel to the end of the world. He supposes there were three thousand three hundred and ninety one years, from the beginning of the world to Daniel; he then takes and joins the one thousand two hundred and ninety days in the preceding verse, which he understands of years with the one thousand three hundred and thirty five days or years in this, which make together two thousand six hundred and twenty five; and, added to the above, the whole is six thousand and sixteen years; which agrees with the opinion of Elias, in the Talmud q, that the world shall stand six thousand years. Many Christian interpreters r apply it to the times of Antiochus; and reckon them thus, understanding them of days; and not years; from the time of his taking away the daily sacrifice, to the restoration of it by Judas Maccabaeus, were three years and a half and some days, in all one thousand two hundred and ninety, as in the preceding verse; during which time the temple was profaned by idolatrous worship, the altar demolished, and the daily sacrifice ceased, and was a time of great distress with the Jews; and which, though greatly alleviated by the success of Judas, yet their calamities were not over until the death of Antiochus, which happened forty five days after; and these, added to the above number, make one thousand three hundred and thirty five days; at the close of which it was happy times with them, being delivered from so cruel and powerful an enemy; and therefore blessed were they that waited and came to this time. This passage Mr. Brightman applies to the Turkish empire; and thinks that time, and times, and half a time; Daniel 12:7, measure the space of the power of that empire; "time" signifying one hundred years; "times" two hundred years; "half a time", fifty years; in all three hundred and fifty years; which added to one thousand three hundred, when that empire began, the date ends in one thousand six hundred and fifty, when he supposes, it would begin to decline; to which, if you add forty five days or years, as here, it will bring it down to one thousand six hundred and ninety five, when he thought it would be utterly extinct; but time has shown this to be a mistake. Mr. Mede s thinks these numbers are to be reckoned from the profanation of the temple by Antiochus; and that the first number, one thousand two hundred and ninety, ended in the year of Christ one thousand one hundred and twenty three, when antichrist was come to his height, and was discerned by many to be the person that was prophesied of as such; and the latter number, one thousand three hundred and thirty five ended in the year of Christ one thousand one hundred and sixty eight, when the Waldenses, Albigenses, and others separated from the church of Rome as antichristian, upon which violent persecutions were raised upon them: but then not happy, but miserable times, followed on these; unless this blessedness spoken of is to be applied to the martyrs that died for the sake of Christ, as in Revelation 14:13. Another learned man t was of opinion that these numbers are to be counted from the destruction of Jerusalem by Titus Vespasian, A.D. 71, from whence the first number fell on the year 1361, at which time the school at Prague was founded by Charles king of Bohemia, and the errors and tyranny of antichrist began to be openly opposed by the same; and the second number ended in the year 1406, when the light of the Gospel broke out more clearly; so that the angel here pronounces those blessed who overlived these first seeds of the Gospel being brought to light; but something of great importance and cause of more joy, is here intended. Wherefore, upon the whole, it seems best to interpret these numbers as at first, of the date of the reign of antichrist, and as showing the full and certain end of it; when there will be blessed times, halcyon days indeed!
p Nizzachon, No. 332. q T. Bab. Sanhedrin, fol. 97. 1. r Broughton in loc. L'Empereur, Not. in Jacchiad. in loc. Huls. Theolog. Jud. par. 1. p. 77, 78. s Works, B. 3. p. 720. t Henr. Wolphius lib. de tempore apud Brightman in loc.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
Blessed is he that waiteth - This indicates a patient expectation of an event that was to occur, and the happy state of him who would reach it. The angel refers to another period different from the “time, and times, and an half,” and different also from the twelve hundred and ninety days. He speaks of this as the consummation - as the desirable time; and pronounces him blessed who shall be permitted to see it. The idea here is, that of one looking out for this as a happy period, and that he would be regarded as a happy man who should live in that age.
And cometh to - literally, “touches.” That is, whose life would reach to that time; or who would not be cut off before that period.
The thousand three hundred and five and thirty days - The article is not used in the original, and its insertion here seems to make the period more distinct and definite than it is necessarily in the Hebrew. There is much apparent abruptness in all these expressions; and what the angel says in these closing and additional communications has much the appearance of a fragmentary character - of hints, or detached and unexplained thoughts thrown out on which he was not disposed to enlarge, and which, for some reason, he was not inclined to explain. In respect to this period of 1335 days, it seems to stand by itself. Nothing is said of the time when it would occur; no intimation is given of its commencement, as in the former cases - the terminus a quo; and nothing is said of its characteristics further than that he would be blessed who should be permitted to see it - implying that it would be, on some accounts, a happy period.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse Daniel 12:12. Blessed is he that waiteth — He who implicitly depends on God, expecting, as his truth cannot fail, that these predictions shall be accomplished in due time.
And cometh to the thousand three hundred and five and thirty days. — This is seventy-five days more than what is included in the three years and a half, or the time, times, and a half in the seventh verse; and as we have met with so many instances of prophetical days and years, this undoubtedly is another instance; and as a day stands for a year, this must mean a period of one thousand three hundred and thirty-five years, which period is to bring all these wonders to an end, Daniel 12:6. But we are left totally in the dark relative to the time from which these one thousand three hundred and thirty-five years are to be reckoned. If, however, we reckon them from the above epoch, A.D. 612, when Mohammedanism arose, they lead us to A.D. 1947, when the fullness of the Gentiles shall be brought in; and thus a final closure of vision and prophecy be made, as then all the great events relative to the salvation of men shall have taken place. Wars and contentions will probably then cease over the whole world; Jews and Gentiles become one fold, under one Shepherd and Bishop of souls; and the triune God be properly worshipped and glorified, from generation to generation, over the face of the whole earth. But all these conjectures may be founded in darkness. We have not chronological data; and "the times and seasons God has reserved in his own power."