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Daniel and the Boys in the Band

By Limmer, Brian , E. R.

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Book Id: WPLBN0100751248
Format Type: PDF (eBook)
File Size: 2.91 MB.
Reproduction Date: 1/8/2026

Title: Daniel and the Boys in the Band  
Author: Limmer, Brian , E. R.
Volume:
Language: English
Subject: Non Fiction, Religion
Collections: Authors Community, History
Historic
Publication Date:
2026
Publisher: Limmers Loft Publishing
Member Page: Brian Limmer

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R. Limme, B. E. (2026). Daniel and the Boys in the Band. Retrieved from https://www.gutenberg.cc/


Description
Daniel said four nations would rise, one after the other in the following 434 years, and they did! He said each of the first three would swallow the preceding one as they expanded, and they did! He said the forth would not be defeated but disintegrate, and the Roman empire was never defeated, it just fragmented and scattered over Europe. He said at the end of 490 years, the Messiah would ride into Jerusalem, be taken by the people, and be cut off from the land of the living, and it happened precisely! He said, after this the Jewish nation would once again be scattered around the world to give Gentiles a period of time to come into the kingdom, and they were! He said that their great temple would once again be demolished, and it was, in 70AD! He said, as the time of the Gentiles draws to a close, the Nation of Israel would be reborn and the people gathered again in their homeland. They were in 1926AD. The prophets said the nation would be born in a day, and it was, at the signing of the Belfort Treaty! How then can the future of the world be decided by humans when this has already been declared and recorded in writing before those humans have been born?

Summary
The story of Daniel and the boys in the band needs to be retold: First: to remind the atheist or humanist that he has some explaining to do. If the cosmos is not running to a plan beyond the control of humans, how could these guys predict half a millennia into the future so accurately. If there is no plan behind the universe, how could they give so much detail. Second: to remind the agnostic there is a wealth of history to checkout. Creation gives plenty of evidence that there is a design behind nature. Third: for the enthusiastic Christian theologian, who, by his brilliant mind, has so organized future events thinking scripture must follow doctrine. The Pharisees tried that and got it wrong. Forth: To encourage Christian pilgrim through life’s journey. Scripture tells us to expect many strange events in the future. These need to be anchored in the assurance of God’s ability to deliver, by reviewing His record of the past.

Excerpt
The Greatest Question of All Time What is one question humans have been asking since the dawn of civilisation? Without a doubt, it must be, ‘Who is in charge around here?’ Mankind asked the weather, and the weather replied, ‘I Am’! The parent asked the crying baby, and the baby bawled louder, ‘I Am’! The citizen asked the leader, and the leader raised his sword and said, ‘I Am!’ World leaders strut their mightiest armies on the parade ground, asking the world, ‘Who is in charge?’ And the world answers back with an earthquake or a tsunami, saying ‘I am’! The race for the greatest world army began when the ark was opened and the people came out. God reminded them, ‘Spread out and replenish the whole earth’. Nimrod moved eastward into the vale of Babel and said to the people, ‘We will camp here, keep together now, and we will build a name for ourselves.’ Out of Nimrod came a pattern for world leaders that still exists today. Notice how the techniques of Nimrod are still the basic techniques of dictators today. Nimrod (semantic: “to rebel”) was the first person after the flood to be called ‘a mighty man’. He was a mighty hunter ‘before the Lord’. But something changed because he decided later to oppose God by setting about to Page 14 Daniel and the Boys in the Band establish a kingdom called Babylon. Later, the famous hanging gardens made it the world’s first ‘must visit’ site for the rest of the world. Nimrod expanded his kingdom base by spreading from there to build new cities including: Erech, Accad, and Calneh, in the land of Shinar, into these cities, only his closest followers were allowed to live. Nimrod was a despot with an enormous ego, brilliant communication skills, and subtle negotiating skills. He started out well, as many dictators do, but turned his popularity into a power base later. His power turned into idolatry and greed. He kept his power by military might and unspeakable cruelty. He first stood up to God when God said “Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth”7. Nimrod instead, sought to unite the people in one place by building the great Tower of Babel. ‘This great project must reach into Heaven’8. He convinced his people, and united them under the famous slogan, ‘Make ourselves Great’, (MOG), which only reveals Nimrod’s ambitious and prideful nature. His massive ego craved glory, hoping to have an everlasting monument to himself9. His was the seed that continued along time and inspired following boastful kings of Babel and Babylon10. Nimrod exemplified self-dependence and arrogance, attempting to build an empire that exalted wealth, and human ambition over divine obedience without shame.

Table of Contents
Table of Contents Foreword 4 Introduction 13 The Greatest Question of All Time 13 An Antichrist in Every Age 15 Chapter 1: Introducing The Boys in the Band 19 Isaiah Was a Foundational Member. 19 Jeremiah: The Second Guy In The Band 24 Ezekiel and Jeremiah Became Mates & Corresponded 26 Daniel And His God 26 Backing Boys: Micah, Obadiah and Amos 32 Chapter 2: Defining Time 35 Month 37 Year 38 Day 39 Hour 40 Week 40 Jubilee Year 40 Rest Day / Gap Year 41 Chapter 3: The Battle Behind The Scenes 45 Genesis 3: Enemies In The Making 45 Who is an Edomite? 55 The Nations Choose Their Own Allegiance. 61 Chapter 4: Identifying Nations and People 63 Who Are My Ancestors? 65 Where Are They Now? 66 Chapter 5: Dividing the Years 75 The First Period (49 Years) 75 When will This Period Begin? 76 The second period (434 years) 77 What Happens At The End Of This Period? 78 The Purpose Of This Period According To Daniel 81 Six Purposes For This Time. 83 Chapter 6: A Time For Gentiles 89 The Benefits of Hindsight 92 The ‘Gap-Year’ is Necessary for the Church. 97 Where the book Revelation Connects 99 Chapter 7: INTERLUDE 102 The Rapture 103 The Rise of the Antichrist. 105 The Abomination of Desolation. 107 The Tribulation 108 The Battle of Gog and Magog 109 The Judgment Of The Nations 110 The Binding of Satan and the Millennial Kingdom. 111 The Great White Throne Judgment And The New Creation. 112 Chapter 8: The Gap-Year 113 Time Out On Sovereignty 114 Sovereignty of God: 115 Daniel and the church 133 The New Covenant and the Indwelling Spirit 138 Chapter 9: Final Days 141 Dealing with speculation 144 The Tribulation 148 The Rapture and Resurrection 150 Armageddon / Magog invasion 153 The Kingdom Age 154 From idea to Fruition. 159

 
 



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