Questions about Daniel 11:1-45
- Historically who was the "Mighty King" spoken of in
Daniel 11:3?
- Jesus Christ.
- Darius the Mede.
- Julius Caesar.
- Alexander the Great.
- Is the event that is recorded in Daniel 11:31 recorded elsewhere
in Scripture?
- Yes also in Daniel 8:13.
- Yes also in Daniel 9:27.
- Yes also in Matthew 24:15.
- Yes also in Mark 13:14.
- Yes also in 2 Thessalonians 2:3-10.
- All of the above.
- Is the person referred to in Daniel 11:21 the same person that
is referred to through to the end of the chapter?
- Yes.
- No.
- Relative to our day when does the event in Daniel 11:31 occur?
- Long before Jesus was born to us.
- At the time of Christ
- In 70 AD when the Romans destroyed the city of Jerusalem and the Sanctuary.
- Yet in our future.
- Into how many pieces will the mighty king's kingdom be divided?
- Two.
- Three.
- Four.
- Seven.
- With the understanding of the fact that Daniel chapter two tells
us that there was to be four kingdoms that would come to rule over Israel,
which kingdom did the mighty king bring?
- The Third.
- The mighty and never ending kingdom of heaven.
- The kingdom of Greece.
- The restored kingdom of Israel.
- Both (a.) and (c.).
- The kings of the North and South all descend from which kingdom?
- The third, that is, the Greek.
- Satan's earthly kingdom.
- The Roman Empire.
- The kingdom of Israel and the Kingdom of Judah.
- Which nation dominated the King of the South's kingdom?
- Judah.
- Egypt.
- Cush.
- None of the above.
- Which nation dominated the King of the North's kingdom?
- The ten tribes of northern Israel.
- What is now modern Russia.
- What is now modern Germany.
- What is now Syria.
- At which point in the narrative does the text switch from historically
fulfilled events to yet to be fulfilled events?
- Verse 21.
- Verse 31.
- Verse 40.
- It is all historical.
- Where in the narrative do we see the "abomination that causes
desolation" sign?
- Verse 31.
- Verse 36.
- It is not here.
- Where does the king of the North go in Daniel 11:19?
- He was taken from the earth and placed into the Abyss, that is, Hell.
- He died and was buried.
- He retired from politics.
- He fell into a deep hole.
- In the account of Elijah and the firey chariot in 2 Kings 2:9-12
where did Elijah go?
- Heaven.
- Hell, or the Abyss.
- He died and was buried.
- None of the above.
- Did Elijah die a physical death in 2 Kings 2:9-12?
- Yes.
- No.
- Did Elijah later come back to earth and live as a man?
- Yes.
- No.
- In the account of Enoch in Genesis 5:21-24 where did Enoch go?
- Heaven.
- Hell, or the Abyss.
Questions about Revelation 17:7-11
- What is meant by the statement, "The beast, which you saw,
once was , now is not, and will come up out of the Abyss..."?
- It doesn't mean anything, it is just flowery talk.
- It means that he was once in the church, but he fell away, but he will
repent and return.
- It means that he was once alive on the earth, but now he is not, and
he will come up out of Hell to live on the earth again.
- None of the above.
- The beast with seven heads represents what?
- Satan.
- The fourth kingdom.
- NATO.
- All of the above.
- The seven heads are what?
- Rulers over the fourth kingdom.
- Seven kingdoms that will rule over Israel.
- They are the first kings of Babylon, Persia, Greece, Rome, Arabia,
Turkey, and England.
- They are the seven Prime Ministers of modern day Israel.
- Is the beast that once was, and now is not, (verse 11), a physical
part of the seven headed beast?
- Yes.
- No.
- What does this say concerning the origin of the man called the
beast?
- It says that he is not from the fourth kingdom.
- It says that he is from the fourth kingdom.
- Where does the eighth head come from?
- From the third kingdom?
- From the Abyss.
- From the city of seven hills.
- From the Roman Empire.
- Both (a.) and (b.) above