So this is a false statement because some suggest Daniel was written by a Jewish author but others including Ezekiel, many times and Jesus Christ in Mathew and Mark.
The traditional view is that it was written after the Babylonian captivity due to manuscript dating evidence, supernatural events that took place in the inter testament period and prophecies that are yet to be fulfilled.
So Daniel is not a forgery.
All of these mistakes together are simply impossible for an author at the time,
much less a high ranking Babylonian and Persian official, as Daniel is incredibly portrayed throughout. The actual author of Daniel was simply very ill-informed about the Babylonian and Persian eras, and is struggling to make up anything he can using famous names vaguely known here and about, and also to “fix” failed prophecies in Jeremiah (who predicted
the “Medes” would vanquish the Babylonians; it ended up being the Persians instead, but this can explain why Daniel has “changed” Darius into a Mede). Which all indicates Daniel was most likely written centuries later than it purports. This was so obvious that it was noticed even in antiquity: the 3rd century philosopher
Porphyry famously pointed it out
long ago. It’s thus very telling that, though it purports to be written in the 6th century B.C. foretelling events in a later century (in
Daniel 9-12), it becomes quite accurate
for that later century. As Seow aptly puts it, “the book is remarkably precise in its allusions to certain events in the Ptolemaic and Seleucid periods down to the time just before the death of Antiochus IV Epiphanes” at the end of 164 B.C. After which year it gets everything about the course of history disastrously wrong. Two guesses then when Daniel was written.
In furtherance of this conclusion it has also been pointed out that the Aramaic of Daniel (in
Daniel 3:4-15) weirdly contains loan words from Greek—in the words it chooses to use for zither, sambuka, harp, and a multi-piped flute. It is strange even that Greek instruments should appear here at all (if such instead is meant), in a proclamation about what people should expect to hear from a Babylonian imperial marching band. Indeed, Greek loan words don’t
otherwise appear in Aramaic texts or inscriptions until the
late Persian period (hundreds of years after Daniel purports to have been written). This does not alone prove the conclusion, but it does increase its probability. Though apologists will argue that Greek loan words in Daniel are
possible for an early Persian-era text (e.g. Benjamin Noonan, “
Daniel’s Greek Loanwords in Dialectal Perspective,”
Bulletin for Biblical Research 28.4 [2018]: 575-603), that ignores the actual point which is that
this is improbable. An official “Babylonian herald” such as Daniel claims to be quoting, or a high official in the Babylonian (and then Persian) court, as Daniel is depicted, would far sooner have employed much more recognizable Babylonian, Persian, or (as the text usually attempts) Aramaic words for those same things (or have correctly described an actual Babylonian orchestra). Thus, that the obscure and largely impertinent language (or even actual instruments) of the Greeks would be chosen for them instead
is really weird. It thus does not matter if it is “possible.” What matters is that this is not at all what we expect, and thus is not at all
probable; whereas an author writing under Antiochus who had little knowledge of Babylonian or Persian court vocabulary for such things (or even the actual musical instruments of that era) would be
entirely likely to grab
then-more-familiar Greek words for the purpose instead (especially for instruments that would by then be entirely familiar to a people who had been serving under a Greek empire for decades or even centuries). It is this difference in probabilities that makes this observation evidence for forgery. This cannot be rebutted by arguing for a mere “possibility.” The point carries. No apologetics can escape its impact.
Finally (per Collins, pp. 24-38 and Seow, pp. 7-11), many serious proposals have been made (and evidence adduced) that earlier parts of Daniel (much or all of Daniel 1-6) might date to around the 4th century (still, thus, forged), but that obviously does not include chapters 9-12, which can only date to the 2nd century, yet are the chapters Christian apologists most desperately need to be authentic. But their having been forged in the 4th century wouldn’t make them authentic either; and we don’t know how much any earlier material may have been altered or edited for the 2nd century edition (indeed additions kept being made even after that, e.g.
Bel and the Dragon as chapter 14,
Susanna as chapter 13, and the
Song of the Three Children was added to chapter 3). So none of these scholarly arguments are of any help to apologetics. (I should also add that even in the small fraction of the text of Daniel recovered at Qumran are many variant readings and scribal corruptions, which means the total number of corruptions across the whole text of Daniel must have been much larger even by then; and therefore considerably more must have crept into any manuscripts from centuries later.)
Historical Context
Daniel 11:1-4 is not so accurate, but
Daniel 11:5-39 is spot on, and that chapter gets progressively more detailed and precise as it follows history along from the
Persian to the
Alexandrian and then the
Seleucid eras, until it spends the most verses, and with the most verifiable detail, on the ten year reign of
Antiochus, all the way up to just before his death (and the Jewish recapture of Jerusalem) in 164, during the
Maccabean Revolt. As Seow observes, therefore, “the interests” of the “author and probably its audience are focused on that decade.” So the book of Daniel is really
about that period of history, and was written
for Jewish readers
going through that decade. It was thus clearly written as an inspirational tract for the people fighting for the Jewish rebellion under the Maccabees; it was probably passed off as a forgotten book “serendipitously rediscovered” at just the right moment when increased resolve was needed to finally vanquish the enemy Antiochus (the convenient “discovery” of long lost books was a known way to pass off forgeries promoting going political movements; one can suspect it for
Deuteronomy, the
Linen Rolls and
Sibylline Oracles, and the original
Ascension of Isaiah).
So when we notice Daniel
then starts to get history totally wrong (
Daniel 11:40-45), incorrectly “predicting” a war between the
Ptolemies and
Seleucids that never came to pass, and that Antiochus would conquer most of North Africa (he didn’t capture even a single province there, due to the unforeseen intervention of the Romans), and die in Palestine (
he was nowhere near), we can directly tell when the book was written: sometime in or shortly before 165. Because any earlier and its inaccuracies would start sooner, and any later and it wouldn’t have circulated successfully so as to gain a strong position as scripture, since its predictions would have been too rapidly falsified; instead it clearly gained such fanatical support that even when its prophecies eventually did fail, people’s faith in it was strong enough to motivate them to do what they did with all beloved but failed prophecies: try to reinterpret them as referring to yet a further distant time (exactly as
Daniel 9 does with a failed prophecy of Jeremiah). And notably, it is precisely the effort to do that
that caused Christianity.
It is generally agreed by mainstream experts now that the “Messiah” who is “predicted” to be killed (
Daniel 9:25-26) was actually meant to be the “rightful” high priest
Onias III, illegitimately deposed and replaced by Antiochus but revered as something of a saint at the time (e.g.
2 Maccabees 3-4), who then was assassinated while in exile in Syria before Daniel was written (making this a classic, and indeed altogether typical, example of “prophecy” being written after the fact and then purported to have been written before the fact,
a common device in prophecy as a literary genre). That this makes the strange math in Daniel 9 work perfectly only confirms this conclusion. Since Daniel was actually written centuries after the restoration of the Jewish Temple under Cyrus, 59 years after its sack (by Babylonians in 598, who were overthrown by Cyrus in 539), and thus
the prophecy of Jeremiah that this
would not happen for seventy years was proved false, that “seventy” year timetable had to be “reinterpreted” so Jeremiah could be rescued from the charge of being a false prophet. Accomplishing this by reimagining Jeremiah as “actually” referring to the Maccabean revolt was then propagandistically exactly what its authors needed. So they did some weird math to make it come out that way.