Aramaic/Hebrew Key Terms:
Context: Nebuchadnezzar's dream reveals the succession of world empires as a great statue: head of gold (Babylon), chest/arms of silver (Medo-Persia), belly/thighs of bronze (Greece), legs of iron (Rome), feet of iron and clay (divided kingdom). A stone "cut without hands" strikes the statue, destroys all human empire, and becomes "a great mountain that filled the whole earth" (v. 35). Daniel interprets this as God's eternal kingdom that will "crush all these kingdoms and bring them to an end, but it will itself endure forever" (v. 44).
OT-to-OT Development:
Connections:
Christological Connection: The stone "cut without hands" finds fulfillment in Christ. (1) Divine Origin: The stone is "cut without hands"—not of human origin. Christ's kingdom is "not of this world" (John 18:36). (2) Humble Beginnings, Universal End: The small stone becomes "a great mountain that filled the whole earth" (v. 35). From Bethlehem's obscurity, Christ's kingdom spreads worldwide. (3) Destruction of Empire: The stone "strikes" and "crushes" all human kingdoms (vv. 34, 44-45). Christ's victory dismantles every "Nimrod" structure (1 Cor 15:24-25). (4) Eternal Kingdom: "It will itself endure forever" (v. 44). Unlike Babylon's dynasty or Rome's empire, Christ's kingdom has no end (Luke 1:33). (5) Stone Christology: Jesus identified Himself with this stone (Matt 21:44). Those who fall on it are broken (repentance); those it falls on are crushed (judgment). The Nimrods of history will be crushed by the Son of David.
Connection Method(s): Promise-Fulfillment, Contrast — The stone "cut without hands" that crushes all human empires and fills the earth is explicit prophecy fulfilled in Christ's eternal kingdom, contrasting divine origin with Nimrod-pattern human ambition.
Trajectory Table: 111 - Nimrod (The First Empire Builder)