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Fiery furnace

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This article is about the Bible story. For the rock band, see The Fiery Furnaces.
"Mishael" redirects here. Mishael is also the name of one of the minor characters in the Book of Genesis.
"Fiery Furnace" redirects here. Fiery Furnace is also the name of a part of Arches National Park.

Image:Fiery furnace 01.jpg

The fiery furnace is a story from the Book of Daniel (chapter 3) in the Tanakh / Old Testament. The story is well-known among Jews and Christians.

In the story, Hananiah (Shadrach), Mishael (Meshach), and Azariah (Abednego), defy King Nebuchadnezzar's order that they bow down and worship a golden idol, a cult image of Nebuchadnezzar. Nebuchadnezzar, in a rage, orders the boys thrown into a furnace, but they are miraculously unharmed by the flames and survive the experience unscathed. Nebuchadnezzar sees them walking around in the furnace along with an unnamed fourth figure. After the three youths emerge, Nebuchadnezzar orders everyone to worship their God instead of the golden idol.

The Septuagint version of this story adds two additional portions to the story that take place while the three youths are inside the furnace. In the Prayer of Azariah, Azariah confesses their sins and the sins of Israel, and asks God to save them to demonstrate his power to the Babylonians. It is followed by an account of an angel coming and making the inside of the furnace feel like a cool breeze over dew, and an extended song of praise to God for delivering them.

The song of the three youths is alluded to in odes seven and eight of the canon, a hymn sung in the matins service and on other occasions in the Eastern Orthodox Church. The reading of the story of the fiery furnace, including the song, is prescribed for the vesperal Divine Liturgy celebrated by the Orthodox on Holy Saturday.

Contents

[edit] Characters

[edit] Shadrach

Hananiah is a Hebrew boy in the Book of Daniel in the Bible, whom Nebuchadnezzar names Shadrach.

  • Introduced in Daniel 1 as one of the nobles
  • Taken captive by the Babylonian army after they conquered Judah
  • Brought to Babylon to be re-educated as a Babylonian and serve in the court
  • Renamed Shadrach (an honorific for a Babylonian god)
  • Along with his companions Daniel (Babylonian name: Belteshazzar), Mishael (Babylonian name: Meshach), and Azariah (Abednego), refused the king's meats and kept Kosher by eating only vegetables, a way of resisting compromise and maintaining his Jewish identity
  • Along with Mishael and Azariah, refused to bow down to the golden idol of King Nebuchadnezzar, leading to the episode of the fiery furnace

[edit] Meshach

Meshach (me-shack) is the name given in Babylon to Mishael, one of the three young hebrew companions of Daniel (Daniel 1:7; 2:49; 3:12-30). It is likely based on a name of a Chaldean (Babylonian) god. It also means "to feed" or "to provide" (as in how a husband would provide for his family) in Hebrew.

Meshach (possibly, Mi·sha·aku), apparently a clever twist of "Who Is Like God?" to "Who Is What Aku Is?"

[edit] Abednego

Abednego (Hebrew עֲבֵד־נְגוֹ, Standard Hebrew ʿAved-nəgo, Tiberian Hebrew ʿĂḇēḏ-nəḡô) is the name given in Babylon by Nebuchadnezzar to Azariah, one of the companions of Daniel (Daniel 1:7). It is perhaps a corruption, perhaps deliberate, of either Abednebo, "servant of Nebo," or Abednergo, for Abednergal, "servant of the god Nergal."

[edit] King Nebuchadnezzar

Main article: Nebuchadrezzar II

[edit] Influence

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

he:חנניה, מישאל ועזריה nl:Azarja (Daniël) ja:アベド・ネゴ

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