Contemporary English Version Anglicised

Daniel 6:5-17 Contemporary English Version Anglicised (CEVUK00)

5. Finally, they said to one another, “We will never be able to bring any charge against Daniel, unless it has to do with his religion.”

6. They all went to the king and said:“Your Majesty, we hope you live for ever!

7. All of your officials, leaders, advisers, and governors agree that you should make a law forbidding anyone to pray to any god or human except you for the next thirty days. Everyone who disobeys this law must be thrown into a pit of lions.

8. Order this to be written and then sign it, so it cannot be changed, just as no written law of the Medes and Persians can be changed.”

9. So King Darius made the law and had it written down.

10. Daniel heard about the law, but when he returned home, he went upstairs and prayed in front of the window that faced Jerusalem. In the same way that he had always done, he knelt down in prayer three times a day, giving thanks to God.

11. The men who had spoken to the king watched Daniel and saw him praying to his God for help.

12. They went back to the king and said, “Didn't you make a law that forbids anyone to pray to any god or human except you for the next thirty days? And doesn't the law say that everyone who disobeys it will be thrown into a pit of lions?”“Yes, that's the law I made,” the king agreed. “And just like all written laws of the Medes and Persians, it cannot be changed.”

13. The men then told the king, “That Jew named Daniel, who was brought here as a captive, refuses to obey you or the law that you ordered to be written. And he still prays to his god three times a day.”

14. The king was really upset to hear about this, and for the rest of the day he tried to think how he could save Daniel.

15. At sunset the men returned and said, “Your Majesty, remember that no written law of the Medes and Persians can be changed, not even by the king.”

16. So Darius ordered Daniel to be brought out and thrown into a pit of lions. But he said to Daniel, “You have been faithful to your God, and I pray that he will rescue you.”

17. A stone was rolled over the pit, and it was sealed. Then Darius and his officials stamped the seal to show that no one should let Daniel out.