Daniel 2:35

35 Alors le fer, l'argile, l'airain, l'argent et l'or furent brisés ensemble, et devinrent comme la balle de l'aire en été; et le vent les emporta, et il ne s'en trouva plus de vestige; mais la pierre qui avait frappé la statue devint une grande montagne et remplit toute la terre.

Daniel 2:35 Meaning and Commentary

Daniel 2:35

Then was the iron, the clay, the brass, the silver, and the
gold, broken to pieces together
The feet, the basis of the image, being broken, the whole body of it fell, and with its own weight was broken to pieces; an emblem this of the utter dissolution of all the monarchies and kingdoms of the earth, signified by these several metals: and became like the chaff of the summer threshing floors;
which is exceeding small and light: and the wind carried them away, that no place was found for them;
for the several metals, and the monarchies signified by them, which were no more: the allusion is to the manner of winnowing corn in the eastern countries upon mountains, when the chaff was carried away by the wind, and seen no more: and the stone that smote the image became a great mountain, and filled
the earth;
Christ's kingdom, from small beginnings, has increased, and will more and more, until the whole earth is subject to it: this began to have its accomplishment in the first times of the Gospel, especially when the Roman empire, as Pagan, was destroyed by Constantine, and the kingdom of Christ was set up in it; and it received a further accomplishment at the time of the Reformation, when Rome Papal had a deadly blow given it, and the Gospel of Christ was spread in several nations and kingdoms; but it will receive its full accomplishment when both the eastern and western antichrists shall be destroyed, and the kingdoms of this world shall become the Lord's and his Christ's, ( Revelation 11:15 ) .

Daniel 2:35 In-Context

33 Ses jambes étaient de fer; et ses pieds, en partie de fer et en partie d'argile.
34 Tu regardais, jusqu'à ce qu'une pierre fut détachée sans le secours d'aucune main et frappa la statue dans ses pieds, qui étaient de fer et d'argile, et les brisa.
35 Alors le fer, l'argile, l'airain, l'argent et l'or furent brisés ensemble, et devinrent comme la balle de l'aire en été; et le vent les emporta, et il ne s'en trouva plus de vestige; mais la pierre qui avait frappé la statue devint une grande montagne et remplit toute la terre.
36 C'est là le songe; et nous en donnerons l'interprétation devant le roi.
37 Toi, ô roi! tu es le roi des rois, auquel le Dieu des cieux a donné le règne, la puissance, la force et la gloire;
The Ostervald translation is in the public domain.