The 3 visions make much more sense when you realize they are all about the same kingdoms.
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Dan 2 Dan 7 Dan 8
Head Gold : Winged Lion : : Babylon
Chest Silver : Lopsided Bear : Ram : Media Persia
Waist Brass : Winged Leopard : Goat : Greece
Legs Iron : Iron Monster : little horn : Rome
Feet Iron/Clay : 10 horns : : Europe (Rome divided)
The head of gold is identified clearly as Babylon in Dan 2.
The Ram is identified by name as Media Persia in Dan 8
The Goat is identified as Greece by name in Dan 8.
Babylon is left out of Dan 8 because Babylon had already fallen by that time, Daniel was serving in the Media Persian empire.
The Legs/Iron Monster/Little Horn Kingdom is not identified by name, but the only candidate that fits is Rome. Rome was the world wide empire that took over after Greece. And Rome did indeed break up into multiple divided kingdoms that still exist to this day. Europe. (Beats me why Europe wasn't represented directly in the Dan 8 vision)
Many try to connect the little horn in Dan 8 with Antiochus Epiphanies, but it just won't work.
Dan 8:4 ram ... became great (Media Persia)
Dan 8:8 goat waxed very great (Greece under Alexander the Great)
Dan 8:9 little horn, which waxed exceeding great
Ok, we can argue about how big \"exceeding great\" is, but its hard to argue with the sequence. Antiochus was a small king, he didn't compare to Media Persia, let alone Alexander the Great. There is simply no way he qualifies as the top of this list, whereas Rome clearly does.
You will note that I have carefully left out all of the \"spiritual\" interpretations and stuck just with the political. One of the reasons there are divergent Christian interpretations of Daniel's prophecies is the different viewpoints Protestants and Catholics usually take on the spiritual application and meanings of these prophecies. So lets just avoid that heated debate. The political timeline is simpler and much less controversial.
Now then, I do NOT expect this to convince determined Atheists to become Christians. There IS wiggle room, and the number of different Christian interpretations proves that. But I still think these are way and above the Nostradamus nonsense.
Daniel predicts that Media Persia would be succeeded by Greece, (NAMING the kingdoms, no guesswork here) If we grant that Daniel was actually written in the 6th century BC (and there are really good reasons we should), then this prediction was made about 200 years before Alexander conquered Persia.
It predicts that Greece would have one great king that led it to conquer the world. And that this great king would be broken at the height of his power. His kingdom would be split up under four smaller kings. This matches the history of Greece and Alexander the Great so perfectly that it has been used as the primary reason for saying Daniel must have been written at a later date.
None of this part of the prophecy is vague Nostradamus nonsense. Greece is named directly, the details about the horn being a king etc, all explained right there.
Dan 8:20-22 The ram which thou sawest having two horns are the kings of Media and Persia. And the rough goat is the king of Grecia: and the great horn that is between his eyes is the first king. Now that being broken, whereas four stood up for it, four kingdoms shall stand up out of the nation, but not in his power.
More vague is the prediction that the next world conquering kingdom after Greece would be one big powerful kingdom that shattered into small kingdoms that are still around until the end of the world. It's true, but not out of believability to guess.
Which brings us to:
In the time of those kings, the God of heaven will set up a kingdom that will never be destroyed, nor will it be left to another people. It will crush all those kingdoms and bring them to an end, but it will itself endure forever.\"
I take it that Christians interpret this part to be metaphorical,
Nope, \"those kings\" are the shattered remnants of Rome, the many kingdoms of Europe. And this is a literal description of the second coming, it just hasn't happened yet.