Daniel 7:13–14 Explained: The Vision About The Son of Man

Six hundred years before Jesus was born, a man in exile saw something.

Daniel, an Israelite in the Babylonian court, saw a night vision that would become one of the most important texts in the Old Testament.

He did not fully understand it. He wrote it down.

The Vision in Full

NIV “In my vision at night I looked, and there before me was one like a son of man, coming with the clouds of heaven. He approached the Ancient of Days and was led into his presence. He was given authority, glory and sovereign power; all nations and peoples of every language worshiped him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion that will not pass away, and his kingdom is one that will never be destroyed.” (Daniel 7:13–14)

Every phrase carries weight, and the best way to understand it is to take it one piece at a time.

The Room Where Daniel Saw It

Daniel 7 opens with Daniel lying in bed, dreaming.

He sees four beasts rising from the sea: terrifying, aggressive, world-devouring empires represented as animals.

Then the scene shifts.

A courtroom appears in heaven.

The “Ancient of Days” takes His throne: white garments, white hair, a river of fire flowing before Him, thousands of attendants surrounding Him (Daniel 7:9–10).

The beasts are judged.

And then the figure of verses 13 and 14 appears.

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The beasts came from below, from the chaotic sea.

The one in verses 13 and 14 comes from above.

He is not seizing power; He is receiving it.

I once heard someone say of a role they had been given rather than taken: “I didn’t fight for it. It was given to me. That’s a different kind of authority.”

That distinction is exactly what Daniel is making.

One Like a Son of Man

The phrase “one like a son of man” is Aramaic: bar enash, literally “like a human being.”

What the “Like” Does

The word “like” creates deliberate ambiguity.

Clouds in the Hebrew Bible are consistently divine imagery: at Sinai, in the tabernacle, in the temple.

For a being to ride the clouds is to be associated with the divine.

Yet this figure looks human: recognizably like a person, yet carrying authority that belongs to God.

What the Title Points Toward

The Aramaic bar enash is the source of the title Jesus used most often for Himself.

He used it over eighty times in the Gospels: for His authority (Mark 2:10), His suffering (Mark 8:31), and His return (Matthew 24:30).

Each time, He was pointing back to this vision.

Coming With the Clouds of Heaven

A Movement That Goes Upward, Not Down

In most people’s imagination, the figure comes down from the clouds to earth.

But the text says something different: the figure comes to the Ancient of Days.

This is investiture, a scene of receiving authority.

The destination is the presence of God.

What the Clouds Mean

The cloud was the vehicle of divine presence in Jewish understanding.

When the cloud filled Solomon’s temple, the priests could not stand (1 Kings 8:10–11).

The figure approaching the Ancient of Days in a cloud is moving through the presence of God.

He Came to the Ancient of Days

Who the Ancient of Days Is

The Ancient of Days is God the Father.

The title appears three times in Daniel 7.

It describes the God older than time, whose authority is prior to and above every earthly power.

A friend told me about meeting an elderly statesman in his late nineties, a man who had lived through events most people only read about in history books.

She said the feeling in the room was different from meetings with powerful young people.

“It was like being in the presence of accumulated time,” she said.

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The Ancient of Days carries something like that, multiplied beyond human comparison.

Being Presented Before Him

He is “presented before him,” led into the divine presence.

This is formal court language: granted access to ultimate authority.

The Son of Man receives the kingdom from the Father, not independently of Him.

Dominion, Glory, and a Kingdom That Will Not Be Destroyed

This is where the vision reaches its peak.

Three things are given: dominion, glory, and a kingdom.

What Each Word Means

Dominion is authority. Glory is the weight of presence. Kingdom is the scope of rule: all peoples, nations, and languages.

Nothing is excluded.

The Contrast With the Beasts

The four beasts had dominion too, but each had an end.

Rome fell. Babylon fell.

The Son of Man’s kingdom stands by the authority of the Ancient of Days Himself.

What Jesus Did With This Vision

A Title He Chose Deliberately

When Jesus called Himself “Son of Man,” He was not reaching for the most modest title available.

He was reaching for the most audacious one.

Every Jew who knew Daniel 7 knew what Son of Man meant: the figure who receives dominion over all peoples from God Himself.

When the high priest asked at His trial whether He was the Christ, Jesus said: “I am. And you will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of Power, and coming with the clouds of heaven” (Mark 14:62).

He quoted Daniel 7:13 to the man who was about to condemn Him.

The high priest tore his robes.

He understood exactly what Jesus was claiming.

A Vision That Runs Through the Cross

Jesus linked the Son of Man title not only to glory but to suffering: betrayed, handed over, killed, and raised.

The route to all dominion ran through a cross.

The one who was given everything laid everything down, and was then given everything again.

What the Vision Is Saying to You Now

Daniel 7:13–14 is a statement about who is in charge.

The beasts represent a principle that has not disappeared: the tendency of power to consume what is around it, to treat dominion as something seized.

But the vision says something that stands over all of it: there is a kingdom that will not be destroyed.

I have sat with people when the world felt completely out of control.

What Daniel’s vision offers in those moments is not an explanation but a throne room.

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The Ancient of Days is seated. What was given to that figure will not pass away.

Daniel 7:13–14: What People Are Asking

Who is the “son of man” in Daniel 7:13–14?

The figure appears human but comes on divine clouds and receives universal authority from God. Most Christian scholars identify this as a messianic figure fulfilled in Jesus Christ, who used “Son of Man” as His most frequent self-designation, often drawing directly on Daniel’s vision and language.

Why did Jesus call himself the Son of Man so often?

Jesus used the title more than eighty times, consciously invoking Daniel 7:13–14 and claiming the identity of the figure who receives everlasting dominion. The title was a claim to divine authority and a statement about how that authority would be exercised through suffering and service.

What are the “clouds of heaven” in Daniel 7:13?

Cloud imagery throughout the Hebrew Bible accompanies God’s presence: at Sinai, in the tabernacle, in the temple. To come with the clouds is to move in God’s presence and carry His authority. The figure in Daniel 7:13 arrives in the manner of divine manifestation.

Who is the Ancient of Days in Daniel 7?

The Ancient of Days is God the Father, described in Daniel 7:9 with white garments, seated on a fiery throne with thousands attending. The title emphasizes God’s eternality: He predates every kingdom and every power. The Son of Man receives his dominion from this figure, not independently of Him.

How does Daniel 7:13–14 connect to Jesus’s trial in Mark 14?

At His trial Jesus quoted Daniel 7:13: “You will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of Power, and coming with the clouds of heaven.” The high priest tore his robes, recognizing a claim to divine authority equal to God’s.

Is the everlasting kingdom in Daniel 7:14 the same as the Kingdom of God?

Yes. Jesus inaugurated it through His first coming, death, and resurrection, and will consummate it at His return. The everlasting, indestructible nature of the kingdom Daniel describes aligns with what Jesus taught: the kingdom of God is both already present and still coming in fullness.

Before the Ancient of Days

Lord, Daniel saw something he could not fully explain.

He wrote it down anyway, trusting that You knew what it meant.

I want to hold that as my posture.

There is a throne room I cannot see.

A figure who has already received dominion, glory, and a kingdom that will not be destroyed.

And that figure has a name: Jesus.

Let me live today in the knowledge that what looks chaotic from where I am standing has already been ordered from that throne room.

The Ancient of Days is seated.

His kingdom will not pass away.

That is enough.

Amen.

Academic and Pastoral Sources

Goldingay, J. (1989). Daniel (Word Biblical Commentary). Thomas Nelson.

Collins, J. J. (1993). Daniel: A commentary on the Book of Daniel (Hermeneia). Fortress Press.

Longman, T. (1999). Daniel (NIV Application Commentary). Zondervan.

GotQuestions.org. (n.d.). Who is the Son of Man in Daniel 7?

Bible Study Tools. (n.d.). Daniel 7:13–14 commentary and cross-references.

Crosswalk.com. (n.d.). What does Daniel 7:13–14 mean?

Christianity.com. (n.d.). Daniel 7:13–14 explained: The son of man vision.

(n.d.). Daniel chapter 7 commentary. Enduring Word Blog.

(n.d.). What does Daniel 7:13 mean? BibleRef Commentary Blog.

(2025). Daniel 7:13–14 and the identity of the Son of Man. Christian Publishing House Blog.

(2025). Daniel 7:13 meaning and commentary. Bible Outlined Blog.

Pastor Eve Mercie
Pastor Eve Merciehttps://scriptureriver.com
Pastor Eve Mercie is a minister and biblical counselor with over 15 years of experience in local church ministry. She holds a Master of Divinity from Liberty University, which laid the foundation of her theological training and shaped her ability to teach Scripture with clarity and depth. She has served in both Associate Pastor and Lead Pastor roles across congregations in the United States. Her studies in counseling psychology gave her the tools to sit with people in real pain, and over the years she has walked alongside hundreds of individuals working through anxiety, depression, grief, identity struggles, and seasons of spiritual doubt. With a background in philosophy, she has strengthened her ability to engage hard questions about faith with honesty and without easy answers. Training in leadership and organizational management has also helped her build and sustain healthy ministry environments where people genuinely grow. Her studies in history and sociology have given her a broad understanding of the world her congregation actually lives in, making her teaching grounded and relevant. Through her ministry blog, Pastor Eve addresses the questions believers carry into their daily lives, including the ones rarely spoken aloud in church. Her writing is practical, and rooted in Scripture, shaped by everything she has studied and everyone she has served. She is committed to helping Christians build a faith that is theologically solid, emotionally healthy, and strong enough for real life.
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