The Coronation No Empire Could Stop
On June 2, 1953, over twenty million people crowded around television sets across Britain to watch something their ancestors could only have imagined — the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in Westminster Abbey. The ceremony lasted nearly three hours. Archbishop Geoffrey Fisher placed St. Edward's Crown on her head while trumpets sounded, cannons fired from the Tower of London, and the congregation shouted "God save the Queen!" The weight of that crown — nearly five pounds of solid gold — symbolized an authority that stretched across continents.
Yet for all its pageantry, Elizabeth's reign was limited. Her empire shrank. Her authority was constitutional, bounded by Parliament and time. She reigned over a kingdom already in decline.
Daniel saw a coronation of an altogether different order. The Ancient of Days, the Almighty robed in white as snow, took His seat on a throne of blazing fire. Ten thousand times ten thousand stood before Him. And then, approaching on the clouds of heaven, came one like a son of man — not seizing power by conquest, but receiving it as a gift from the Eternal One. His dominion would never shrink. His kingdom would never pass to another. Every nation, every language, every people would serve Him — not by compulsion, but because His authority was absolute and unending.
No crown forged by human hands compares to the sovereignty bestowed that day in the courts of heaven. Every earthly throne is a fading shadow of the one Daniel witnessed — the kingdom that will never, ever end.
Scripture References
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