In Daniel 9:26 we read these puzzling words:
“After the sixty-two ‘sevens,’ the Anointed One will be cut off and will have nothing. The people of the ruler who will come will destroy the city and the sanctuary.”
“After the sixty-two ‘sevens,’ the Anointed One will be cut off and will have nothing. The people of the ruler who will come will destroy the city and the sanctuary.”
Who is this “anointed one” or “prince” who is cut off? Christians and Jews have answered this question very differently through the centuries. Let’s look at the main options before exploring a forgotten figure who may open the door for a fresh reading.
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Jewish Readings
Many Jewish interpreters, especially in the Second Temple and medieval periods, saw the “anointed one” not as the Messiah, but as a priest or ruler in Israel’s history. Onias III, the high priest murdered in 171 BCE, is a common candidate. Others saw it as the collapse of priestly leadership just before the Temple’s destruction.
For Jews, Daniel was a book of covenantal suffering and restoration, not a countdown to a Christian savior. This reading made sense in their own cycles of exile and persecution.
Some readers assume Daniel is prophecy projecting into a distant future, but the book itself often works as history told in a prophetic key. Its visions rehearse Israel’s story of empires, exile, desecration, and restoration. In this sense, Daniel 9:26 may not be predicting a Messiah centuries ahead, but interpreting events already unfolding—the assassination of leaders, the unraveling of priesthood, the looming destruction of Jerusalem. The language of “sevens” and “anointed one” functions as a theological lens on history, not a coded timetable. This helps explain why Jewish interpreters saw Onias III or the collapse of the priesthood in view, and why the text continues to resonate with covenantal crises across ages.
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Christian Readings
The Church Fathers were quick to identify the “anointed one” with Christ. His crucifixion, they said, fulfilled the prophecy of being “cut off,” and the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE sealed the judgment.
But here we must be careful. Christian interpretation often skipped over Jewish memory and went straight to Christological fulfillment. And by the time of Marcion and other heretics, the pendulum swung further: the Old Testament itself was rejected as “too Jewish.” What began as fulfillment turned into detachment.
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Modern Dispensational Reading
Dispensationalism divides the seventy weeks into 69 fulfilled at Christ’s death, with a “gap,” and a final week postponed until the future. For them, the “prince” is Antichrist, who will desecrate a rebuilt Temple.
Dispensationalism divides the seventy weeks into 69 fulfilled at Christ’s death, with a “gap,” and a final week postponed until the future. For them, the “prince” is Antichrist, who will desecrate a rebuilt Temple.
This view is popular in prophecy conferences, but it is a modern construct. Neither Jews nor early Christians read Daniel this way.
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A Forgotten Option: Herod Agrippa II
Now consider a figure most Christians overlook: Herod Agrippa II. Acts 26 shows him listening to Paul’s testimony. Paul pleads with him: “King Agrippa, do you believe the prophets? I know you do.” Agrippa’s famous reply: “Almost you persuade me to be a Christian.”
Now consider a figure most Christians overlook: Herod Agrippa II. Acts 26 shows him listening to Paul’s testimony. Paul pleads with him: “King Agrippa, do you believe the prophets? I know you do.” Agrippa’s famous reply: “Almost you persuade me to be a Christian.”
Here was a Jewish prince, the heir of Herodian rule, standing at a decisive moment. Had he embraced Paul’s message, Agrippa could have been a bridge for Israel and the nations. Instead, he deferred, and with that deferral came a kind of “cutting off.”
This was not just personal hesitation. In Agrippa we see a covenantal transfer: the last flicker of Jewish princely authority before Rome took over completely. Here Edom, already absorbed into Herodian lines, now folds into Rome. In Jewish tradition, Edom had long symbolized the empire that opposed covenant faithfulness. By Agrippa’s refusal, Jewish royal authority slipped into the hands of Rome/Edom once and for all.
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Why This Matters for Christian–Jewish Relations
This interpretation doesn’t mean the Jewish reading was “wrong” or that the Christian reading was “right.” Both caught glimpses of truth. The Jews saw covenantal leadership collapse. The Christians saw fulfillment in Christ. But both missed how figures like Agrippa embodied the actual hinge of covenant history.
This interpretation doesn’t mean the Jewish reading was “wrong” or that the Christian reading was “right.” Both caught glimpses of truth. The Jews saw covenantal leadership collapse. The Christians saw fulfillment in Christ. But both missed how figures like Agrippa embodied the actual hinge of covenant history.
And this is important: Jewish interpretations of Daniel were often reactionary—shaped by centuries of persecution, and by rejection from the Jesus movement. Christian interpretations were also reactionary—often defined in opposition to Judaism, sometimes sliding into Marcionite distortions that cut the gospel away from Israel’s story.
By recovering a covenantal realism in Daniel 9—where Agrippa’s near-conversion and refusal mark a transfer from Israel’s prince to Rome/Edom—we can see how Jewish and Christian stories intertwine. This is not about triumphalism or blame. It’s about honesty: God’s covenant purposes continued, even through tragic human refusals.
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Reflection Question
When Agrippa told Paul, “Almost you persuade me,” he stood at the edge of covenant destiny. What might it look like for us today not to be “almost persuaded,” but to fully embrace God’s call to faithfulness in our own time?
When Agrippa told Paul, “Almost you persuade me,” he stood at the edge of covenant destiny. What might it look like for us today not to be “almost persuaded,” but to fully embrace God’s call to faithfulness in our own time?







