For we have sinned and committed iniquity, departing from you.
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Jerome
AD 420
The three young people surely did not sin, nor were they old enough at the time they were deported to Babylon to justify being punished for their personal faults. Thus, it must mean that they were, therefore, speaking as representatives of the people in the same way as the apostle when he said, “What I do is not what I want, the actions that I do are those which I do not want to do,” and so it goes throughout the rest of that passage in a similar context. - "Commentary on Daniel 3.29"
Some authorities very wrongly apply this to the devil himself, asserting that in the |45 consummation at the end of the world even the devil himself will receive a knowledge of God and will exhort all men to repent. These persons would have it that this is the king of Nineveh who finally descends from his proud throne and attains to the rewards of humility.
Now of course the three youths had not sinned, nor were they old enough when brought to Babylon to warrant being punished for their own faults. Consequently they were speaking as representatives of their people, in the same manner as the Apostle had to state: "For what I wish to do, that I do not; but what I do not want, that I carry into effect" (Rom 7:19), and so on with the rest of that same passage.
There is none, there is no remedy better able to destroy sins than to continually recall them and to continually accuse oneself. In this way the publican could cancel his innumerable sins by saying, “God, have mercy on me, a sinner.” And thus also the Pharisee remained unjustified because, taking no care to think of his own sins, he condemned everyone else, saying, “I am not like other people, greedy and avaricious, or even like this publican.” Thus also Paul exhorted, “Let each one examine his own conduct, and then he will find reason to boast only in himself and not in others.” Did you know that even in the Old Testament the righteous accused themselves? Listen to them speak as with one voice. David said, “My iniquities have gone over my head. They oppress me like a heavy burden.” And Isaiah cried out, “Woe is me, wretched man, because I am a man of unclean lips!” The three young men, while they were in the furnace and offered their bodies to death for God, counted themselves among t...