River by the Great Hiddekel
Daniel 10:4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Daniel 10 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Daniel stands by the great river on the 24th day of the first month. The scene marks a still moment before a deeper revelation.
Neville's Inner Vision
To Neville's ear, the verse speaks not of geography but of a state. The 'great river' is the vast current of your own consciousness, Hiddekel becoming the life-flow that carries images into awareness. The 'twenty-fourth day' is your moment of ready attention—a decisive point in the inner calendar when imagination may birth form in formless possibility. By the river side you are not observing a scene but becoming that which you wish to see: awareness watching awareness, I AM attending to I AM. The event is not an external visitation but an internal movement of revelation, triggered by a settled feeling that you are already what you seek. The river’s motion dissolves limitation; it neither drags you nor resists your present sense of self. Instead it invites you to rest in the assurance that your inner vision has the power to become the outward order. When you inhabit the river, you inhabit your true kingdom, and what you behold in imagination begins to exist as fact.
Practice This Now
Imagination act: Close your eyes, breathe, and place yourself at your inner river. Assume the state you seek is already true, feel the current carrying your vision into tangible form.
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