Inner Kings of Daniel 11:2-4
Daniel 11:2-4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Daniel 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Daniel 11:2-4 speaks of rising empires and a king whose power is broken and scattered, signaling that external rulers fade as new inner states take their place.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within this text, Persia and Grecia are inner dispositions, not distant lands. The three Persian kings are habitual thoughts you mistake for reality; the fourth, wealth, is the belief that outer power can govern inner life. The mighty king who rises and rules with great dominion is your current dominant idea—your living sense of power. He acts as if he must be obeyed, and so he seems to rule. Yet the prophecy ends with his kingdom broken and divided toward the four winds of heaven: the old power does not endure as your posterity, but disperses into other parts of your mind, inviting new possibilities that already exist. The drama shows that authority is an inner posture, not an outer dynasty; you become the author who can dissolve the old crown by embracing a truer assumption. When you revise with the I AM as ruler, you invite a deeper sovereignty to take root and reframe your world from the inside out.
Practice This Now
Sit quietly and revise the scene as if it is happening now: I am the I AM, the sovereign ruler of my inner realm; the old king dissolves and a new dominion is established within me. Feel it real.
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