Dreams of Nebuchadnezzar's Mind

Daniel 2:1 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Daniel 2 in context

Scripture Focus

1And in the second year of the reign of Nebuchadnezzar Nebuchadnezzar dreamed dreams, wherewith his spirit was troubled, and his sleep brake from him.
Daniel 2:1

Biblical Context

In Daniel 2:1, Nebuchadnezzar dreams and his spirit is troubled, breaking his sleep.

Neville's Inner Vision

Daniel 2:1 shows a king whose outward dreams awaken an inward turbulence. In Neville's psychology, the king is a symbol of your own I AM throne, and the dreams are inner images rising because your awareness has not yet reconciled conflicting states. The troubled spirit is the friction between what you have believed about yourself and what your deeper consciousness already knows to be true. The breaking sleep signals a moment when old patterns yield to revelation, inviting you to revise the drama from the seat of your own awareness. Imagination is the altar here: you are the sovereign reader who can decree a new dream. By assuming a state of clarity, peace, and guidance, you transform the disturbance into a demonstration of dominion. The kingdom of God is not distant but rests in the I AM reading the dream and choosing its meaning. When you persist in feeling as if the answer is already given, the dream's charge diminishes and becomes a blueprint for the reality you now accept as true.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Tonight, close your eyes and assume you are already at peace; revise the dream by feeling it real that the answer comes from within and you rest in confidence.

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