Daniel 6:24 Inner Lions Den
Daniel 6:24 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Daniel 6 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Daniel 6:24 describes how the accusers are cast into the lions' den, illustrating the consequences of false judgment. The scene shows that external verdicts reflect inner states and their outcomes.
Neville's Inner Vision
Let Daniel 6:24 be read as a map of your inner terrain. The men who accused Daniel are not people in your present life but memories and judgments you have allowed to stand as gatekeepers in your mind. The den of lions is the theatre of fear-thought, the belief that a hostile verdict could crush your peace. When you align with the I AM—the unshakable awareness that you are more than any outward circumstance—you issue a sovereign decree: the outer law of appearances rests in your own consciousness. The king’s command and the lions’ assault illustrate how long you have consented to fear’s ruling, and how the apparent victory of those accusations collapses when you refuse them. Daniel’s integrity represents the steadfast state of consciousness that refuses to move from wholeness, regardless of circumstance. As you dwell in that I AM, the jaws of the lions grow still, the bones of old judgments are no longer needed, and the imagined harm dissolves into quiet, all-powerful life. The scene invites you to revise the entire drama from within: assume the state, feel it real, and watch the outer scene harmonize with your inner victory.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes, assume the I AM presence, and revise the scene by declaring, 'No accusation can prevail in me.' See the den of lions release their hold and the fear melt into quiet.
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