Two Thousand Three Hundred Days
Daniel 8:13-14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Daniel 8 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verses present a dialogue about how long the vision of sacrifice and desolation lasts, ending with a period (2300 days) after which the sanctuary is cleansed.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within Daniel's vision, the two saints symbolize facets of your own consciousness questioning the duration of upheaval. The 'daily sacrifice' and the 'transgression of desolation' are not external events but inner routines and disturbing thoughts that tread down the sanctity of your mind. The cry, 'How long?' is your longing for constancy, for a settled sense of self. The answer—'two thousand and three hundred days'—is not a clock but a statement of persistence: as long as the mind repeats the same inner posture, healing remains on pause. Yet the promise that after this period the sanctuary will be cleansed points to a turning of awareness. When you stop identifying with disturbance and begin to subject your inner theater to the I AM, the sanctuary experiences its cleansing, and your life—the host and the temple—rises in renewed clarity. The vision thus becomes a map of inner causation: your consistent assumption of wholeness causes the desolation to fade, and your awareness to stand restored.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Assume the end—feel the sanctuary already cleansed; dwell in the I AM and imagine the temple radiant; repeat for a few minutes, letting the feeling of wholeness rewrite your inner narrative.
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