Inner Fury and Power
Daniel 8:6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Daniel 8 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse presents a furious encounter: a goat charging a ram standing before the river. It expresses a clash of inner forces before a fixed state of consciousness.
Neville's Inner Vision
To Neville, this line is not about outward empires, but about the inner energy you project when your attention rushes toward a fixed picture of yourself. The ram with two horns stands as a settled state of consciousness, a consciousness that believes itself to be established before you; the arrival of the goat, the he-goat in its fury, represents the assault of a newer, more aggressive thought-form pressing upon that established state. When you read, you are not watching history unfold; you are watching the process by which you imagine your next scene. The goat races toward the ram with power because your imagination is vivid, and every thought is a seed that grows into form. The key is to realize that you are the I AM that witnesses both drama and power; the outer event only mirrors your inner stance. You can revise this scene by asserting the end you desire as already true. In practice, you hold the feeling that you are the unmoved awareness, and you do not allow the charging energy to shake your sense of self. See the ram not as a victim but as a fixed state you now reimagined as receptive and secure.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes, assume the I AM, and revise the scene so the ram stands calm as the goat approaches; feel the end state realized as you repeat I AM.
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