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**Daniel 4:34** โ *"But at the end of those days I, Nebuchadnezzar, looked up to heaven, and my sanity was restored to me."*
A king who commanded armies and carved his name into empires โ humbled to eating grass like an ox. Then, one upward glance changed everything.
Notice what preceded the restoration: not a prayer, not a sacrifice, not a religious ritual. Simply *looking up*. Acknowledging that the dominion above his own existed.
Nebuchadnezzar's confession is remarkable precisely because it cost him his pride โ the one thing a king guards most fiercely. His sanity returned not when he strategized his way back, but when he yielded to the One whose *"kingdom endures from generation to generation."*
Scripture reminds us that clarity often waits on the other side of surrender. The most sovereign act we can perform is the one that releases our grip on sovereignty itself.
Walk with that truth today โ and consider what you may still be holding.
A king who commanded armies and carved his name into empires โ humbled to eating grass like an ox. Then, one upward glance changed everything.
Notice what preceded the restoration: not a prayer, not a sacrifice, not a religious ritual. Simply *looking up*. Acknowledging that the dominion above his own existed.
Nebuchadnezzar's confession is remarkable precisely because it cost him his pride โ the one thing a king guards most fiercely. His sanity returned not when he strategized his way back, but when he yielded to the One whose *"kingdom endures from generation to generation."*
Scripture reminds us that clarity often waits on the other side of surrender. The most sovereign act we can perform is the one that releases our grip on sovereignty itself.
Walk with that truth today โ and consider what you may still be holding.