
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


One dream. One towering tree. One sentence that cuts through our noise: “the Most High rules the kingdom of men.” Daniel 4 is a story about the humbling of Nebuchadnezzar, but it lands on all of us because pride rarely announces itself. Sometimes it looks like competence, independence, or the quiet belief that we can run our lives without help, without prayer, and without surrender.
We walk through the dream that turns from a beautiful picture of strength into a warning from heaven, then we sit with the mercy tucked inside the severity: the stump remains, the suffering has a limit, and God’s intent is restoration, not destruction. Along the way, we notice Daniel’s surprising heart for the king who harmed him and connect that to Jesus’ call to love your enemies, bless those who curse you, and pray for those who abuse you.
We also get practical about repentance, because Daniel’s counsel is not sentimental. Repentance is not vague regret; it is turning with action, practicing righteousness, and showing mercy where we have ignored it. The turning point for Nebuchadnezzar is simple and life-changing: he lifts his eyes to heaven, and his reason returns.
If you want to learn more about the MidTree story or connect with us, go to our website HERE or text us at 812-MID-TREE.
By MidTree Church5
3434 ratings
One dream. One towering tree. One sentence that cuts through our noise: “the Most High rules the kingdom of men.” Daniel 4 is a story about the humbling of Nebuchadnezzar, but it lands on all of us because pride rarely announces itself. Sometimes it looks like competence, independence, or the quiet belief that we can run our lives without help, without prayer, and without surrender.
We walk through the dream that turns from a beautiful picture of strength into a warning from heaven, then we sit with the mercy tucked inside the severity: the stump remains, the suffering has a limit, and God’s intent is restoration, not destruction. Along the way, we notice Daniel’s surprising heart for the king who harmed him and connect that to Jesus’ call to love your enemies, bless those who curse you, and pray for those who abuse you.
We also get practical about repentance, because Daniel’s counsel is not sentimental. Repentance is not vague regret; it is turning with action, practicing righteousness, and showing mercy where we have ignored it. The turning point for Nebuchadnezzar is simple and life-changing: he lifts his eyes to heaven, and his reason returns.
If you want to learn more about the MidTree story or connect with us, go to our website HERE or text us at 812-MID-TREE.

33,104 Listeners

188 Listeners

26,639 Listeners

1,565 Listeners