Theme: our mind is our spiritual heart what’s on
the walls of our heart’s need to be biblical 
prophecy because biblical prophecy will come to pass prophecy is a biblical  prediction we need to learn how to think word that’s what need to come to pass in our lives my beloved wife is a carpenter when i thought about her putting the tiles on the wall this theme came to mind.
Daniel 5:5
Suddenly, they saw the fingers of a human hand writing on the plaster wall of the king’s palace, near the lampstand. The king himself saw the hand as it wrote,
Divine story time.
Daniel 5: 5 the "writing on the wall" story, which takes place during a great feast thrown by the last Babylonian king, Belshazzar. During this banquet, Belshazzar sacrilegiously used sacred vessels from the Temple in Jerusalem, prompting a disembodied hand to appear and write a divine message on the wall, a moment that foreshadows the downfall of his kingdom. This event happened in the 6th century BC, shortly before the Babylonian Empire fell to the Persian Empire.
The setting: The passage occurs during a lavish feast held by King Belshazzar, who was the last king of the Neo-Babylonian Empire and ruling as co-regent with his father, Nabonidus.
The sacrilege: Belshazzar and his nobles were drinking wine from sacred, golden vessels that had been looted from the Temple in Jerusalem.
The miraculous event: In the midst of this revelry, a hand appeared and began writing on the palace wall, visible to the king and his guests.
The historical context: This event took place in 539 BC, a time of impending doom for Babylon, which was conquered by the Persian Empire shortly after.
The divine message: The words written on the wall were interpreted by the prophet Daniel, revealing that God had numbered the days of Belshazzar's kingdom, weighed him and found him wanting, and that his kingdom would be divided and given to the Medes and Persians.
The outcome: The prophecy came true that very night; Belshazzar was killed, and the kingdom was taken over by the Medes and Persians.





















































































