Daniel 5:5
Immediately the fingers of a human hand appeared and began writing on the plaster of the wall of the king's palace, next to the lampstand. The king was watching the hand as it wrote. The narrative's sudden shift from human celebration to supernatural intervention marks the turning point. A disembodied hand—clearly not an ordinary human hand but a divine manifestation—appears and writes on the palace wall in full view of the feasting king and court. The location next to the lampstand (a source of light) suggests that the writing is meant to be clearly visible and readable. Belshazzar's watching the hand as it wrote creates a moment of supernatural terror interrupting the revelry; the king witnesses God's direct intervention in response to his blasphemy. The writing itself remains uninterpreted in this verse, creating narrative suspense and preparing for the interpreters' failure and Daniel's eventual success.