Inner Wealth of the Kingdom
1 Kings 10:27 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 1 Kings 10 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Solomon's wealth appears so abundant that silver is as common as stones and cedars as plentiful as sycamore trees in Jerusalem. The verse invites us to view abundance as a state of consciousness, not mere external fortune.
Neville's Inner Vision
Think of the king as the I AM within you, the self who rules the inner city of consciousness. When the text says silver is in Jerusalem like stones and cedars like trees in the vale, it reveals that abundance is a settled, visible quality of your inner realm. Wealth does not arrive from luck or distant sources; it is an alignment of your interior life with belief and feeling. In Neville's language, you, the speaker of thoughts, are the architect of your surroundings; you choose the state and the state reforms your world. The kingdom grows not by chasing commodities but by becoming the kind of awareness that does not fear lack. The imagery—cedars, stones, sycamore ways—marks a landscape that has been reordered by imagination. Your authority lies in your decided act of attention: to dwell in a Jerusalem of fulfillment, to regard every perceived resource as a mirror of your inner abundance. If you practice this, the outer scene shifts to reflect the inner foundation: wealth is already within you, waiting to be consciously realized through imagination.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Close your eyes and affirm 'I AM wealth' until the feeling of abundance is real in you. Revise any sense of lack by speaking from the I AM, and visualize Jerusalem lined with silver and cedar.
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