Inner Kingship and Provision
1 Kings 10:28-29 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 1 Kings 10 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Solomon had horses and chariots brought from Egypt, paid for by the king's merchants at set prices; the passage records outward provisions for his reign.
Neville's Inner Vision
This passage invites you to read the outward details as an inward economy. Egypt represents old conditioning and limitation; horses and chariots are the swift powers of your imagination and will that awaken when claimed by awareness. The linen yarn and the merchant prices symbolize the precise valuation you assign to your inner resources—the mental currency by which you move. When the text notes that the kings of the Hittites and Syria obtained them by their means, it points to the truth that outward power flows through your own inner channels of decision and belief, not chance. In Neville’s sense, Solomon is your present state of royal consciousness, and wealth is the felt reality of resources already held in mind. If you dwell in the I AM—the sense of being the creator here and now—your inner merchants bring forth opportunity and action. Supply aligns to the quality of your assumption; the external world becomes a reflection of your inner state, dissolving scarcity as you awaken to your inherited sovereignty.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: In a moment of quiet, assume the state of kingship—say I AM, I have all resources now—and visualise horses and chariots arriving from your inner Egypt, the merchants delivering what you need, and feel the exchange is already done.
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