Inner Remnant of Grace
1 Kings 14:13 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 1 Kings 14 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Israel mourns for Jeroboam’s son, for in him there is found some good toward the LORD within Jeroboam’s house; a rare remnant of righteousness persists in an imperfect lineage.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within the structure you call self, the phrase ‘house of Jeroboam’ is your mind’s outer arrangement, and the son is the spark of true awareness near or within it. The outer mourning signifies the shifting perception when a glimmer of good toward the LORD is perceived in that seeming flaw. The story teaches that a remnant of grace can dwell inside even the most discordant configurations of identity. In this Neville-inspired reading, the good toward the LORD is not earned by outward behavior but awakened by your conscious assumption of God's presence in your current state. The grave to be borne away is the old image of separation; the mourning is the correction of sight, allowing that inner remnant to pass into fuller recognition of the divine I AM in you. When you rest in awareness, you realize that even a Jeroboam-like structure houses a faithful refuge in God. Your imagination becomes the ark, and your feeling of I AM carries this good into lived experience, making grace your present reality here and now.
Practice This Now
Assume there is a remnant of good toward the LORD within you now. Close your eyes, breathe, and revise your self-concept: 'There is some good thing toward the LORD in me, right here, right now.' Feel that reality as the steady I AM presence in your chest until it becomes your lived sense of self.
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