Inner Judgment at Naboth's Gate
1 Kings 21:13 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 1 Kings 21 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Two men accuse Naboth, and the crowd stones him outside the city; the verse exposes mob justice and political power at work.
Neville's Inner Vision
I tell you, the tale is not about Naboth but about the state of your own consciousness when you mistake a dream of loss for reality. The two men are Belial, the split voices in you that accuse and condemn; they witness against Naboth, the steadfast integrity in you, in the presence of the people—the crowd of old identities and habits. When they say Naboth blasphemed God and the king, you are hearing the mind’s claim that your inner truth challenges the throne of conditioned self. Yet Naboth’s death is not a historical judgment but a belief you have bought into as reality. In the practice of the I AM, you choose a revision: there is no real blasphemy against God, only the shifting of consciousness as it awakens to its own sovereignty. Stand in the inner court as the judge and the witness, and declare, I AM that truth; I am the ruler of my inner land, and the justice I seek is the justice I feel as real. The sentence dissolves as you align with the higher state, and the stoning becomes a turning of that old belief into life.
Practice This Now
Practice: In a quiet moment, assume the state 'I AM' as unassailable, revise the scene by declaring 'Naboth is innocent' and feel it real until the outer circumstances echo the inner truth.
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