Inner Kingdom Map: 1 Kings 4:13-14
1 Kings 4:13-14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 1 Kings 4 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage lists the territorial assignments in Transjordan, naming Geber at Ramoth-gilead, Jair’s towns in Gilead, Argob in Bashan with sixty fortified cities, and Mahanaim under Ahinadab.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within you, the names on the page translate to states of consciousness. The Transjordan territory is the awake portion of mind beyond the center—your outer administration—where thoughts, beliefs, and habits govern outcomes. Geber in Ramoth-Gilead, Jair’s towns in Gilead, and Argob in Bashan with sixty great cities surrounded by walls and brazen bars symbolize the many compartments of self: defended sectors, fixed routines, and cultivated capacities. Ahinadab the son of Iddo, who had Mahanaim, points to the inner bivouac of two camps—dual aspects of consciousness, one guarding order, one inviting harmony. Neville teaches that God is the I AM within, and imagination must rule these territories. When you assume the feeling of ruling from within, you reorganize outer life by conviction rather than force. You align kingship and authority with community and unity, and you navigate family dynamics through inner order that yields outward peace. The practice is to revise one inner map today: acknowledge it as already existing in harmony, and feel the negation of lack as you dwell in the inner kingdom.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and declare, 'All my inner cities are mine to govern by love and truth.' Revise one stubborn belief as if it were already transformed, and feel the inner throne of the Kingdom of God seated in your chest.
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