Inner Wealth, Outer Trade
2 Chronicles 1:16 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 2 Chronicles 1 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Solomon brought horses from Egypt and linen yarn; the king's merchants sold the linen at a price.
Neville's Inner Vision
Solomon's horses and linen in 2 Chronicles 1:16 are not merely historical goods; they are the inner economy of a soul whose imagination has made supply appear. Egypt represents external conditions—the memory of lack—yet the mind that says I AM can draw forth what it needs. The king's merchants are the inner faculties that buy and sell thoughts in the market of consciousness; they set a price for every imagined resource and accept it as real. When I interpret this picture, I see that wealth flows from within: I choose a state of abundance, and the world assembles goods to match the picture I hold. The linen yarn is the fine texture of circumstances woven by belief; the horses are the swift movements of realized intention. The verse teaches that provision begins in imagination and is confirmed by the feeling that this is already so. So I, the I AM, revise my awareness, and let the inner commerce yield outward signs of prosperity.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume, in the I AM, that you already possess the wealth you seek. Feel the inner market price met and watch external goods enter your life.
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