Inner Kingdom of Rehoboam
2 Chronicles 11:21 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 2 Chronicles 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Rehoboam loves Maachah above all his wives and concubines. He has many wives and many sons and daughters.
Neville's Inner Vision
Rehoboam’s devotion to Maachah above all his wives is not about marriage; it is about a state of consciousness choosing a favorite image over the living I AM. The many wives and concubines represent outward abundance that promises security, prestige, and progeny, yet this is a counterfeit sovereignty. In Godward terms, his inner kingdom is built on preference, attachment, and pride—an ego that measures worth by numbers and names rather than by alignment with the presence within. The text asks you to see that your own world mirrors this inner posture: when you prize a person, a position, or possessions above the awareness that I AM is your only source, you are living in Rehoboam’s shadow. The invitation is to revise: abandon the insistence on outer plenitude as proof of worth, and repeat the assurance of the I AM as your true capacity for being. As you feel that unity—I AM, I perceive, I provide—you will begin to notice the outward scene submitting to that inner kingdom, with abundance flowing not from the multitude of images but from the singular consciousness that you are.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit quietly, declare 'I AM with you—my sole Source,' and revise every attachment to wealth, status, or numbers by feeling the I AM as the governing presence. Dwell in the sense of inner unity and watch the outer scene align with that truth.
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