Inner Idols and the I Am
2 Chronicles 25:14-15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 2 Chronicles 25 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Amaziah returns from battle and worships the gods of Seir, which draws the LORD's anger and invites a prophetic rebuke about seeking deliverance from deities unable to save their own people.
Neville's Inner Vision
Amaziah’s ‘gods’ are not distant carved images but inner states of consciousness he clings to after victory. He tries to anchor power in symbols rather than in the I AM that unmistakably governs all life. The LORD’s anger represents the clash between a living, inner awareness and a borrowed image of safety; the prophet is the inner check reminding you that true power does not come from external idols or past victories. In Neville terms, you cannot summon deliverance by worshiping representations of power outside your I AM. The inner law is that the deliverer lies within, and peace emerges when you revise your scene to the feeling and assumption that you are the I AM, here and now. When you align with that state, the need for external gods dissolves and genuine worship—recognition of your own unity with the divine awareness—flourishes. The inner kingdom is realized by choosing consciousness as source, not symbols as security.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Assume the I AM as your deliverer in this moment; revise the belief that external powers save you and feel it real that you are the source of all deliverance.
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