Inner Feast of Confession
2 Chronicles 30:22 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 2 Chronicles 30 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Hezekiah encourages the Levites who teach the LORD's knowledge; the people eat for seven days, offer peace offerings, and confess to God.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the Neville Goddard vein, this scene is not about a historical feast but a state of consciousness that you, reader, can enter. The 'Levitical teachers' are your faculties that teach the good knowledge of the LORD—the I AM that you are. When Hezekiah speaks 'comfortably' to them, he is guiding your mind to speak tenderly to its own beliefs, soothing inner scripts that feel distant from divine truth. The seven-day feast represents a sustained period of inner nourishment—feasting on the awareness of God as your own consciousness rather than seeking from without. The peace offerings signify reconciliation with inner friction, a quiet acknowledgment that all apparent lack is already resolved in the LORD, your I AM. The confession to the LORD God of their fathers is your turning back to the source—confessing that the God of your spiritual ancestry is present now as I AM, here. Thus the outer ritual mirrors an inner turning toward covenant loyalty, where repentance is simply a shift of belief back to alignment with your true self.
Practice This Now
Assume the state 'I am the LORD' in your quiet mind, and revise any doubt by feeling the confession already true. Let the sense of covenant loyalty nourish your inner feast.
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