Inner Gates of Judgment

2 Kings 10:7-8 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read 2 Kings 10 in context

Scripture Focus

7And it came to pass, when the letter came to them, that they took the king's sons, and slew seventy persons, and put their heads in baskets, and sent him them to Jezreel.
8And there came a messenger, and told him, saying, They have brought the heads of the king's sons. And he said, Lay ye them in two heaps at the entering in of the gate until the morning.
2 Kings 10:7-8

Biblical Context

The text records a brutal act of kingship—seventy slain, their heads sent as a message—signaling a public judgment carried to the gates.

Neville's Inner Vision

Imagine the scene as a symbolic drama playing out in your own consciousness. The letter arriving is a thought form that has gained power; the king's sons are the many facets of your old self you have not yet reconciled. The seventy heads symbolize your multitude of worn-out beliefs and identifications that you have let die, not through mercy but through the sovereign act of awareness. The baskets and two heaps at the gate are the boundaries you set in your mind where you place these endings; the morning reference invites you to let a new light be born from what you have renounced. Jezreel stands for a place of judgment within your kingdom, where the I AM, your true awareness, oversees the scene. This is not vengeance but transformation: by acknowledging and setting aside the old forms, you clear space for a new order governed by righteousness and inner authority. Your God-given sovereignty becomes real as you revise belief and feel the reality of a renewed inner kingdom.

Practice This Now

Assume the feeling of the I AM surveying your inner kingdom. Imagine laying each old belief in two heaps at the gate and welcoming the morning light as your new sovereignty takes root.

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