Inner Battle at Bethshemesh
2 Kings 14:11-12 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 2 Kings 14 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Amaziah refuses to hear, Jehoash moves against Judah, and outward defeat follows; the passage mirrors an inner refusal to listen for divine guidance.
Neville's Inner Vision
Two kings face off on the page because two states of consciousness stand in your chest. Amaziah, who would not hear, represents a stubborn thought refusing the I AM within; Jehoash, the conquering king, embodies the move when you accept the inner truth. When Amaziah persists in denial, Judah falters and the outer world mirrors that inner refusal—conflict, retreat, and defeat. Neville teaches that God is the I AM awareness you wield; imagination creates reality through steady attention. Therefore the scene is not about kings and borders, but about your willingness to listen to the inner law. If you persist in not hearing, your inner powers clash, and you reproduce the defeat externally. But you can rewrite the script: assume the feeling of being in union with the inner voice, hear what it says, and let its command reorder the battlefield. The moment you revise the scene to acknowledge the inner guidance as already true, the outward defeat dissolves, and the face-off becomes a gentle alignment under one sovereign I AM. Remember, every Bethshemesh is a doorway to the kingdom within.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume, 'I hear the I AM within and obey its guidance.' Visualize the two inner powers bowing to unity and feel the scene shift to total inner agreement.
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