Inner Rescue in Israel's Night

2 Kings 14:26-27 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read 2 Kings 14 in context

Scripture Focus

26For the LORD saw the affliction of Israel, that it was very bitter: for there was not any shut up, nor any left, nor any helper for Israel.
27And the LORD said not that he would blot out the name of Israel from under heaven: but he saved them by the hand of Jeroboam the son of Joash.
2 Kings 14:26-27

Biblical Context

The passage says God saw Israel's bitter affliction and there was no outer helper. Yet He did not blot out Israel's name but saved them through Jeroboam the son of Joash.

Neville's Inner Vision

Where does salvation live? Not in external aid, but in the consciousness that names itself I AM. The verse speaks of Israel's bitter affliction—an inner climate of feeling shut in, blocked, with no helper visible in the outer world. Yet God’s movement here is toward preservation: He does not erase the name, the identity you bear as I AM. The saving hand is not a distant actor but the inward ray that rises when you stop rehearsing lack and begin declaring your own reality. Jeroboam the son of Joash appears as a symbolic instrument—the inner pattern that arises to govern you back to wholeness. In Neville’s terms, the “hand” is awareness acting through a new inner state, a revised self that reaches out to pull you from bitterness into realization. Your task is to turn attention from the felt absence to a fresh assumption: that you are intact, guided, and named in eternity by the I AM. The inner king sits now as you, and salvation is your awakening, here and now.

Practice This Now

Imaginative Act: Close your eyes and assume the truth of your wholeness—see the I AM reach you with a steady inner hand, and feel the bitterness dissolve as you are saved from within.

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