Inner Remnant, Outer Fruit
2 Kings 19:29-31 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 2 Kings 19 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
2 Kings 19:29-31 presents a sign of divine provision: in the first year you eat what grows by itself, in the second year the same, and in the third year you sow, reap, and plant anew. The remnant of Judah will take root downward and bear fruit upward; from Jerusalem a remnant will arise by the zeal of the LORD.
Neville's Inner Vision
Consider this not as a description of a land's harvest, but as a map of your inner life. The sign promised in the text is a sign you could claim in consciousness: abundance appearing as what grows of itself when you persist in a state of fullness, then deeper assurance in the same state, and finally a third turn where you sow and reap because your imagination has become the ground of experience. The remnant is the conscious life in you that refuses to yield to doubt; it takes root downward into the silent certainty of I AM and bears fruit upward in your manifested world. Out of Jerusalem and Zion in you goes forth the remnant, not by external rescue, but by the zeal of the LORD of hosts acting through your own awareness. Providence, then, is the natural overflow of a steady state you inhabit. When you align with this inner seed, the future harvest no longer depends on the weather outside but on your inner weather and the inevitable pull of your creative desire.
Practice This Now
Practice: close your eyes and declare, 'I am the remnant that takes root downward and bears fruit upward.' Feel the flourishing as already done, revise any sense of lack, and let the sign appear in your world in the coming days.
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