Inner Hearing, Remnant Prayer

2 Kings 19:4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read 2 Kings 19 in context

Scripture Focus

4It may be the LORD thy God will hear all the words of Rabshakeh, whom the king of Assyria his master hath sent to reproach the living God; and will reprove the words which the LORD thy God hath heard: wherefore lift up thy prayer for the remnant that are left.
2 Kings 19:4

Biblical Context

Rabshakeh reproaches the living God, and the text says the Lord may hear those words. It instructs lifting up prayer for the remnant that remains.

Neville's Inner Vision

Rabshakeh’s taunt is not an outer critic but a voice within a state of consciousness that has forgotten its oneness. The verse suggests that the Lord thy God may hear every word—the inner dialogue that challenges the living God in you—and that the correction comes through a shift in awareness, not in external force. The “remnant that is left” is the core I AM, the faithful portion of your being that remains when doubt rises. Lift up thy prayer for that remnant, therefore, is a directive to return your attention to the one powerful state that never departed from you. When you assume this state, you reprove the doubt by silent affirmation: I AM is listening; I AM hears; I AM answers from within. Intercession becomes a voluntary return of all separated thoughts to the sovereign center, reconnecting you to Providence and guidance. The practice reveals how your perception creates reality: as you hold the remembrance of the I AM, the words against it lose their sting and the remnant rises in confidence, carrying the evidential feeling of answered prayer into your present awareness.

Practice This Now

Practice for now: sit quietly, assume the state I AM, and feel the I AM hearing every inner word; then affirm My remnant is left, and my prayer is answered in consciousness.

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