Wall Prayer Inner Kingdom
2 Kings 20:2-3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 2 Kings 20 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Facing a crisis, Hezekiah turns to prayer, reminding God of his truthful walk and perfect heart, and weeps deeply.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the inner application, the 'wall' is the boundary of your present self-conception. He turns his face to the wall—the inward shift from outward worry to the quiet miracle of consciousness. The LORD here represents the I AM within you, the awareness that can recall and revise any life. His words 'remember now how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart' are not a plea to a distant deity but a declaration of the state he now chooses to inhabit. He is not asking God to change; he is affirming his own consciousness of truth—truthfulness, integrity, deeds aligned with the good. The weeping is the emotional energy given to the old fear; in Neville's terms, you release the memory of limitation and then hold fast to the new assumption, permitting the inner movement to become outward reality. When you entertain the state of truth and a perfect heart, you awaken the inner law that shapes experience. God becomes your awareness of being; the wall is the space you revise with steady, loving attention to your inner state.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, turn your inner face toward your I AM, and assume you already walk in truth with a perfect heart. Feel the relief as if the prayer is answered.
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