The Mind At Megiddo

2 Kings 23:29 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read 2 Kings 23 in context

Scripture Focus

29In his days Pharaohnechoh king of Egypt went up against the king of Assyria to the river Euphrates: and king Josiah went against him; and he slew him at Megiddo, when he had seen him.
2 Kings 23:29

Biblical Context

Pharaohnechoh, king of Egypt, advances against the king of Assyria; Josiah goes out to meet him, and Josiah is slain at Megiddo.

Neville's Inner Vision

Within the scripture, Pharaohnechoh is not a conqueror from without but a state of fear pressing on your inner sovereignty. The river Euphrates stands for the flow of life your old thought-form rides. The king Josiah is your active discernment, the part of you who would confront that fear and establish order in your inner realm. When Josiah goes out to oppose Pharaohnechoh and sees him, the old king is slain—a symbolic death of a former center of power. This is not punishment but the necessary fall of an old structure so that a higher awareness can reign. The outer tragedy mirrors an inner turning point: you realize you are the I AM, the awareness that remains when appearances crumble. The Kingdom of God is already within, and the battle is the moment your imagination tests and solidifies that truth. By holding the assumption that the inner king rules now, you revise the impression of power from without to within, and the outer scene reconfigures to reflect your new consciousness.

Practice This Now

Assume the state 'I am the I AM; within me, my inner king rules this kingdom now.' In quiet stillness, revise the scene: the old Pharaoh dissolves as you affirm enduring sovereignty, and feel the victory as already true.

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