After Ahab's Death: Inner Reign

2 Kings 3:5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read 2 Kings 3 in context

Scripture Focus

5But it came to pass, when Ahab was dead, that the king of Moab rebelled against the king of Israel.
2 Kings 3:5

Biblical Context

When Ahab dies, the king of Moab rebels against the king of Israel.

Neville's Inner Vision

In the inner allegory, Ahab represents the old ruling ego—rigid, protective, and outwardly controlling. His death marks the cessation of that old authority. The revolt of Moab against Israel is not a mere historical disruption but an inner movement: a rebellious energy arising when the old self loosens its grip. Moab, the land of outsiders and unknown desires, becomes a new force within the psyche, challenging the established order of your inner Israel—the realm of divine sovereignty, the I AM within. This scene invites you to notice how, when a former identity dies, fresh impulses surface to assert themselves. The inner kingdom (Israel) must remain steadfast, not crushed by rebellion but integrated through awareness. The apparent conflict is the mind’s way of reorganizing itself, preparing a higher harmony. Observe the movement as a sign that you are enlarging your inner authority; you are not punished but invited to claim a larger reign from within.

Practice This Now

1) Close your eyes and assume the state: I AM the king of Israel within. 2) Feel the old king dissolving as you assert the inner sovereignty; imagine Moab’s rebellion as a transitional impulse and affirm the Kingdom within is intact.

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