Inner Resurrection of Life
2 Kings 4:18-37 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 2 Kings 4 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The Shunammite’s son dies after growing up; the mother carries the matter to the man of God, who prays and performs a ritual that restores the boy to life. The revival centers on faith, persistence, and the inner action of consciousness at work within a human form.
Neville's Inner Vision
The scene is an inward drama of life rising from consciousness. The child represents a state of awareness that has temporarily ceased to express vitality. The mother’s steadfast faith—“It shall be well”—is the decisive act of inner imagination, the I AM within declaring life prior to its visible appearance. Elisha stands as your higher state of awareness; his actions—sending Gehazi, laying the staff, praying—are symbols for the interior methods by which you attempt to wake your life by external means. Yet true awakening comes when attention is withdrawn from the appearance of death and placed upon the inner source of life. The door is closed, the inner dialogue continues in prayer, and the restoration occurs through a renewed contact between consciousness and its expression. The ultimate reversal—life returning to the child—proves that consciousness can reanimate form when it carries the affirmed reality “It is well” and holds to it with unwavering faith. The miracle is not distant; it is your own inner renovation of life.
Practice This Now
Practice in the present: if a situation seems 'dead,' affirm 'It is well' and imagine laying your inner hands on the situation, feeling life warm and returning. Repeat until the sense of revival feels truly real.
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