Inner Healing Paradox

2 Kings 8:10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read 2 Kings 8 in context

Scripture Focus

10And Elisha said unto him, Go, say unto him, Thou mayest certainly recover: howbeit the LORD hath shewed me that he shall surely die.
2 Kings 8:10

Biblical Context

Elisha states that recovery may occur, but the inner foresight shows the person shall die; the verse presents a dual forecast reflecting inner and outer possibilities.

Neville's Inner Vision

Here the text speaks not of a medical verdict but of inner states. Elisha’s words carry two frequencies: a possible recovery conditioned by the present energy of life, and a foreseen death rooted in a deeper consciousness. In Neville’s map, the sick person is an I AM state in motion; events in the world reflect the impression you hold in awareness. If your attention rests on the outward prognosis, you feed the old self into form; if you assume the I AM and revise your feeling about it, you begin to feel it real that only health remains. The envoy’s message mirrors your daily breath of belief: you may pretend to health outwardly, yet the inner vision can be set toward the cessation of the old you. The parable invites a single practice: decide which state you will embody and dwell there until the world outside aligns. The prophet’s note is not fatalism but invitation: a deliberate shift in consciousness dissolves appearance of illness and death, revealing the inexhaustible health of being.

Practice This Now

Assume the state of perfect health here and now; revise the outward prognosis by declaring, 'I am health.' Feel the I AM flowing through every cell until your experience aligns with that truth.

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