Jehu and the Inner Crown
2 Kings 9:11-13 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 2 Kings 9 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jehu’s elevation is presented as an inner proclamation: the LORD declares him king, and the servants respond by preparing and proclaiming the new order. The outer acts of garments and trumpets symbolize the inward shift becoming outward reality.
Neville's Inner Vision
Jehu’s rise in 2 Kings 9:11–13 is not a newsflash from a distant throne room; it is a whisper of the I AM within you announcing a new sovereign state. The messenger’s words, Thus saith the LORD, I have anointed thee king over Israel, are a call to acknowledge the one power you truly inhabit—the state of kingship in consciousness. The servants’ simple acts—taking off their garments and casting them on the stairs, blowing trumpets—are not about a passing political event; they symbolize your inner preparations for a shift in being. When you hear the inner message, you respond as if the decree has already occurred: you cloak the ascent (garments) as a ritual of honor, you announce a new order (trumpets) in your mind and in your world. The mad fellow who came to you is the old version of self resisting change. Deny that response; accept the new king you already are, and act from that state today. Your kingdom is an inner covenant, kept by fidelity to the I AM, and all outward events follow that decree.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit quietly, declare 'I am the king of my domain' and imagine a robe of authority wrapping you as the old self yields. Hear the inner trumpets as you feel the state of kingship now, and act from that certainty today.
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