Inner Throne Reframing 2 Samuel 13:21-22

2 Samuel 13:21-22 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read 2 Samuel 13 in context

Scripture Focus

21But when king David heard of all these things, he was very wroth.
22And Absalom spake unto his brother Amnon neither good nor bad: for Absalom hated Amnon, because he had forced his sister Tamar.
2 Samuel 13:21-22

Biblical Context

David's outward anger meets a deeper inner disturbance; Absalom silently hates Amnon for the assault on Tamar. The passage lays bare how turmoil within the self shows up as anger and concealed resentment toward others.

Neville's Inner Vision

The throne of David represents your awareness. When the inner news arrives of a disturbing act, you react with anger, as if the outer world were overturning your kingdom. Absalom’s neutral reply marks a hidden, hardened attitude—hatred—rising from a wound around Tamar, the symbol of innocence. In Neville’s terms these figures are not historical persons but inner states: righteous anger, protective resentment, and the impulse to punish. The healing is not found by judging others but by revising the scene within your imagination under the I AM. Assume a new inner order where your sovereignty governs with justice, compassion, and balance, so the outer kingdom reflects this wholeness. The story then becomes a map of the soul’s governance: choose a state that aligns with divine order, and your inner realm will harmonize with the truth you affirm.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes, breathe, and declare the I AM sovereign over your inner scene. Silently revise the story with compassion and clarity, feeling the shift as if the kingdom within is already restored.

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