Inner Exodus After Command
2 Samuel 13:29 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 2 Samuel 13 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Absalom's servants carry out his command, and the king's sons rise up and flee on their mules.
Neville's Inner Vision
Consider Absalom’s command as a thought-form released into your I AM. The servants are your habitual responses; when you entertain a grievance, they mobilize to fulfill that impression. The king’s sons symbolize parts of your life—trust, relationship, vitality—who rise and flee on the swift mule of fear. The mule stands for the outer vehicle through which inner weather travels. The scene is not history but an inward drama of belief: once you accept the command, your entire inner kingdom drafts the next scene to match that belief. To heal it, withdraw belief from the command and entertain a different focus. Assume justice, reconciliation, and harmony are already present in your consciousness, and feel the reality of the I AM governing all events. When you hold that assumption, the flight dissolves and a new order—calm, compassionate, truthful—emerges within your inner kingdom.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: In stillness, revise the inner command by declaring 'I AM the author of my life; I choose harmony now,' and feel fear dissolve.
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