Inner Kingdom of Mercy
2 Samuel 19:28-30 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 2 Samuel 19 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Mephibosheth acknowledges the king's mercy and his own dependence. The king then decrees that Mephibosheth and Ziba divide the land.
Neville's Inner Vision
Think of this scene as an inner map. The king represents your I AM, the only sovereign reality you awaken within. Mephibosheth's plea, like a fragment of your mind crippled by fear, is invited to stand before the king and acknowledge grace. You may notice that the land—the outward possessions, roles, and claims of life—gets spoken of as something to be divided between two aspects of yourself: the conscious will and the hidden humility. Yet the king's word cancels the need to quarrel; his return in peace signals that all you sought is already secure in the inner presence. When Mephibosheth says, let him take all, he is not abandoning abundance but yielding to the higher ruling of grace, the sense that the I AM is the true owner. In this reading, your sense of lack dissolves as you recognize that the inner kingdom is not divided, but unified by the king's peace. The moment you trust that you are already in possession, you will naturally treat every circumstance as grace.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, assume the feeling of the wish fulfilled by imagining the king is seated at your own table. Rest in the certainty that the land of your life is already yours as grace, not conquest.
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