Grace of the Inner King
2 Samuel 9:3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 2 Samuel 9 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The king asks if there is any of Saul’s house to show the kindness of God; Ziba replies that Jonathan has a son who is lame.
Neville's Inner Vision
See the king in this verse as the I AM within you, the ruler of your consciousness who wants to pour out the kindness of God upon every worn part of your self. The house of Saul represents the old covenant mood, the structure of thoughts built on limitation and memory. When the king asks for someone from Saul’s line, he is asking you to inspect the old self and decide to bless it through grace rather than cling to it as pain. Jonathan’s son, who is lame on his feet, stands for your latent potential that has seemed crippled by belief. He exists, yet he moves haltingly under the weight of past identifications. The report of Ziba is your subconscious reminder that there is still a son within you deserving kindness. The invitation is to rise in your inner king and bestow the kindness of God on that crippled portion, healing the belief that you are limited by history. When you assume the state of the benevolent king, grace flows as your present awareness, dissolving separation between past and possible.
Practice This Now
Assume the state of the inner king now and declare I will show kindness to Saul’s house. Picture Jonathan’s son standing healed and confident, and feel the grace of God flowing through you as your present reality.
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