Kindling Rabbah Within
Amos 1:14-15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Amos 1 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Amos 1:14–15 foresees a fire devouring Rabbah’s walls and palaces during battle, followed by the king and his princes going into captivity. It portrays divine judgment that ends the rulers of that city, symbolizing the removal of exposed power.
Neville's Inner Vision
From the Neville Goddard vantage, Rabbah is the inner capital where you store a fixed story about yourself. The fire Amos speaks of is the heat of imagination that burns away the walls of that story, not your body. In the day of battle and a tempest, the old king and his princes are your dominant beliefs and habitual reactions; their captivity is the surrender of those thoughts to your higher I AM. When you stop defending the structure and invite the blaze, you allow your awareness to devour the palaces built on fear, pride, or grievance. The LORD here is your I AM, the unchanging awareness that witnesses and redefines. As you dwell in this I AM, the ruling identities lose their power, and a wider, freer consciousness rises. This is not punishment but transformation—your mind rearranging itself by the consent of your imagination. See the moment you acknowledge the end: you are the king who rules only by your present idea of state. The fire is not violence but a clearing light. You awaken to an inner city where you are sovereign, and the walls that once constrained you reveal their emptiness.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes and assume the feeling of the king bowing to your I AM. Repeat 'I am the ruler of my mind now' until the sensation of captivity dissolves.
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