Inner Feast of the I Am Presence

Esther 1:5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Esther 1 in context

Scripture Focus

5And when these days were expired, the king made a feast unto all the people that were present in Shushan the palace, both unto great and small, seven days, in the court of the garden of the king's palace;
Esther 1:5

Biblical Context

Esther 1:5 depicts the king's seven-day feast for all in Shushan, symbolizing inner abundance for every part of the mind. It invites every aspect to be welcomed and nourished.

Neville's Inner Vision

Consider Esther 1:5 as a mirror where the king—the I AM within you—hosts a feast for all the people present in Shushan, the palace of your mind, seven days in the garden court. This is not a factual history, but a psychological scripture: the feast is the activity of consciousness when you recognize that every thought, desire, memory, and feeling is included in the one life. The people are your various selves, great and small, ranging from bold ambitions to quiet fears. When the days are expired, the inner recognition rises into fullness; the inner atmosphere is saturated with a sense of unity and plenitude. The garden represents the imagination, the court being the private arena where you acknowledge that God, your I AM, rules. As you dwell in that awareness, outward events align with the inner feast: opportunities, healings, harmonies spring forth as signs of your inner wholeness. To practice: assume you are hosting such a feast now, feel the I AM inviting every part to the table, and declare, I am the king; I am the presence that feeds all.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and imagine the seven-day feast in the garden of your mind, where every inner state is invited to the table. Feel the I AM hosting, approving, and nourishing all parts until you know this is already true.

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