Inner Decree in Esther 3:15
Esther 3:15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Esther 3 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The king issues a swift decree; the king and Haman drink while the city is perplexed.
Neville's Inner Vision
Esther 3:15, in the Neville reading, is not about a political moment but about your inner state moving outward. The hastened posts and the king's command symbolize how a decision in consciousness presses itself into the world of effects. The king and Haman at table are your outward thoughts and opinions, comfortable in their position, while the city Shushan—the stage of appearances—appears perplexed because the old order meets a new end. Remember: in Neville's teaching, the decree of the moment is an inner assumption; the outer world merely reflects the consistency of that assumption. If you would not be pleased with perplexity, attach your attention to the end you desire and inhabit it now, as truly as you can in your chest and solar plexus. You are the I AM, not the circumstances. By accepting the end, you rewrite the inner script, and the external scene rearranges to match that inner decree. The decree goes out; the world responds because your inner state has changed.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume the end: I am the decree; the city is now clear. Feel the relief as if it already happened, and remain in that sensation for a minute.
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