Mordecai’s Gate Insight
Esther 3:3-4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Esther 3 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Mordecai at the king's gate is questioned for not following the king's command; his hidden identity as a Jew surfaces, while he remains steadfast rather than inwardly swayed by the outward decree.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the Esther narrative, Mordecai becomes the living I AM—awareness that cannot be bent by external law or daily insinuations. The gate stands for the boundary of consciousness where appearances seek to command. When the servitors urge conformity and announce his Jewishness, his inner state remains unassailable because identity is not an outward badge but the truth of being. The king's command and Haman's fear are projections of a world that tests your willingness to live from your inner I AM. By not hearkening to the surface pressure, Mordecai demonstrates that imagination, properly held, governs phenomena. Your true self is the unmovable witness who, when pressed by decree, does not yield; the outer scene thus serves to reveal the strength of your inner law. The moment you accept I AM as your only real identity, the outward law must conform to that inner truth, and what seems to transgress becomes the very test that confirms your state.
Practice This Now
Assume the I AM as your unwavering self standing at the gate of your life; when doubt or external pressure arises, revise to 'I am the truth of my life' and feel that inner certainty as real.
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