Inner Plot, Outer Consequences
Esther 3:6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Esther 3 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Esther 3:6 reveals Haman's offense toward Mordecai growing into a plan to destroy all Jews in the realm, illustrating how a personal grievance can ripple into collective peril.
Neville's Inner Vision
Consider the scene as a mirror of the inner state. Haman's scorn is not merely against Mordecai but against the inner law he refuses to bow to—the awareness that all beings are one in the I AM. When the mind concentrates on offense—images of slight or superiority—it fashions a plot in the kingdom of consciousness, projecting fear and destruction outward. The Jews are the people of Mordecai—an emblem of fidelity to truth within the self. To seek their destruction is to attempt to annihilate any part of you that resists surrender to ego. The kingdom is your own consciousness, and the decree to destroy all Jews is the universal law of cause and effect: what you imagine about others you invite into your state. The cure is not defense but revision: entertain the premise that the I AM is sovereign over every thought and person. See the unity of all life and feel it as real now. As you dwell in that unity, the perceived threat dissolves and your inner kingdom is restored to peace.
Practice This Now
Assume the I AM rules your mind; revise the offense into unity. Imagine all beings already in harmony and feel that universal peace as real in this moment.
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