Esther's Inner Courage
Esther 4:10-12 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Esther 4 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Esther tells Hatach to relay to Mordecai that she has not been summoned to the king for thirty days, and that approaching the king uncalled is deadly.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within Esther’s drama, the throne room is a state of consciousness rather than a place. The rule that uncalled entry is death is the fear of the old self; your I AM, your inner king, is unharmed by such fear. When you recognize that you are already present in the king’s awareness, you place your action on the shelf of what is possible, and the external risk loses its sting. Esther delays by counsel, not because she doubts but because she is aligning with the inner law of possibility. Your task is to revise that moment now by assuming you are already invited, already recognized, and already supported by the I AM. Then your subsequent move will be a natural expression of your inner authority, not a rebellion against it. Mordecai's message is your inner voice confirming readiness; the thirty days become a period of inner preparation, not outer prohibition. If you dwell in the feeling that you are seen and blessed, your outer circumstances bend to reflect that truth. In that shift, you enter the inner court with confidence and your presence becomes the scepter by which you live.
Practice This Now
Assume you are already invited to the inner court. Close your eyes, affirm I am called and welcomed, and feel the inner scepter of approval extending toward your next action.
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