Inner Honor Revealed in Esther
Esther 6:3-6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Esther 6 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
In Esther 6:3–6, the king asks what honor has been given Mordecai; the courtiers admit nothing has been done. Haman arrives in the court as the ego's plot unfolds, while the king's question points to the inner choice between honoring the noble self and vanity.
Neville's Inner Vision
Esther 6:3-6 is the I AM asking you to notice the root of your reality: what image of 'the honored one' do you carry in consciousness? The scene shows the outer plot as a projection of an inner state. Mordecai’s honor in the king’s question represents the noble self awaiting recognition within you; the servants’ confession that nothing has been done reflects a consciousness that has neglected its inner Imago Dei. Haman’s entrance is the ego rising to claim the throne of your life by vanity, attempting to hang the good on the gallows of fear. When the king says, Let him come in, you are being invited to bring forward your own inner court and acknowledge the good you have neglected. The true honor is not external favors, but the recognition that the I AM already honors the real you—the noble, divine image within. As you align with that truth, the fear and plots of Haman dissolve, and your outer circumstances bend to reflect the inner state you have embraced.
Practice This Now
Assume you have already honored your Mordecai—your noble inner self—and feel the dignity, warmth, and certainty that follows. Stay with that feeling for a minute and let your outer scene reflect this revised inner state.
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