Inner Court of Esther 6:4

Esther 6:4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Esther 6 in context

Scripture Focus

4And the king said, Who is in the court? Now Haman was come into the outward court of the king's house, to speak unto the king to hang Mordecai on the gallows that he had prepared for him.
Esther 6:4

Biblical Context

Esther 6:4 presents the king's question as a moment in consciousness where inner images contend in the court of awareness; Haman's entrance signals a fear-based impulse to destroy Mordecai, the virtuous self.

Neville's Inner Vision

Esther 6:4 places your awareness at the door of its own court. The king is your I AM, and the outward court is the surface of thoughts where images move. Haman's arrival to speak of Mordecai's execution is the appearance of a hostile image drawn from memory and fear, pressing to settle the scene by force. Mordecai, the loyal subject in the king's history, stands for a truth you already know in consciousness—the good that seeks expression through you. The question 'Who is in the court?' is an invitation to observe which images you have admitted to rule your mind. In Neville's practice, you do not chase away the fear; you revise the assumption, declaring that the I AM within you is sovereign, and that any plan for harm is only a dream in need of revision. When you affirm Providence and align with your inner king, the outward scheme dissolves, and what remains is the steady movement of good, order, and protection within your life. Your inner Mordecai remains safe because you have refused to empower the contrary image with belief.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and revise the scene: 'In this inner court, the I AM rules; Haman cannot harm Mordecai.' Feel the truth as already real and let Providence settle the matter in your awareness.

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