King Within: Haman in Court

Esther 6:5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Esther 6 in context

Scripture Focus

5And the king's servants said unto him, Behold, Haman standeth in the court. And the king said, Let him come in.
Esther 6:5

Biblical Context

Esther 6:5 records the king's announcement that Haman is in the court, and the king says, Let him come in. It marks a moment where inner authority invites a challenge to approach, allowing events to move toward resolution.

Neville's Inner Vision

Think of the king as your I AM—the steadfast consciousness that rules all inner scenes. When the servants announce Haman in the court, that figure is a belief or habit pressing for entry into your awareness. The king's reply, Let him come in, is not permission to entertain fear but an act of deliberate attention: you invite the belief to stand before the light of awareness so you may dissolve it. The timing is divine: what appears in the court is exactly what your consciousness needs to see next to awaken. By inviting the obstacle, you give your imagination permission to reframe it, to reveal that it serves your purpose rather than governs you. Maintain the posture of calm sovereignty, observe the fear or habit as a temporary guest, and revise the scene with the assumption that this entry will lead to a favorable outcome. As you persist in this inner act—assuming, revising, and feeling it real—you shift the whole landscape: the court becomes a portal through which your I AM delivers its decision, and the obstacle loses its grip as you recognize its place in the drama of your own kingdom.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Close your eyes and see Haman stepping into the mind’s court; then revise the scene by affirming a favorable outcome and feel the relief as the I AM settles the matter.

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