Inner Justice in Esther 7:8-9
Esther 7:8-9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Esther 7 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The king returns to the banquet. Haman falls upon Esther's bed, threatening the queen, and the king orders Haman's execution.
Neville's Inner Vision
Esther 7:8-9 is not a tale about palaces, but a map of your inner life. The king represents the I AM, the steady awareness that surveys the garden of your mind and returns with certitude. Haman is the fear-identity—the accusation you have carried as if it were a law. When he falls on Esther’s bed, your attention collides with the sacred image you’ve identified as queen; in that moment the outer verdict becomes your inner realization that fear cannot rule you. The moment the king asks, 'Will he force the queen?' you witness the erasure of that threat as the face is covered—an inner acknowledgement that the old story has been seen without enforcing it. Harbonah’s declaration is the inner insight that the gallows, built by fear, belong to the past; the king’s command to hang him there signals the complete release of the pattern. In truth, these are movements of your own consciousness: the perceived danger dissolves as you recognize your sovereign state and align every scene with justice and benevolence.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Assume the inner king's verdict now—'It is finished; the old fear is hanged.' Feel the release as your sovereign state settles into the body.
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