Esther's Inner Petition
Esther 8:3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Esther 8 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Esther speaks again before the king, falls at his feet, and pleads tearfully to avert Haman's plot against the Jews. The scene embodies mercy seeking redemption for her people.
Neville's Inner Vision
Esther is not a mere historical scene but the inner state of consciousness addressing its own I AM. The king on the throne represents the outer mind, moved only by the persistence of awareness. Esther’s tears are the heat of feeling that refuses to accept the appearance of doom; her bowing to the king is the outer self surrendering to the inner governor, signaling a consent that dissolves the ‘mischief’—the stubborn belief in danger, lack, or separation. When the king commands to revoke the device, this is your inner awareness affirming that nothing can thwart your true unfoldment once you align with the truth that you are one with source. Providence appears as a present, felt shift: as you dwell in the feeling of the wish fulfilled, your inner ideas loosen the grip of fear and rearrange circumstances to mirror that inner conviction.
Practice This Now
Assume the inner king has already granted release. Feel that relief in your chest and let it linger as fact.
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