The Inner House of Deliverance
Esther 8:7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Esther 8 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Esther 8:7 records the king announcing that Haman's house is given to Esther and that Haman has been hanged for attacking the Jews, signaling a turning point toward deliverance and justice.
Neville's Inner Vision
Esther 8:7 stands as a parable of inner law. The outward event—the king’s proclamation that Haman’s house now belongs to Esther and Haman's execution—reflects a change already accomplished in consciousness. In Neville’s terms, the 'house' is a state of mind; the gallows symbolize the end of a hostile, fear-based pattern. When the Jew's safety becomes the king's concern, it is the mind’s recognition of its own power to preserve life that has shifted. The decree is not merely a royal order; it is the moment your awareness declares, 'I have delivered myself.' The deliverance of the Jews is the justice that flows from a settled consciousness that stands in harmony with the I AM, the undivided awareness that cannot be threatened. Thus, the external scene of victory is the echo and validation of the inner conviction that no darkness can withstand the light and righteous order of Being. The story invites you to see that redemption begins within, and manifests outwardly as liberation for all who share that awareness.
Practice This Now
Sit quietly and assume the inner decree: 'I have delivered myself.' Feel the transformed sense of safety and freedom now, and let that realization bloom into your outward sense of deliverance.
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