Inner Purim Feast in Action
Esther 9:20-22 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Esther 9 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Mordecai's decree establishes Purim as an annual festival of joy, feasting, and generosity. It marks turning sorrow into a good day through unity and charity.
Neville's Inner Vision
Esther 9:20–22 whispers a law of the inner realm: you can appoint a day when your consciousness chooses the turn from sorrow to joy. Mordecai’s letters are not historical messengers but interventions of your I AM, informing all your inner states that a festival of rest from fear is now established. The 'days wherein the Jews rested from their enemies' speaks of quieting the inner opposition by assuming a different atmosphere—an inner rest that dissolves struggle in a larger good. 'The month which was turned unto them from sorrow to joy' is the completed act of imagining that a current of joy flows through your life, transforming mourning into a good day. When you celebrate with feasting and with sending portions to others, you enact abundance from within and prove that your world mirrors your inner unity and mercy. The key is to dwell in that state, to make the festival ongoing in imagination, and to let acts of generosity become your automatic response. In this way Esther’s decree becomes a practical method for shifting every day from sorrow to the good you are and have always been.
Practice This Now
Imaginative_act: Assume the mood of Purim now. Write a mental decree to your inner community that rest from inner enemies is established, then feel the joy as if it is real today.
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