The Inner Name of Purim
Esther 9:26 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Esther 9 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse records that the people named those days Purim, in memory of what they had seen and heard. It marks a conscious turning point where events are given a name for remembrance.
Neville's Inner Vision
Esther 9:26 invites you to hear the inner note behind the word Purim. Not a history lesson, but a revelation of consciousness: the 'days' become a fixed state of awareness when you name them after their inner meaning. In Neville’s light, the letter and what was seen are inner communications from your I AM, guiding you to acknowledge a deliverance you have already conceived in imagination. When you attach a name to the event, you solidify it as present reality in your inner world, and that inner disposition—hope, faith, Providence—begins to translate into outward experience. The act of naming awakens memory of a solution, funds your trust, and aligns your thoughts with a future that has already occurred as possibility. Thus, salvation is not distant but an ongoing state you enter by choosing and naming: Purim is the discipline of remembering that your imagination has already fulfilled the matter.
Practice This Now
Choose a current issue and, in your inner diary, name the days as Purim. Then revise your self-talk to declare, 'This is done in my I AM,' and sit quietly while you feel the relief as though it already happened.
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