Inner Pharaoh Court
Genesis 40:1-2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Genesis 40 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Pharaoh is angry with two officers—the chief butler and the chief baker—after they offend him. The scene depicts judgment that reveals inner states.
Neville's Inner Vision
Let the scene be peeled back from the surface and placed inside the mind. In Genesis 40:1-2, Pharaoh's anger toward his chief butler and baker is not about a historical king; it is the somatic signaling that your awareness—your I AM—has awakened to the misalignment of its inner administrators. The butler and the baker represent faculties in your consciousness that serve the life of your world; their offense is a belief of lack or misalignment; Pharaoh's wrath is the failing to keep the inner court in harmony. Yet this is not punishment, but a call to your power: you can revise the scene by assuming the mood and posture of the king who presides in you. When you imagine yourself as the I AM, the rulers of your inner kingdom respond to your consciousness with peace and order; wrath dissolves into clarity because you no longer take the outer event as real, but as a signal to correct your inner state. The Kingdom of God is not out there; it is the order you maintain in your own mind by insisting that you are one with the divine I AM.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and declare I AM the king of this inner realm; forgive the offenses of my officers and revise the scene to reflect harmony. Then feel the revision as real by imagining the two officers bowing to your sovereign consciousness.
The Bible Through Neville










Neville Bible Sparks









