Hell Moves to Meet Your Coming
Isaiah 14:9-10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Isaiah 14 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Isaiah 14:9–10 depicts Hell rising to meet the king and the dead and earthly kings taunting him, exposing mortal pride; it serves as a mirror of inner judgment and consciousness.
Neville's Inner Vision
Think of Hell as a state of consciousness, not a place. When the verse says Hell from beneath is moved to meet thee, it is your own subconscious waking to test the claim that you rule all. The dead and the kings you imagine are not external enemies but your inner faculties—memory, ambition, pride—stirred to challenge your ascent. The question they utter, 'Art thou also become weak as we?' is the reminder that every throne you claim in the outer world is echoed by a corresponding vibration in the inner world. But you are not held by their verdict. You are the I AM, the awareness that makes the world appear. When you stand in that awareness, these inner images must bow to your sovereignty, for you are calling them forth by your assumption. The movement of the underworld becomes a signal: revise your premise from fear to faith, from separation to oneness. The so-called judgment is your invitation to hold a firmer identification with the kingly self within, not by fighting but by assuming the state that already holds all states in solution. In this light, the passage is prophecy fulfilled—your inner kingdom triumphs as you persist in the I AM.
Practice This Now
Imagination act: Close your eyes, declare 'I am the I AM; this kingdom of consciousness is sovereign now,' and feel the fear, pride, and memory dissolving as you hold that state.
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