Inner Siege, Inner King

Isaiah 36:12 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Isaiah 36 in context

Scripture Focus

12But Rabshakeh said, Hath my master sent me to thy master and to thee to speak these words? hath he not sent me to the men that sit upon the wall, that they may eat their own dung, and drink their own piss with you?
Isaiah 36:12

Biblical Context

Rabshakeh's contemptuous threat against the defenders on the wall is a dramatic image of fear testing the mind; the passage models how pressure can probe one's inner resolve.

Neville's Inner Vision

Rabshakeh’s bluster is not coming from outside you; it is the first wave of a thought-idea trying to take temporary possession of your mind. The wall and the eating-rites he invokes are symbols of your own mental defenses and self-images under pressure. The master who sent him is the belief that you are divided, that fear can overpower awareness. In Neville’s terms, all events are states of consciousness; the apparent siege is a shift in your inner disposition. When you identify with the voice, you feed it; when you observe it as a mere movement of consciousness, it dissolves. Your true kingdom is the I AM behind the scene, the unshakable witness that neither applauds nor condemns. The mockery exposes a choice: cling to fear or return to the awareness that you are the reality the fear pretends to threaten. As you revise the scene—hear the words as illusion, recall your oneness with the I AM, and feel the fear collapse into quiet power—you become the conqueror you already are.

Practice This Now

Assume the I AM is the ruler of your inner city; hear the threat as a passing voice, then revise it by declaring, 'I am the I AM; this fear cannot master me.'

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