The Inner Crown Over Proclamation

Isaiah 36:13 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Isaiah 36 in context

Scripture Focus

13Then Rabshakeh stood, and cried with a loud voice in the Jews' language, and said, Hear ye the words of the great king, the king of Assyria.
Isaiah 36:13

Biblical Context

Rabshakeh's call is a loud public claim of imperial power. It mirrors the inner voice of fear commanding obedience to apparent authority.

Neville's Inner Vision

Rabshakeh's loud cry in the Jews' language stands for the outer voice of power pressing you to bow to circumstance. In Neville's terms, the king he spoke for is the familiar sense of lack that attends your life when you identify with the ego. The I AM within you, your true awareness, remains unseen by the crowd outside, yet it is the only throne that matters. When you hear that voice, you are being invited to forget who you truly are and to submit to a reality defined by fear and survival. The remedy is not to refute the world, but to revise your state of consciousness: claim the inner king, the I AM, as the source and ruler of all experience. Picture the scene as a private audience with your own divinity, and feel the assurance that the kingdom of God is within, not on a distant battlefield. As you dwell there, the voice of lack quiets, and events align with that new state of consciousness.

Practice This Now

Silently declare I AM as the ruler here and now, then feel the inner throne beneath your chest as you revise fear into assurance.

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