Seeing the King Within

Isaiah 6:5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Isaiah 6 in context

Scripture Focus

5Then said I, Woe is me! for I am undone; because I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips: for mine eyes have seen the King, the LORD of hosts.
Isaiah 6:5

Biblical Context

Isaiah 6:5 records the prophet's confession of unworthiness after beholding the King. He names himself and his people as unclean, signaling an inner realization before divine presence.

Neville's Inner Vision

Before the vision, the mind lives in a traffic of separations and unclean lips—voices that speak from fear, lack, and limitation. When the King, the Lord of hosts, appears in the inner eye, you suddenly know the state of your talking and naming. Woe is me becomes an invitation, not a punishment: the I AM-aware self recognizes that the speech of the old consciousness remains attached to a lesser degree of reality. The 'undone' state is simply the revealing of your current alignment; as you witness the King, you are shown where you still believe you are separate from the divine source. The cure is not by punishment but by the return of your attention to the I AM, by echoing a new speech that aligns with the vision of unity. In Neville's method, you revise by assuming you are already the one you behold, the King inside, and that your lips speak from this unity. The moment you assume this, the inner movement shifts, and your language becomes sovereignty, integrity, and readiness to express truth as the I AM.

Practice This Now

Assume you are the I AM beholding the King. In the next moment, revise your speech by silently declaring, 'I am clean; I am the I AM speaking; I dwell in the King,' and feel that truth as present reality.

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