Mountains of Myrrh and Frankincense
Song of Solomon 4:6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Song of Solomon 4 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
It depicts choosing to enter the inner sanctuary of worship until daybreak, leaving shadows behind.
Neville's Inner Vision
Verse 4:6 is not about geography but consciousness. The daybreak represents a waking state of awareness; shadows are unsettled thoughts that obscure I AM. The mountain of myrrh and the hill of frankincense are inner stations of feeling and intention—sweet fragrances your mind pours into experience when you align with your true I Am. When you say 'I will get me,' you claim sovereignty over your inner weather; you choose to ascend not by external travel but by revision and faith in imagination. The claim invites you to dwell in the worshipful posture until the whole nature is permeated with the aroma of remembrance and creative power. Your inner worship dissolves doubt, fear, and separation by repeatedly stepping into the imagined scene until the daybreak reality is felt as now. This is practical mysticism: use the imagination to move from shadow to light, and by feeling it real, your outer world rearranges to reflect the inner covenant.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and imagine yourself on the mountain of myrrh, then on the hill of frankincense, until daybreak floods your feeling with sacred presence. Whisper I AM, feel it as now, and allow the fragrance to rewrite your sense of reality.
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