Inner Roots of Kin
1 Chronicles 2:46-47 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 1 Chronicles 2 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verses name Ephah, Caleb's concubine, and her sons Haran, Moza, Gazez, followed by Jahdai's six sons. They sketch a web of kin and lineage within the community.
Neville's Inner Vision
Behold, the genealogical list is not a record of distant facts but a map of your inner kingdom. Ephah, Caleb's concubine, becomes the image of fertile receptivity within your current state of consciousness. Haran, Moza, Gazez are inner movements that proceed from that receptive state—habits, choices, and tendencies that give birth to the events you call life. Jahdai's sons—Regem, Jotham, Gesham, Pelet, Ephah, Shaaph—are the successive thoughts and feelings that weave themselves into a living story when you linger in a particular mood or assumption. The passage invites you to examine who you count as kin: your sense of belonging, dignity, and honor as Imago Dei within you. When you recognize these names as inner dispositions rather than outer facts, you discover that unity and community arise from the way you hold and relate to your own inner life. The I AM, your eternal watcher, notices which movements you identify with and which you let pass. Imagination, rightly attended, rearranges the inner order, and from that revised interior reality your relationships and circumstances follow, harmonizing as you dwell in a single, inclusive consciousness.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Close the eyes and assume you are already in harmony with your inner kin; feel the dignity and inclusion that come with that state. Then revise a current relationship by visualizing it healed in the light of that unity, and let the feeling of it be real in your chest.
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