Twilight to Evening Victory

1 Samuel 30:17 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read 1 Samuel 30 in context

Scripture Focus

17And David smote them from the twilight even unto the evening of the next day: and there escaped not a man of them, save four hundred young men, which rode upon camels, and fled.
1 Samuel 30:17

Biblical Context

David defeats the enemy from twilight to the next evening, and not one escapes except four hundred young men who flee on camels.

Neville's Inner Vision

Here the tale is your inner drama. The I AM awake within you presses through the twilight of old beliefs until the evening of the next day, until the last echo of limitation falls. The enemies are fear and circumstance; their defeat is not a battle outside but a decision of consciousness. When the scripture says not a man escaped, it proclaims that your imagined state has pervaded every interior area; the four hundred who fled symbolize scattered thoughts clinging to the old image, and they retreat in the face of your concentrated awareness. Providence and guidance are the steady hand of your own awareness, fulfilling the natural law that your assumption shapes outcomes. The victory is not over others but over your own inconsistent versions of yourself. Stand in the I AM now, and the outward scene will align with your inner triumph.

Practice This Now

Assume the end has already occurred: declare I AM the conqueror of this condition, and feel it real now, letting the feeling carry from twilight into the next evening.

The Bible Through Neville

Neville Bible Sparks

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