Inner Rain Drought: Amos 4:7-9
Amos 4:7-9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Amos 4 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Amos 4:7-9 describes God withholding rain and sending blight as consequences of turning away; the people wander for water and still do not return to the LORD.
Neville's Inner Vision
In this passage the drought and pestilence are not external judgments but inner weather patterns you generate by your state of consciousness. When you believe the I AM is distant, when you argue for lack, you withhold the rain from your experience. The deliberate distribution of rain or drought across cities mirrors how your attention can scatter and deplete your sense of abundance. The line 'yet have ye not returned unto me' is not a historical verdict but a reminder that the moment you cling to a belief in separation, you refuse the communion that nourishes life. Return, then, to the God within, the I AM that you are, and revise the entire climate of your mind. If you awaken to the truth that you are consciousness, and that imagination is the instrument by which reality is formed, you can reverse the weather with a single assumption. See rain where you stand, feel it saturate your inner garden, and allow the palmerworm of fear to disappear as you affirm your oneness with divine abundance.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit quietly, place a hand on your chest, and assume the feeling of the wish fulfilled: 'I am the I AM, abundance now.' Stay with the sensation until weather inside shifts and the sense of lack dissolves.
The Bible Through Neville










Neville Bible Sparks









