Inner Acts of Divine Providence
Deuteronomy 11:5-7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Deuteronomy 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
God recounts the Lord's deeds in the wilderness and the judgment that befell rebellion. He then reminds Israel that their eyes have seen the great acts of the LORD.
Neville's Inner Vision
In Neville’s sense, the wilderness Moses speaks of is the current posture of your mind under pressure. The Lord’s acts are not distant events but demonstrations of the I AM operating within you, moving you from fear to faith. When Dathan and Abiram are swallowed, see that as the collapse of a false self—the old stubborn belief that you are separate from provision. The earth opening its mouth represents your inner disharmony dissolving under the reality that nothing stands outside your consciousness. Your eyes have seen the great acts of the LORD, meaning you have already witnessed the power of your own imagining. The acts of God are your own inward results—orderly, timely, inevitable—once you stop trying to enforce outcomes from lack and begin to notice the idea that you are the awareness that experiences these acts. Rest in the conviction that the divine is not a far-off judge but the I AM within you, forever unfolding what you inwardly accept as real. This is the spiritual law: imagination creates the world you inhabit.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Assume you are in the wilderness and that the Lord’s acts are happening now within you; revise one lack-based belief by declaring, 'I have already witnessed the great acts of God here.' Feel the emotion of gratitude as if it is real.
The Bible Through Neville










Neville Bible Sparks









