Stones of Inner Covenant
Deuteronomy 27:4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Deuteronomy 27 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse commands setting up stones on Mount Ebal after crossing the Jordan, as a public sign of obedience to God's command and covenant.
Neville's Inner Vision
Imagine that Deuteronomy 27:4 is not about stones planted in a remote place, but about the architecture of your own awareness. The Jordan crossing marks a shift from old identifications into the promised land of a renewed self. The stones on Mount Ebal are fixed states of consciousness you declare and therefore claim as yours: discipline, loyalty to the inner law, and steady action. Plastering them with plaster becomes the act of saturating your mind with conviction—making the promise feel real in the now. The command to set and plaster is an invitation to render obedience a living function of I AM, not a distant rite. When you set up these inner stones, you create an altar within which true worship arises as the harmony of thought, feeling, and choice with the inner law. Your consciousness becomes the Mount, and your constant allegiance to inner truth becomes the worship that persists, even as circumstances shift around you.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes. Assume you have already placed the inner stones on Mount Ebal in your consciousness; feel the plaster of conviction harden; let obedience to the inner law become your present worship.
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