Plainly Written Law Upon Stones
Deuteronomy 27:8 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Deuteronomy 27 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse commands writing all the words of the law very plainly on stones. It emphasizes making the law explicit and unambiguous.
Neville's Inner Vision
Placed on stone, the law becomes fixed in your imagination, not on sands that shift with mood. In Neville's teaching, the stones symbolize the durable beliefs you carry in the basement of consciousness. To write the words very plainly is to refuse coyness and uncertainty; it is a direct alignment of your I AM with its instruction. When you assume that the law is already true within you, you are not appeasing a deity outside; you are waking to your own inner authority. The act of inscribing is a revision technique, a practice that makes the law a visible fact in your inner world. As you repeat, re-event, and revise, you feel the presence of the covenant—loyalty to your own I AM—becoming the governing condition of your days. The outer world then mirrors the clarity you forged inward: decisions become easier, circumstances align, and events appear in alignment with the command you plainly etched. The key is not force but faith that the inner inscription governs the outer scene.
Practice This Now
Practice: Choose one inner law to fix, e.g., 'I AM abundant and secure.' Close your eyes and 'write' those words on the inner stone until the impression feels true, then dwell in the feeling that it is already so for a minute.
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