Inner Covenant Judgment
Deuteronomy 29:20-21 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Deuteronomy 29 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage says that breaking the covenant invites severe judgment: curses will rest on the offender, and the LORD will blot out their name from under heaven. They will be separated unto evil from all the tribes of Israel.
Neville's Inner Vision
Take the passage as a mirror: the 'man' is a state of consciousness that has wandered from the covenant with God—the I AM that you are. The 'anger of the LORD' and the 'curses' are the inner weather you create when you identify with fear, guilt, and separation. When you live from that old state, your name is 'blotted from heaven' in the sense that your sense of self is withdrawn from the light of awareness, and you feel exiled within your own mind, among the imagined tribes of your life. Yet this is not punishment but law: you experience what you hold as true in your mind. The answer is the creative act of revision, of returning to the covenant by imagining and feeling yourself already in harmony with the divine I AM. Assume the feeling of the wish fulfilled, dwell there, and let it supplant the old scene. In this way you do not appease an external judge but awaken to your innate unity; your inner name is restored, and your life aligns with the written law of your true self.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Assume the feeling of the wish fulfilled—imagine you are already in covenant with the I AM; revise the old scene by dwelling in that inner state for a few minutes, feeling it real.
The Bible Through Neville










Neville Bible Sparks









