Crossing the Inner Promised Land

Deuteronomy 3:25 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Deuteronomy 3 in context

Scripture Focus

25I pray thee, let me go over, and see the good land that is beyond Jordan, that goodly mountain, and Lebanon.
Deuteronomy 3:25

Biblical Context

Moses longs to enter the land God promised and to behold the realm beyond the Jordan. The verse frames that longing as a faithful gaze toward a future already prepared.

Neville's Inner Vision

Think of Moses’ petition as your own impulse to cross the border of limitation and inhabit a state of triumph within. The 'land' he wishes to view is not a map but a mental condition—peace, receptivity, and the felt presence of God I AM. Jordan represents the old self-boundaries that the mind must pass, while Lebanon and the good land symbolize the elevated, abundant awareness now available to you through imagination. When he says, 'I pray thee, let me go over,' he is naming a deliberate act of attention: move your consciousness into the interior landscape you desire and treat it as real. The key in Neville’s practice is to assume the end first and let the feeling of the wish fulfilled redraw your inner weather. In practice, repeat this: I now possess the land within, and I walk there in I AM presence, tasting its abundance. Persist in the revision and notice how inner movements align with a new sense of what is possible. The dream you seek is not distant; it is a present awareness you cultivate by inner conviction.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: In a quiet moment, close your eyes and revise: I am now standing in the good land beyond Jordan; Lebanon shines as the height of my awareness. Feel the sun of I AM on your skin and declare, 'This is mine now.'

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