Let It Suffice: Inner Silence
Deuteronomy 3:26 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Deuteronomy 3 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Moses pleads on behalf of the people, but God grows angry and refuses to listen, telling him to stop speaking about the matter.
Neville's Inner Vision
On the surface this verse recounts a moment of petition and prohibition: God’s anger at Moses and the command to drop the matter. In Neville’s inner-eye, this is a scene of consciousness, not a feud between persons. The LORD you meet is the I AM within you—the state that is aware of itself. When you persist in asking for an outer hearing or a fresh explanation, you are clinging to a story that keeps you separate from the end you desire. The phrase, 'Let it suffice thee,' is a doorway: it signals a decisive revision of the assumption you carry. If you accept this inner boundary as binding, you place yourself in alignment with the fulfilled state, and the old drama cannot penetrate. Your welfare and the welfare of the whole (the 'for your sakes') appear as your inner law at work, guiding you toward a union with Providence. By surrendering the need to plead the old matter, you allow the covenant of your I AM to manifest as your visible life. You are not being judged; you are choosing to end the scene and begin the real.
Practice This Now
Practice: Sit quietly, close your eyes, and revise your inner speech to: 'Let it suffice thee; the matter is settled in me now.' Then feel the state of the fulfilled covenant spreading through your body as if it were real.
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