Conquering Inner Boundaries
Deuteronomy 3:8-9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Deuteronomy 3 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Deuteronomy 3:8-9 records the people taking land from the two Amorite kings on this side of the Jordan, from the river Arnon to Mount Hermon. It marks a boundary claimed and a liberation won.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within Neville's psychology, the land they conquered is your own inner territory. The two Amorite kings symbolize opposing states within your mind—fear, resistance, limitation and doubt—that you have chosen to displace. The Jordan is the boundary you cross in consciousness, the moving line of awareness across which you refuse to concede any more to lack. From Arnon to Hermon you are surveying the full stretch of your inner landscape—the waters of feeling, the heights of belief—each named by inner voices (Hermon, Sirion, Shenir) that remind you names carry no power unless you inhabit them with attention. God is not an external army; God is the I AM within you, the awareness that can declare, 'This land is mine,' and dwell there in thought and feeling until it becomes your lived experience. The act of taking the land is the act of imagining yourself already in possession, revising your sense of identity from one of need to one of authority and gratitude.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, assume you already possess this inner land, and feel the ownership as a present tense reality. Breath into the feeling, and let the old kings fall into memory as you stand in your new kingdom.
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