Inner Covenant in Tribulation

Deuteronomy 4:30-31 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Deuteronomy 4 in context

Scripture Focus

30When thou art in tribulation, and all these things are come upon thee, even in the latter days, if thou turn to the LORD thy God, and shalt be obedient unto his voice;
31(For the LORD thy God is a merciful God;) he will not forsake thee, neither destroy thee, nor forget the covenant of thy fathers which he sware unto them.
Deuteronomy 4:30-31

Biblical Context

Tribulation calls you to turn inward and obey the voice. God is merciful and will not forsake the covenant.

Neville's Inner Vision

Your imagination is the instrument by which Deuteronomy becomes personal; the tribulation is the pressure that pushes you to awaken to the I AM; when you comply with the voice within, you align your consciousness with mercy, the divine pattern, and the ancient covenant becomes your lived reality, a present fact rather than a distant promise. The merciful nature of God is not a future event but the tender reality of your own awareness, available whenever you choose to return to the I AM. The 'latter days' mark a shift in your state—fear to trust, separation to communion—and obedience to the voice is the inner act of revision: you see yourself already kept, already favored, and your world remolds to reflect that truth. Remember that the covenant rests in your own heart as an agreement between your true self and the source of life, and it cannot be forgotten as long as you remain faithful to the I AM.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Assume you are already kept by the merciful I AM. Revise any sense of abandonment by declaring, 'I turn to the I AM now and am kept,' and feel the truth as real in your chest.

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