Terah's Inner Lineage
Genesis 11:26-29 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Genesis 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Genesis 11:26-29 describes Terah fathering Abram, Nahor, and Haran; Haran dies; Abram and Nahor marry Sarai and Milcah.
Neville's Inner Vision
Terah’s seventy years marks the threshold where consciousness begins to generate its own lineages. In this inner drama, the names Abram, Nahor, and Haran become states of mind you cultivate within. Haran’s death before his father signals the need for an old impulse to expire so something new may be born in you. Abram and Nahor taking wives—Sarai and Milcah—represent the alliance of your I AM with fresh ideas and commitments; Sarai embodies the ideal you are inviting into your world, Milcah the inheritance of patterns you are willing to relate to and transform. The fact that Haran begat Lot hints that every inner impulse tends to produce offspring of thought and habit. The generations are not distant ancestors but processes of your consciousness. The scene invites you to see yourself as the I AM behind these movements, capable of revising the script by imagining the ends you desire and feeling them as real now. When you consent to this inner ordering, the lineages shift, and your present life begins to reflect a renewed inner kingdom.
Practice This Now
Assume a quiet moment and revise the inner lineage: declare 'I AM the origin of every state in my life,' then feel the new alignment as if the scene were already fulfilled.
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