Abram's Inner Rescue
Genesis 14:14-16 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Genesis 14 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Abram learns Lot has been captured, arms his trained servants (318), and pursues the captors by night. He defeats them and restores Lot, his goods, and the people.
Neville's Inner Vision
Genesis 14:14–16 is not a history lesson but a map of consciousness. Abram embodies the I AM in action, the untired will that refuses to concede a single inch of life to dream-thieves. The 318 trained servants—born in his house—are your disciplined faculties ready to mobilize when summoned by a clear inner call. The night pursuit shows thought moving in the unseen, where fear is transmuted by resolute decision. When he divides himself against them, it is the mind splitting toward unity: faith pairing with courage, obedience aligning with fearless imagination. Dan and Hobah mark inner thresholds you cross as you reclaim what you have allowed to slip away—your goods, your people, your sense of wholeness. The outcome—Lot restored, goods returned, the people saved—speaks of salvation as awakening to your covenant loyalty: you are your own guardian, your own deliverer, because you refuse to surrender your inner alliance with life. The narrative invites you to trust the I AM, to move with quiet strength, and to possess the land that is already yours in consciousness.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit quietly and declare, 'I am the I AM that rescues and restores now.' Visualize Lot and the people returning, the goods recovered, and feel the victory as already accomplished.
The Bible Through Neville










Neville Bible Sparks









