The Inner Heir Awakening
Genesis 15:2-3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Genesis 15 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Abram voices his childless condition and the fear that Eliezer of Damascus will inherit his house. He frames the future as coming from an external hand rather than from the seed within his own consciousness.
Neville's Inner Vision
Abram’s dialogue with the LORD God is your awareness noticing a lack-state wearing the mask of fact. 'What wilt thou give me, seeing I go childless?' is the cry of a consciousness convinced that its seed lies outside and apart from itself. The steward Eliezer of Damascus represents a belief that the future inheritance must come from without, not from the seed planted in imagination. In Neville’s view, the verse invites a revision: you are not awaiting a gift from somewhere else; you are the I AM capable of generating seed. The statement 'to me thou hast given no seed' is the exact moment to reframe as: I am the one who sows and reaps within my mind. Speak to your inner God and assume the end: I have seed now; I am the father of many, the house is not a person but a state of consciousness that holds fullness. Persist in the feeling of the wish fulfilled, until the image of a promised lineage becomes your immediate perception and the old doubt vanishes.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes and assume the end: I have seed now; I am the father of many. Feel it as a present fact and let the inner image displace the old lack.
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