From Solitude to Inner Union
Genesis 2:18 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Genesis 2 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Genesis 2:18 says it is not good for the man to be alone and that God will provide a helper. It points to companionship as part of divine order.
Neville's Inner Vision
Suppose you are the man in Genesis 2:18. In Neville's psychology, the man is a state of consciousness, not a person walking in a garden. The sentence 'It is not good that the man should be alone' declares loneliness as a mental condition, a discord within your I AM. The 'I will make him an help meet for him' is not external providence but an inner act of alignment: your subpersonalities—the assertive self and the cooperative, receptive self—are invited to cooperate under the divine law of unity. When consciousness is torn by solitary aim, you feel separation; when you imagine and feel the I AM as the source that supplies a partner-like harmony, you awaken a new scene in your life. The 'helper' becomes an inner faculty—discernment, support, energy—rendered real by assumption and feeling-it-real. In this sense, Genesis speaks of the order of creation returning to wholeness: unity of will with inner companionship, and the appearance of outer events to match that inner alignment. The presence of God is the awareness that you are not alone; you are accompanied by your I AM.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, and assume the feeling 'I am not alone; I am joined by the I AM and its inner harmony.' Then imagine a scene of inner harmony assisting your life as if the inner helper is already present.
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