Genesis 20:11 Inner Fear and Providence

Genesis 20:11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Genesis 20 in context

Scripture Focus

11And Abraham said, Because I thought, Surely the fear of God is not in this place; and they will slay me for my wife's sake.
Genesis 20:11

Biblical Context

Abraham fears for his life because he believes the locals will kill him for Sarah, since he thinks there is no fear of God in that place.

Neville's Inner Vision

Genesis 20:11 whispers a timeless truth to the practitioner: the fear of God is not a threat out there, but a signal of your own inner alignment. Abraham's deception springs from a split in consciousness—a belief that he and his wife are separate from the divine protection of the I AM. He projects danger onto the outer world because his mind has forgotten that the I AM governs every place and every possibility. When you convince yourself that the outer scene lacks God, you contract into fear and you will craft clever stratagems to survive. But the kingdom of God begins in your own heart; the fear you sense is simply resistance to the law of cause and effect that you, as consciousness, have set in motion. The remedy is not flight or fraud but a re-orientation: assume the truth that God is the sole power and that you are in His keeping. In that inner posture, the place becomes sacred, your wife, your life, and your protection are guaranteed by the I AM, and fear dissolves.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Close your eyes, breathe, and revise the scene by declaring, 'The I AM is my shield; fear has no power here.' Feel the truth in your chest until the body relaxes and you move with effortless certainty.

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