Inner Mourning, Inner Hebron
Genesis 23:2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Genesis 23 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Sarah dies in Kirjatharba (Hebron); Abraham mourns for her, weeping.
Neville's Inner Vision
Viewed through Neville’s inner vision, Genesis 23:2 reveals that Sarah’s death is not an end but a shift in the I AM’s focus. Abraham’s mourning is the inner movement by which consciousness recognizes the passing of an old sense of security. The tomb at Kirjatharba becomes Hebron—the inner state where the self settles into a new dwelling. This is a call to watch your own thoughts when forms perish: the weeping is release, the grief is soil for a new belief, and every sense of lack can be revised into a future imagined from your eternal I AM. When you feel loss, you are not denying life but participating in the alchemy of consciousness that continually births new possibilities. The promise is not outside you but within your own awakening, where the I AM perceives all as your interior state, ever becoming. By relaxing identification with the old form and quietly affirming your dwelling in Hebron, you invite the resurrection of vitality in your present experience.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Close your eyes and picture your old belief as dead, then revise by affirming, 'I AM dwelling in Hebron now.' Feel the new inner life as you anchor the future formed by your I AM.
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