Inner Deliverance From Fearful Esau

Genesis 32:11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Genesis 32 in context

Scripture Focus

11Deliver me, I pray thee, from the hand of my brother, from the hand of Esau: for I fear him, lest he will come and smite me, and the mother with the children.
Genesis 32:11

Biblical Context

Jacob asks for deliverance from his brother Esau, fearing harm to himself and the mother with the children.

Neville's Inner Vision

Fear in the Genesis scene is not a distant threat but a state of consciousness you wear. Esau appears as the image of the old self pursuing the separated mind; the mother and the children are the faculties you nurture under fear—your protective instincts and your future outcomes. When Jacob cries, deliver me, he is not asking a person to intervene; he is inviting the I AM to awaken within. The moment you acknowledge that there is only one Power in you—the I AM—the hand of Esau loses its grip. You discover that the safety you seek is already present in your awareness, and the fear dissolves as you realize you are one with the veiled energy you called Esau. Your external threats dissolve into inner harmonies as you revise the scene in the imagination, seeing yourself as already delivered, seeing the past as a dream of separation. In this light, deliverance is a shift of state, not a petition to a future event. The mother-with-the-children becomes the living faculties of nurture and guidance, now aligned with your divine I AM.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and assume the feeling of I AM as your deliverer now. Revise the scene in your imagination so Esau's threat dissolves into peace, and you stand secure in inner safety.

The Bible Through Neville

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