Innocence at the Inner Court
Genesis 44:7-9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Genesis 44 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The brothers deny any intent to steal, insist on their innocence by returning the money found in their sacks, and propose to become the lord's bondmen if fault is found.
Neville's Inner Vision
Genesis 44:7-9 invites us to view the courtroom scene as a page in the drama of consciousness. The brothers’ words are not mere legal talk but a test of the state they claim to inhabit. The money found in their sacks is not a purse in need of accounting; it is the mind’s forgotten belief returned to the heart’s treasury. When they cry that their servants should not act against this thing, they confess a fear that outward actions may betray an inner condition; their vow to become the lord’s servants, to be bound rather than betray, redefines punishment as the price of inner harmony. In Neville’s terms, the scene shows that what you call the world is a projection of your inner state, and providence answers to the state you affirm. If you insist on innocence and return what is yours to your inner lord, you align with the I AM that never leaves you, and the external test becomes a flow of abundance rather than a proof of guilt. The sense of lack dissolves as you inhabit this state: you are free, you are guided, you are wealth.
Practice This Now
Assume the consciousness of innocence now. Visualize discovering nothing to fear and feel the I AM guiding you toward abundant provision as you breathe.
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