Inner Covenant After the Flood
Genesis 8:1-22 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Genesis 8 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
After the flood, God remembers Noah and all life; the waters recede and the ark rests. Noah offers sacrifice, and mercy is proclaimed as the seasons endure.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within your mind, the ark is disciplined attention; the floods are fearful states that are cooled by a new divine idea. God remembered Noah—that is, the I AM within you remembers the seed of life it has planted. A wind passes over the earth, an inner breeze that quiets the storm of thought and halts the flood of fear. The dove’s journey and its olive leaf become inner signs: when a new life-affirming statement arises, the old waters abate; the dove’s return signals the old conditions yielding to the new. When Noah comes forth with his family, you are choosing to step out of the old story into a covenant of mercy. The altar and the sweet savour symbolize inner worship aligning with the divine law; the heart’s imagination is not a curse but the instrument of renewal. And the line, 'as long as the earth remaineth, seedtime and harvest, day and night shall not cease,' becomes the inner guarantee that your cycles of renewal persist as you remain in this state of being.
Practice This Now
Sit quietly and assume the state of Noah stepping onto dry ground. Say softly, 'I AM restored' and feel the covenant take root in you.
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