Inner Tents Tremble Vision
Habakkuk 3:7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Habakkuk 3 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Habakkuk’s vision shows external forces of trouble—Cushan’s tents in affliction and Midian’s curtains trembling—as if danger arises from outside you. It presents trouble as an outer movement that seems to shake the land.
Neville's Inner Vision
Viewed through the I AM lens, the tents of Cushan and the trembling curtains of Midian are not distant battlegrounds but states of consciousness appearing as outer events. I am the aware watcher who imagines and experiences: affliction arises as a vibration within, a belief that life has broken its promise. When you realize that God is the I AM within, you understand these scenes are only movements of your own mind. The tents are the temporary shelters of fear and limitation you imagine are outside you; the tremble is the mind’s tremor when fear meets a vision that it cannot sustain. By returning to the awareness that you are the one observing, you dissolve the fiction of conquest by external powers. In you, the same I AM can command new alignments of sensation, revision, and feeling. The vision thus becomes an invitation to re-claim your inner sovereignty, to declare that the tense, threatening landscape is but a projection of your inner state, ready to be rewritten by the felt truth of your continued perfect awareness.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Sit quietly, assume the feeling of the wish fulfilled: you are the observer who alters the scene; relax the fear and revise the landscape as already quiet and secure. Let it settle in your body as truth.
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