Rahab's Faith Inner Doors

Hebrews 11:31 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Hebrews 11 in context

Scripture Focus

31By faith the harlot Rahab perished not with them that believed not, when she had received the spies with peace.
Hebrews 11:31

Biblical Context

Rahab, the outsider, is spared because she acted in faith by welcoming the spies with peace. The verse shows that true faith transcends labels and aligns inner motives with courageous, compassionate action.

Neville's Inner Vision

Rahab represents a hidden current of desire within us that has long been judged or dismissed. The spies are not foreign men, but inner messages—the ideas of courage, strategy, and a new agreement with life—that come to every soul. When Rahab receives them with peace, she does not resist or condemn the unknown; she acknowledges and invites it. In this inner drama, 'the harlot' is not a person to be shamed but a symbol of energies we have treated as improper or unworthy. Faith here is trust in the unseen alignment between life’s purpose and the soul’s deepest intention. Because she believed, the outer disaster that might have befallen those who doubted could not reach her; she is saved because her inner state is already in harmony with the divine idea. You are asked to see that mercy and obedience are not external rules but inner reception: you permit the new idea to enter and be at peace with it, thereby changing your outcome. The act of belief is an inner act of hospitality toward the whole of your life.

Practice This Now

Imaginative Act: Sit quietly, breathe into the space where doubt lives, and imagine yourself as Rahab, opening the doors to the spies of guidance and receiving them with peace; feel your inner walls fall as you rest in the certainty that you are already saved by faith.

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