Inner Winds Hosea 13:15-16
Hosea 13:15-16 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Hosea 13 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage shows that outward fruitfulness can coexist with inner drought when one rebels against God; the result is desolation. In Neville's view this is an inner warning about consciousness, and alignment with the I AM revives the inner springs.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within you, Hosea's winds are not distant armies but states of mind. The east wind represents an aggravated consciousness—a belief that you are separate from the I AM and the living water within. When you identify with that belief, your inner spring dries, your fountain loses its life, and your treasured ideas about yourself become vulnerable to spoilage. The outer desolation in Samaria mirrors this inner drought: a rebellion against your own divine nature creates consequence, not punishment. Yet this is not a future doom but a diagnostic signal: you can reverse it by turning inward and choosing to imagine and feel from the I AM. The God of your imagination is not angry but attentive, nudging you to return to the source. By revising the sense of self from lack to abundance, you restore the spring, replenish the treasures, and claim a new landscape of peace, even amid apparent storms. The wind of the LORD coming up from the wilderness becomes the gentle invitation to awaken to the consciousness that you are, and always have been, the fountain.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, breathe into the center of your chest, and declare I AM the inner spring. Assume the I AM as your reality and feel the water returning, transforming drought into abundance.
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