Inner Marches of the I Am

Isaiah 10:28-29 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Isaiah 10 in context

Scripture Focus

28He is come to Aiath, he is passed to Migron; at Michmash he hath laid up his carriages:
29They are gone over the passage: they have taken up their lodging at Geba; Ramah is afraid; Gibeah of Saul is fled.
Isaiah 10:28-29

Biblical Context

The verses describe an army moving through towns, signaling a structured advance that evokes fear. In Neville's view, the towns and moves symbolize inner states and shifts in belief, not merely external events.

Neville's Inner Vision

View Aiath, Migron, Michmash, Geba, Ramah, and Gibeah of Saul as stations on the map of your inner life, not real towns. The Assyrian host is the momentum of a belief in lack, limitation, and separation; their laying up carriages is your old habits stored as memory. To 'pass over the passage' is to move your attention from identified problem into the durable presence of I AM. When Ramah is afraid, and Gibeah of Saul has fled, it reveals fear's power dissolving under the heat of new consciousness. The vision shows that the army cannot touch the reality you are, which is the I AM and its imagination. You feel them moving through, but you do not have to join them. Your job is to assume a different state: that you, the consciousness, have already completed the march and arrived at Geba, comfortable and unafraid, with the old carriage-bags left behind. In that inner city, the true power reigns; the external scene merely confirms what you have already believed inside.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Close your eyes and assume you are already 'in Geba'—the inner stronghold. Feel the I AM presence—unshakable, ruling the mind—and revise the outer scene by dwelling there until fear dissolves.

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