Inner Lament of Isaiah 15:5-6
Isaiah 15:5-6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Isaiah 15 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Moab's heart laments; fugitives flee toward Zoar as they ascend with weeping. The land dries up—waters desolate, grass withered.
Neville's Inner Vision
Consider Moab not as a nation, but as a state of consciousness you carry within. The heart’s lament for Moab is the cry of a part of you that believes in lack, a belief that your thriving is somewhere beyond this moment. The fugitives fleeing to Zoar are thoughts packing up to escape the present, while you, the I AM that notices, stand at Luhith being lifted by tears—tears that signal an old energy loosening its grip. The way of Horonaim, with its cry of destruction, is the inner rumor that all is lost when a certain future memory is clinging to you. Nimrim’s desolate waters and the withering hay represent the inner famine—lack of nourishment for your soul when you identify with limitation. Yet in Neville’s law, you can revise: you are the I AM, the total consciousness that makes all seeming drought give way to abundance. By assuming a refreshed inner climate, by feeling it real, you awaken rivers of living water within and restore the green of your inner landscape.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit in stillness and treat the verse as your inner weather report. Assume the whole scene is your inner state; revise by affirming, 'I am the living water; drought gives way to abundance,' and feel that sensation as real.
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