High Place Prayer Reimagined
Isaiah 16:12 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Isaiah 16 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Moab's wearying climb on the high place ends with him going to prayer, but the verse says he will not prevail.
Neville's Inner Vision
Moab on the high place is a symbol of a mind placed in outer vantage, believing that power comes from views and rituals. When you observe such weariness, you are simply witnessing a state of consciousness that has not yet been convinced of its own sufficiency. The sanctuary is not stone; it is the I AM within you—the unwavering awareness that remains when the world seems loud. To prevail you do not beg or plead; you revise. Assume the feeling that the desired result is already yours. Dwell in that inner assumption until it feels real, then imagine the scene as if it were fulfilled, and let the old conviction dissolve into quiet certainty. The prayer that prevails is a re-creation of the inner state, not an outward appeal. Thus the verse teaches that true victory arises from consciousness aligned with its own power, not from high places or external sanctuaries. When you keep returning to I AM and imagine from that foundation, the outer "prevailed" condition yields to your inner peace.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, step off the high place, and enter your inner sanctuary. Assume the feeling of the fulfilled desire and imagine the scene as already complete, resting in the I AM.
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