The Inner Mountain Feast
Isaiah 25:5-6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Isaiah 25 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage contrasts quieting the noise of outsiders with a divine feast on the Lord's mountain. It signals inner abundance and mercy available to all.
Neville's Inner Vision
You are not translating geography here; you are tracing a state of consciousness. The 'noise of strangers' are wandering thoughts and external cares that prod you into identify with lack. The 'heat in a dry place' and the 'shadow of a cloud' speak of spiritual dryness and transient coverings that hide your true I AM. The 'branch of the terrible ones' is the claim of fear, judgment, and resistance brought low by the mountain of awareness where the Lord of hosts presides. In this inner mountain, the Almighty prepares a feast for all people—the fat things, the wine on the lees, refined and full of marrow—signifying abundance, refreshment, and the savor of grace now available to you. When you turn inward and align with the I AM, outer disturbances dissolve and you enter the present feast, where divine supply is felt as real in your body and life.
Practice This Now
Practice: sit in stillness and declare, in the first-person I AM, that you are on the inner mountain where the Lord feeds you. Revision: when distractions rise, affirm 'I am fed by divine abundance now' and feel the nourishment as real in this moment.
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