Shelter Within Your Chambers

Isaiah 26:20 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Isaiah 26 in context

Scripture Focus

20Come, my people, enter thou into thy chambers, and shut thy doors about thee: hide thyself as it were for a little moment, until the indignation be overpast.
Isaiah 26:20

Biblical Context

God invites retreat into a private inner space and to wait for the indignation to pass; safety becomes an inner posture, not an external shelter. The passage points to deliverance as an inner shift of consciousness.

Neville's Inner Vision

Think of the chambers as your current state of consciousness, a private room where you can withdraw attention from fear and agitation. The word indignation refers to the storm of thought that arises when you identify with a troublesome appearance. By entering the chamber and closing the doors, you are practicing a shift of focus: you acknowledge the disturbance, then refuse to let it shape your sense of self. The salvation spoken is not a rescue from without, but a restoration of your awareness to the I AM—the one you truly are. In this inner setting, you imagine a different reality, feel it as real now, and let the external scene adjust to your inner state. The moment you feel the I AM present, the sense of 'you against the world' fades, and the inner sanctuary becomes permanent. Indignation passes not because time has changed externally, but because your consciousness has shifted toward wholeness, certainty, and love. This is how deliverance arrives: as you live from the inner chamber, you awaken to your own power to transform life by imagination.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Close your eyes and enter the chamber in consciousness; declare, I AM, and feel the security of that identity. Revise the appearing threat by resting in the inner state until your external scene mirrors your inner revelation.

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