Inner Justice, Outer Fruit

Isaiah 3:10-11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Isaiah 3 in context

Scripture Focus

10Say ye to the righteous, that it shall be well with him: for they shall eat the fruit of their doings.
11Woe unto the wicked! it shall be ill with him: for the reward of his hands shall be given him.
Isaiah 3:10-11

Biblical Context

The verse presents a clear contrast: the righteous shall eat the fruit of their doings, while the wicked shall reap the consequences of their hands.

Neville's Inner Vision

Isaiah speaks as the testimony of your own consciousness. The 'righteous' are those in whom the I AM, your awareness, finds a steady inner posture; the 'fruit of their doings' is the natural expression of that inner state. When you hold the assumption that you are well and justly cared for, you are not waiting for a future event—you are established in a state that makes well-being inevitable. The warning to the wicked speaks to the habit patterns of mind that doubt and resist; such resistance breeds the ill that follows. Look not outward for punishment but inward: what you consider as reward or consequence is the movement of your own attention and feeling. If you persist in imagining yourself as separate from the intelligent life that enlivens you, you create lack; if you align with the I AM as your real self, you invite a harvest that is a natural fruit of your discipline and clarity. You are the womb of all outcomes, and your present feeling completes the cycle.

Practice This Now

Imaginative_act: Assume the feeling of the righteous now; declare, 'I am the well-being that prospers; I eat the fruit of my deeds.' Close your eyes and breathe into that truth until it feels real.

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