Inner Schemes of the Churl
Isaiah 32:6-7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Isaiah 32 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Plain summary: The passage condemns a vile person whose words deceive and whose schemes harm the needy, starving the hungry and letting thirst go unanswered. It presents this as an issue of inner disposition and consequence, not only external actions.
Neville's Inner Vision
Isaiah exposes a mind-state that covers the hungry with empty promises; yet the same deceit is a state of consciousness within you. The churl’s 'villany' is not a person so much as a habit of thought—belief in lack, the impulse to control others, the habit of framing others’ needs as threat. When the heart 'works iniquity' and hypocritical speech erupts, it is the imagination playing at being god, accounting for appearances while denying the abundance that is already present in I AM. The 'instruments' are your own habitual thoughts and words that build a case against the poor; they dissolve when you no longer identify with them. To liberate yourself, refuse to empower that inner voice with reality. Return to the I AM that is your true self, the source of all supply. Make a firm assumption that justice begins within, that all supply flows from your inner decree. When you feel the truth of that assumption—stretching the mind to see wealth and nourishment in every scene—the outer world reorders to match your revised inner realization. Deliverance comes as you dwell in that awareness.
Practice This Now
Assume the I AM is the source of all nourishment. In a quiet scene, visualize feeding the hungry and quenching the thirsty, and feel it real now.
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