Inner Language vs Wall Attacks
Isaiah 36:11-12 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Isaiah 36 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Eliakim, Shebna, and Joah urge Rabshakeh to speak in Syriac so the people on the wall won’t understand. Rabshakeh replies in Hebrew, mocking the men on the wall and revealing the struggle between fear, pride, and resilience.
Neville's Inner Vision
To the reader, the wall is not stone but the boundary of your own awareness. The Syriac language is the surface chatter of fear you understand but have learned to endure; the Jews language is your true self, the quiet certainty that I AM is here now. The Rabshakeh’s voice is the ego’s habit of doom, a torrent of words designed to move you to despair or to mock yourself. The assault reveals not a city but your inner sovereignty being tested. When you identify with the outer voice, you concede that you are at the mercy of circumstance. The remedy is to revise from within: decide that the master of your mind has sent you a message of dominion, and respond from the I AM rather than from fear. Speak to yourself in the language of power, feel the truth of your unity with the I AM, and let the fear dissolve as your inner image asserts reality. In this way the wall becomes your altar, and the crowd’s cry becomes the call to awaken to your divine state.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and revise the scene. Imagine you are the one on the wall declaring I AM, hear the external attack as inner noise, then affirm a sovereign inner state and feel it real.
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