Inner Land of Abundance

Isaiah 36:17 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Isaiah 36 in context

Scripture Focus

17Until I come and take you away to a land like your own land, a land of corn and wine, a land of bread and vineyards.
Isaiah 36:17

Biblical Context

The verse promises a shift to a fertile, abundant land, symbolizing divine restoration. It speaks to a future relocation that mirrors inner reordering of consciousness.

Neville's Inner Vision

From the Neville Goddard vantage, this verse is a whisper that you are not moving a person but shifting a state. 'Until I come' is the moment your I AM arrives in awareness and agrees to revise the story you call you. 'Take you away to a land' is the return of your attention from fear to faith, from lack to sufficiency. The 'land of corn and wine' represents the nourishing conditions of consciousness—corn for sustenance of thought, wine for celebration of imagination, bread for daily presence. The verse does not promise a map so much as a mood: a new creation that unfolds when you dwell as the citizen of that land. Exile is a thought-form, a temporary misalignment; return is a correction of the inner weather by consenting to God as your inner governor. In this light, the promise becomes practical: you can occupy that land now by assuming the feeling of being already there and letting your actions flow from that state. Your life rearranges to reflect the inner abundance you have assumed belongs to you.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes. In your mental screen, plant yourself in a land where corn, bread, and wine are in abundance; repeat "I am in a land of abundance now" as a present-tense fact, and feel the nourishment as if real.

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