Seven Cries, One I Am
Isaiah 4:1-2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Isaiah 4 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verses picture a crisis moment in which many seek union with a single state of consciousness to remove reproach. The branch of the LORD then appears as beauty and fruitful life for the remnant.
Neville's Inner Vision
Read as the I AM, these lines announce an interior negotiation. The 'seven women' are the many faces of desire pleading for a place in one authentic state—the man who bears your spiritual name. They say, 'We will feed ourselves and dress ourselves, only let us be called by thy name, to remove our reproach.' Yet the message is not social; it is a conversion of your inner climate: you are invited to stop chasing external solutions and to settle into the one consciousness that already holds you. The branch of the LORD is the living idea born of that inner union; it becomes beautiful and glorious in your mind and bears fruit in your world for those escaped of Israel—the remnant who resist the old self and awaken to God within. When you accept this, you need no longer seek many names or conditions; you awaken to the unity of I AM, and your inner garden blooms with beauty and substance. This is the law of faith: imagine the end, dwell in the I AM, and the outer scene follows.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Assume the I AM as your continuous state now; revise any sense of lack by affirming, 'I am the branch of the LORD in me, beautiful and glorious.' Feel it real.
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