The Idol's Silence, I Am

Isaiah 46:7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Isaiah 46 in context

Scripture Focus

7They bear him upon the shoulder, they carry him, and set him in his place, and he standeth; from his place shall he not remove: yea, one shall cry unto him, yet can he not answer, nor save him out of his trouble.
Isaiah 46:7

Biblical Context

The text describes idols that are carried and set in place, unable to move or answer. It exposes their impotence and the futility of relying on external saviors.

Neville's Inner Vision

Isaiah 46:7 places the idol on your shoulder and hands you a powerless savior. It bears its burden, remains fixed, cannot move, and when you cry to it there is no answer—only your projection returning the silence you gave it. In Neville’s light, this is not about ancient statues but about the inner images you treat as real protection: fear, lack, or need dressed as a god outside yourself. The power you seek is not in the statue but in the I AM within you—the awareness that animates every thought and feeling. When you recognize that the idol is a created image of your own mind, you can withdraw belief from it and turn attention to the living presence of I AM. The response you crave arises as you revise the scene by assumption: declare you are already saved by the I AM you are, and feel that truth as real in your chest. The idol fades as your certainty grows, and you discover you have been, all along, the one who moves the inner world.

Practice This Now

Place the idol on a shelf in your imagination, and declare I AM is the power here. Then revise your belief by feeling that you are already saved by the I AM you are, and let that certainty dissolve the old image.

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