Remembering The Latter End
Isaiah 47:6-7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Isaiah 47 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Isaiah 47:6-7 speaks of anger toward a people who polluted their inheritance, showed no mercy, and boasted they would rule forever, forgetting the consequences. It highlights pride, judgment, and a call to remember the end of such choices.
Neville's Inner Vision
Imagine that the verse is not a decree from an external power but a mirror of your own inner state. 'I was wroth with my people' becomes the part of you that has judged, condemned, and felt separated from your inner inheritance. 'Polluted mine inheritance' signals the moment when you have polluted your estate with fear, doubt, or pride. The claim 'given them into thine hand' shows the surrender of your power to unconscious habit; 'thou didst shew them no mercy' reveals a hardened inner posture that refuses healing. The boast 'I shall be a lady for ever' represents a fixed, proud self-conception—an unyielding ruler that forgets the latter end, the outcomes of its choices. In Neville's language, you are invited to revise this scene by waking to the I AM and to assume a new state: I am the merciful ruler of my inner kingdom; I remember the end I desire and I forgive the past. As you dwell in this revised state, the inner movements shift, allowing the injury to dissolve and a fresh inheritance to be revealed.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and, in your own words, assume the feeling of the merciful I AM. Declare 'I remember the latter end' and imagine your inner kingdom restored.
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