Return of Inner Progeny
Isaiah 49:20-21 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Isaiah 49 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage speaks of new children arising after a previous loss, and a voice that asks for room to dwell; the speaker then questions where these children came from while feeling desolate, alone, and moved about.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within this oracle, the children are not external offspring but states of consciousness that awaken when you stop clinging to a former loss. The line 'the place is too strait for me' is not a threat from without but a signal that your inner room is enlarging; you do not chase them outside you, you accept the end you have imagined and let it dwell. The question 'Who hath begotten me these?' is the I AM answering: you have begotten them by the seed of a belief vividly assumed. You were desolate, a captive, moving to and fro, yet those very conditions were the fragmentary clothing of your old self. When you realize you are the source of every birth—the new conditions, the returns, the reunion of what seemed lost—the exiles return to their innermost dwelling. Claim this: the present moment is the womb of your next appearing; your uncrushed abundance now waits, ready to express through your renewed state. The progeny of your imagination are not spectacle; they are the living proof that you are, always, the I AM.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume the end: you are already dwelling with your inner progeny; feel the space expanding and say, I AM that I AM, then note three new conditions you now welcome as already real.
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