Inner Inversion of Truth
Isaiah 5:20 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Isaiah 5 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Isaiah 5:20 warns that labeling evil as good collapses discernment and invites judgment on misdirected conscience. It calls for a sober inner standard to distinguish truth from the inversion.
Neville's Inner Vision
Think of the inner world as the state you inhabit. When you call evil good, you are rehearsing a dream from a conscience that has forgotten its source. The command is not about others; it is about you, your own inner language: what you name as light, what you name as darkness, what you call bitter or sweet. The moment you persist in mislabeling, you dilute your power to choose and to awaken. But reclaiming will comes by recognizing that you are the I AM that names things. See through the habit of inversion: declare that light is light, darkness is absence, sweetness is sweetness, bitterness is a signal to repent of the story you tell yourself. Change your inner speech, and your outer scenes will shift to reflect your corrected vision. The prophet's woe is a mercy, calling you to reassert truth in your life. By imagining yourself as the one who creates with consciousness, you will align perception with reality—your world becomes a faithful mirror of your inner clarity.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Sit quietly, assume you are the I AM perceiver. When you catch yourself labeling something as good that you know is not, revise the judgment and feel-it-real that light and truth are your natural names.
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