From Prison to Inner Resurrection
Isaiah 53:8-9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Isaiah 53 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
A figure is taken from prison and judged, cut off from the land of the living because of the people's transgression. He is buried with the wicked and the rich in his death, though he did no violence or deceit.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within your present consciousness, Isaiah’s servant becomes your inner state under pressure. To be taken from prison and judgment is to experience a moment when old self-concepts are released, and the mind is moved from fear toward truth. The question 'who shall declare his generation?' dissolves as you realize the cause of life is not outward judgments but the I AM you are. Being cut off out of the land of the living points to a belief that you are separated from life by your sins or the world’s verdict; yet this severing is only a turning of attention from external conditions to the indwelling ruler, the one I call the I AM. The grave with the wicked and with the rich in death signifies that the old story of scarcity and blame can be laid to rest in your psyche, because your wealth and your humility are both in the same tomb once you cease identifying with them as separate. He did no violence, neither was any deceit in his mouth: this is your inner alignment—no need to defend, no need to pretend—your true self speaks truth. The prophecy of such suffering transforms into a message of redemption: through awareness you rise. Your life is not a victim of fate but the embodiment of the law of imagination; as you accept the I AM as your reality, you resurrect from every prison and every verdict.
Practice This Now
Assume the state of being free now—feel the I AM as your life. Revise past judgments by declaring, 'From this moment, I am not defined by prison or verdict; I am the I AM and I live as the fulfilled state.'
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