Robe of Imagination: Isaiah 63
Isaiah 63:1-2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Isaiah 63 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
These verses image a figure from Edom, clothed in dyed garments, glorious in strength and speaking righteousness, able to save. The red garments question why they are stained, pointing to judgment and the call for inner accountability.
Neville's Inner Vision
Beloved, these lines speak not of a distant conqueror, but of the inner man who wears the colors of his own imagination. The 'dyed garments from Bozrah' are your mental hues—habits of thought, guilt, and memory—colors that show up as your apparent world. When you hear the declaration 'I that speak in righteousness, mighty to save,' you are being invited to awaken to your own I AM: the steady, inner governor of consciousness that can redeem any scene. Edom, the land of separation, signals that salvation begins where you once believed you were cut off from God by circumstance. The red in the apparel is not blood shed by others, but the residue of inner conflict worked out as experience. The winepress imagery points to purification through inner discipline, not punishment from without. God’s justice becomes inner alignment: when you assume a new state, your outer world aligns with it. So, ask yourself: am I dressed in the garments of guilt, or may I claim the robe of righteousness? The message is simple—you already possess the power to save in the very act of imagining and declaring the I AM present now.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume the I AM as your inner garment; revise any sense of lack by affirming 'I AM saved now' and feel the lifting as the robe brightens.
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