Inner Winepress of Anger
Isaiah 63:3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Isaiah 63 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
God is depicted as treading the winepress alone, executing judgment with fierce anger against the enemy. The imagery ends with blood and stained garments to signify the severity of the judgment.
Neville's Inner Vision
As I read Isaiah 63:3, I see the winepress not as a distant event but as the crucible of my own consciousness. The solitary tread speaks to me: I am the sole agent of my inner state, the one who can press out the old belief that anger must bind me. When anger arises, I do not reject it; I observe it and re-define it as fuel for transformation. The blood on the garments is the trace of identified self-limitation dissolved by awareness. In this sight, the 'enemy' is not someone outside but a stale pattern of thought, a resisted impulse. By aligning with the I AM, I revise the state: I feel the power flow through me, not as violence but as clarity and just discernment. The act of treading becomes a ceremony of inner purification, burning away the clutter of fear and judgment. Remember: I am consciousness, and this consciousness creates the scene; I can change the tone, and the world follows from that inner shift.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit quietly, place a hand on your chest, and declare 'I AM the I AM within me who treads this winepress.' Then revise the energy of anger into calm discernment, feeling it real for one minute.
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