Quiet Trust in Isaiah 7:3-4
Isaiah 7:3-4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Isaiah 7 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
God commands Isaiah to meet Ahaz and tell him to take heed, be quiet, and fear not the threats from Rezin and Syria. The core idea is to hold inner steadiness in the face of danger.
Neville's Inner Vision
Take the scene not as a historical forecast but as your inner weather. The two fiery brands are not distant armies; they are the two stubborn thoughts that threaten to burn your peace—fear of failure and fear of the unknown. The Lord’s command to meet Ahaz is the moment you turn toward your own awareness and address the trend of anxiety with a calm, present attention. When Isaiah is told to 'take heed, and be quiet,' that is your instruction to still the discursive mind and stop feeding the chanting drama. The fierce anger of Rezin and Syria becomes the inner agitation—the mind’s projection of power against you. Yet the instruction remains: be not moved by these appearances; acknowledge them and settle into the I AM, the silent witness by which you know you are more than the storm. In this interpretation, prophecy is a present invitation: you choose the state you inhabit, not the external threat.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume the feeling of the I AM now. Tell yourself, 'I am the I AM,' and let the imagined fear dissolve into quiet peace.
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