Inner Tribes Of Isaiah 9:21
Isaiah 9:21 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Isaiah 9 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Isaiah 9:21 names Manasseh and Ephraim opposing Judah, illustrating a fraternal clash that persists under divine judgment. The outward scene remains unsettled even as anger is not withdrawn.
Neville's Inner Vision
Behold Isaiah 9:21 as a mirror of your inner life. Manasseh and Ephraim are not distant nations but rival states of consciousness vying for control of Judah—the center you call I AM. Their alliance whispers of old grievances, fear, and pride that still command your outer conditions. The unturned-off anger is not God’s punishment but the stubborn momentum of an unrevised scene. Yet the passage does not decree final failure; it invites you to observe without denial. In Neville’s view, the Kingdom of God is within, not in some external remedy. The 'hand stretched out' is the lingering belief that you are defined by the last scene you witnessed. You can choose a new inner scene: you are the I AM watching the two tribes dissolve their union and return to unity with Judah. When you realize the inner world creates the outer, the internal civil war yields to peace, and your life follows the revised image.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes, feel the I AM at the center of your chest, and revise the scene so Manasseh and Ephraim willingly unite with Judah; feel that light guiding every outward circumstance.
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