Inner Judgment Of Joshua 7:25
Joshua 7:25 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Joshua 7 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
This verse records Joshua asking why Israel has troubled itself and declaring that the Lord will trouble them; it then describes Achan's stoning and burning, illustrating communal accountability for disobedience.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within this scene, the 'Achan' stands for a fixed, favored belief tucked away in your mind—an image you insist is true while acting against your better sense. The 'Israel' is your collective mind, and 'Joshua' is the I AM consciousness that calls the whole man to order. When Joshua asks, Why hast thou troubled us? the inner man awakens to the fact that a tenacious state has been occupying the center of your life. The Lord shall trouble thee this day signifies the inner law's exposure of that state, not as vengeance, but as a necessary broadcast to wake you. The stones and fire are your mental judgments: once you stone (withdraw belief) and burn (transform desire), the old consciousness is cleared. The lesson is that righteousness and justice arise as you align with truth, dissolving separation between self and God. The way out is inner revision: accept a new state, imagine the tribunal already satisfied, and let your feeling-truth erase the old pattern. In that moment, obedience and holiness become your present experience.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit in quiet and assume a new state: 'I am free of that old limitation.' Then revise the scene, seeing the old belief stoned and burned away by your attentive I AM, and affirm 'I AM' as your permanent reality.
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