Achsah's Inner Springs
Judges 1:14-15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Judges 1 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Achsah asks Caleb for a blessing: a field and springs. Caleb grants them, symbolizing the inner provision that follows a clear, conscious request.
Neville's Inner Vision
Judges 1:14–15, seen through Neville's lens, reveals that all land and water spring from the inner state of consciousness. Achsah is the impulse in us that desires a better life; Caleb is the narrator of our familiar self—the I AM that asks, What will you have? When the donkey lights from the road and Achsah moves toward her father, it signals a shift from the old self to a posture of receptive awareness. The south land symbolizes an inner field you can cultivate, a place where nourishment can be prepared. The blessing she asks for is not merely a worldly gift; it is an inner decree of sufficiency—there is more than enough. The two springs—upper and nether—represent the dual streams of life that flow from the same source: spiritual and practical, now accessible when imagination is yoked to belief. The I AM within confirms your true desire by revealing resources already present in your consciousness. The practice is simple: assume the blessing as a present fact, revise any sense of lack, and feel the current of abundance flowing through you as real.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and imagine Achsah approaching Caleb for the blessing. Feel the waters of the springs flowing into your own life, as if the field were already blessed.
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