Inner Cry to the I Am
Judges 10:10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Judges 10 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Israel cried to the LORD, confessing that they had forsaken God and served Baalim.
Neville's Inner Vision
Judges 10:10 asks for a cry that is more than complaint; it is a turning of the mind. The children of Israel acknowledge a split within: they have left the God of their being and have bowed to Baalim—images of power outside their own I AM. In the Neville sense, the outer scene is only a picture of an inner state. The cry is not punishment sought from a distant God, but the ignition of a new state of consciousness. When you say I have sinned and I have forsaken our God you name a previous assumption, a belief that you are separate from the I AM. The remedy is not to fight Baal with more willpower, but to re-enter the one consciousness that never left you—the I AM. In that inner space, the Baals dissolve as you assume a feeling of perfect union, of being attended by divine presence, here and now. The moment you revise, you are back in the consciousness of the Father; the outer events reflect that inward alignment.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and imagine the I AM as a warm inner sun. Say quietly I am one with the I AM; I have never left this presence, and feel the Baalim recede as consciousness returns to its original unity.
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