Crying to Inner Deliverance
Judges 10:10-12 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Judges 10 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Israel cries out to the LORD confessing sin and turning back to God; God recalls past deliverances, showing a cycle of oppression, repentance, and mercy. The text frames their strain as a shift in consciousness as they return to the Source.
Neville's Inner Vision
Judges 10:10-12 speaks in the language of a people waking to themselves. The children of Israel cry out, not to a distant deity, but to the I AM within, confessing that they have turned away from their true identity and leaned on lesser powers. The Lord’s retort—Did I not deliver you from Egypt, from the Amorites, and the rest—reads as a reminder that your inner world already contains every act of salvation you claim to seek. The nations that oppressed you symbolize restless thoughts and fears that arose when you forgot who you are. When you cry and turn back to the Source, deliverance follows, exactly as the inner pattern says: awareness meets condition and dissolves it. The cycle is not punishment but the law of consciousness showing you the contrast that makes your assumed state visible. The mercy of God is the mercy of your own I AM, always ready to remember, restore, and elevate the state you inhabit. Thus repentance is not guilt but a re-entry into a state of realized being.
Practice This Now
Imaginative_act: Assume the feeling of deliverance now; revise by affirming I AM as your immediate awareness, and feel the oppressive thoughts dissolving. Sit with this certainty until it becomes your lived reality.
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