Inner Fire and Riddle
Judges 14:1-20 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Judges 14 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Samson travels to Timnath, sees a Philistine woman, and asks his father to obtain her for a wife. The narrative follows his Spirit-empowered strength, honey from a lion, the riddle, and the ensuing contest, illustrating how desire, power, and consequence play out in the outer world.
Neville's Inner Vision
All the scenes in Judges 14:1–20 are pictures of your inner life. Samson’s attraction to the Philistine woman is a symbol of a state of consciousness drawn to an outer energy, a temptation that seems to please the senses. The father and mother are your old conditioning; the LORD moving thus shows that the I AM, the inner God, is at work to create an occasion for transformation. The lion’s roar and the Spirit's coming symbolize the eruption of power when consciousness aligns with its true nature. The secrecy about deeds points to the inner habit of not naming what arises; when you name and own it, you disarm it. The honey in the carcass represents sweetness that appears when appetite is transmuted by awareness. The riddle and its solution point to inner mysteries solved by steady imagination and faithful listening. The seven days of the feast are cycles of testing through which you learn to hold vision until its fruit appears. Outer events reflect your inner state, until you awaken to the timeless I AM.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, assume the I AM is guiding you now. Revise a current challenge as already resolved by inner power and feel that sweetness filling your life.
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