Inner Vengeance Awakening
Judges 15:7-8 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Judges 15 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Samson vows to avenge what was done to him, then destroys many, and withdraws to the top of Etam. The outward violence mirrors an inner movement of judgment.
Neville's Inner Vision
In Neville's voice: You are not separate from the action; the 'vengeance' spoken is the mind's decision to outpour the inner state that has become a law for you. The verse stages a drama in which a strong personal will enforces a moral retribution, yet the real drama is the inner movement of consciousness. When Samson declares, 'Though ye have done this, yet will I be avenged of you,' he is naming a state of consciousness that refuses to stay wounded. The 'great slaughter' is the outward manifesting of that inner judgment, the exterior world acting as a mirror to the inner stance. The top of Etam is your present vantage point of awareness—the place where you observe and choose your next inner movement. The call here is not to external vengeance but to recognize that you are the I AM behind every act, and that justice is alignment with that sovereign awareness. Redemption comes not by punishing others, but by revising the belief that you are defined by offense; you awaken to a nobler use of power by imagining wholeness already yours.
Practice This Now
Assume the feeling: I am the I AM that revives every scene I enter; revise the memory of offense by declaring, 'I forgive and bless; I am whole, and the world reflects my inward peace.'
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