Inner Night, Outer Injustice
Judges 19:25 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Judges 19 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Judges 19:25 describes a man handing over his concubine to a mob, who abuse her through the night and release her at dawn.
Neville's Inner Vision
Like a parable of the inner life, this verse exposes a consciousness that has forgotten its rightful authority. The crowd that would not hearken represents a thought-form in your own mind that obeys appetite and fear rather than the I AM within. The concubine becomes a symbol of life and vitality treated as possession, a projection of wounds you have not owned. The night’s abuse is the psychic violence born when you abandon conscience and mistake sensation for truth. The dawn that follows is the awakening that you have believed a lie about power, about right, and about who you are. Neville’s method asks you to reverse the scene not by condemning others but by reviving the sovereign premise: I AM the consciousness that governs all experience; I am the guardian of life. When you imagine from that state, you move from tragedy to a corrected order where justice and dignity arise from within and renew your outer world by present imagination, feel-it-real and steady.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes and assume the I AM as the steadfast guardian. Revise the scene inwardly so the inner crowd honors life and conscience, and feel the new reality presence in your chest.
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