Doorway to Deliverance in Judges
Judges 4:20-21 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Judges 4 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jael stands at the tent door and tells Sisera there is no one inside; while he sleeps, she drives a tent peg through his temples.
Neville's Inner Vision
See how the outer story is but a mirror of the inner state you entertain. Sisera is the stubborn belief of defeat pressed upon your mind by appearances; Jael is the awakened I AM within you, the decisive act of inner discernment. Standing at the door of the tent is the moment you refuse to assay the old fear by its question, declaring 'No' to the claim that presence of lack can enter your awareness. The nail and hammer are not instruments of physical violence here but tools of conviction—fixed impressions hammered into the subconscious ground, making the new state feel inevitable. Sisera’s weariness and sleep symbolize a belief that has lost energy and gone unconscious; when the old picture sleeps, you fix a new story in place, and the outer world aligns to confirm it. The deliverance is not a miracle separate from you but the natural fruit of your inner alignment: once you fix and dwell in the new state, the outer scene must echo it, for reality is the cumulative result of your inner declarations.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Assume the deliverance as a finished fact. Stand at the door of your mind, revise the old belief by saying 'There is no presence here of lack,' and feel the nail of truth sinking firmly into the subconscious ground.
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