From Impoverishment to I Am
Judges 6:6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Judges 6 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Israel is impoverished because of Midianite oppression; the people cry out to the LORD.
Neville's Inner Vision
Judges 6:6 is not merely a historical report of famine and fear; it is a map for the inner life. In Neville's psychology, the Midianites symbolize a state of consciousness that has temporarily occupied your awareness, producing impoverishment in the felt sense of reality. The people's cry unto the LORD represents a turning of attention from the condition to the I AM—awareness itself, the living presence you are. When you identify with lack, you empower the very circumstance you fear; when you insist that the I AM is the sole ruler of your experience, you revoke the authority of lack and invite restoration. The 'salvation' and 'redemption' of the verse manifest as a quiet revision in imagination: declare that the divine I AM is here now, within the self that feels weighed down. Your future, in Neville's sense, is a present act of inner conviction—an unshakeable sense that God is your reality, not your condition. This is the moment where crisis becomes invitation, and every cry becomes the opening of consciousness to abundance.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes and declare, 'I am the I AM here now.' Revise lack by feeling the presence of abundance as your own reality.
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