Deliverance Through Inner Worship

Judges 7:15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Judges 7 in context

Scripture Focus

15And it was so, when Gideon heard the telling of the dream, and the interpretation thereof, that he worshipped, and returned into the host of Israel, and said, Arise; for the LORD hath delivered into your hand the host of Midian.
Judges 7:15

Biblical Context

Gideon hears the dream and its interpretation, worships, and proclaims that the LORD has delivered the Midianite camp into Israel's hands. This inner certainty moves the army to rise.

Neville's Inner Vision

Here the dream and its interpretation are not about history but about your inner conversation with God—the I AM you are. When Gideon hears the dream, his inner state shifts from doubt to worship, a turning of attention toward the consistent reality of divinity within. The 'host of Midian' represents conditions your mind presently calls external, yet worship signals a belief that these conditions are already overcome in your consciousness. The act of worship is an inner assumption: you accept, in imagination, that the dream's meaning is true now and that deliverance is already accomplished. By naming victory, Gideon aligns his feelings with the outcome, and the entire camp responds as if the result has already occurred. In Neville's psychology, the dream is a symbol of a state of consciousness that yields outward results when believed. The moment you worship the inner reality, you rise in mind and body, and Providence moves accordingly. Your practice is to dwell in that certainty and let it govern your next action from a place of completed victory.

Practice This Now

Imaginative_act: Sit with closed eyes and recall the dream or an inner impression, then assume the state of deliverance as present. Feel it as real now and act from that certainty.

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