Wail to Wholeness: Inner Jerusalem

Micah 1:8-9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Micah 1 in context

Scripture Focus

8Therefore I will wail and howl, I will go stripped and naked: I will make a wailing like the dragons, and mourning as the owls.
9For her wound is incurable; for it is come unto Judah; he is come unto the gate of my people, even to Jerusalem.
Micah 1:8-9

Biblical Context

Micah laments a wound on Judah that reaches Jerusalem. He proclaims an incurable ache and widespread distress.

Neville's Inner Vision

In Micah, the cry is a portrait of the mind convinced of separation. The wailing, the nudity, the dragons’ cry—the outward symbolism—are inner states, the agitation of a consciousness that believes it has lost its unity with its own I AM. Judah and Jerusalem are not places apart from you but your inner conditions—the gate you enter when fear rules, the city you walk when grief seems to own you. The 'incurable wound' is the stubborn belief that a wound can persist, that pain has sovereignty. Yet in Neville's kingdom, nothing is outside the mind's one-tenth of a second revision. When you feel the ache, you have the opportunity to revise: declare that the wound is healed in your awareness; imagine that you are the city free of fear, that you are the I AM that never left you. The wail becomes a lullaby of realization as you recognize your own creative act. What Micah foretells as judgment becomes your invitation to awaken, and the gate opens to the Jerusalem within you.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes; assume you are already healed and feel the I AM within as the city’s heartbeat. Silently repeat, 'I AM healed, I AM whole' until your body confirms the truth.

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