Inner Gate of Judgment
Micah 1:9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Micah 1 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Micah 1:9 speaks of a wound that has spread to Judah, reaching Jerusalem—sign of collective judgment entering the center of consciousness. It invites inner gaze to see how fear and separation have taken up residence in the heart.
Neville's Inner Vision
Take Micah's voice as a call to your inner life. The wound is not a distant injury in a city; it is a belief pattern you have accepted as real. When the verse says the wound is incurable and has come to Jerusalem, it is saying the state of consciousness named Judah has admitted the tale of separation, and the gate of my people stands as the boundary you permit between who you are and what you suffer. The remedy is not to fight the wound but to awaken to the I AM that stands behind and beyond it. In Neville's terms, you revise by imagining the city and its gate as yours to command, a place where feeling and thought bow to the true Self. See the gate open to light, feel the sense of I AM filling the streets, and declare silently: I AM healing here and now. As you dwell in that awareness, the sense of injury loses its grip, and the city becomes a home of wholeness rather than a battlefield. Imagination is your instrument; through it you rewrite the inner climate until the outer scene follows.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and stand before the inner gate of Jerusalem within your mind. Assume the state of healing now; feel the I AM surrounding you and declare that this wound is healed and you are whole.
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