Inner Justice of the I AM
Micah 2:7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Micah 2 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Micah 2:7 asks whether the Spirit of the LORD can be constrained, and it suggests that God’s words are good to those who live uprightly.
Neville's Inner Vision
Beloved, the 'house of Jacob' is not a place in time but a state of awareness. The question, 'is the spirit of the LORD straitened?' asks you to look at your own inner weather: do you believe the I AM is limited by current images, or do you awaken to a boundless Presence? 'Are these his doings?' invites you to stop blaming circumstance and to notice that the only action happening is your thinking, your inner speech. 'Do not my words do good to him that walketh uprightly?' becomes: attract to yourself through the quality of your inner words. When you choose to walk uprightly—consistently with truth, integrity, and love—the good words of divine life are spoken within you and as you. The Spirit is never coerced; it responds to your inner faith, your capacity to imagine and dwell in the feeling that all is well. So the verse is a reminder that your inner posture, not external conditions, determines what flows to you.
Practice This Now
Close eyes and silently affirm: The Spirit of the LORD within me is free; I walk uprightly and therefore my words affect reality for good. Revise the scene by feeling the resolution as already mine.
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