Inner Exile and the Glory Within

Micah 2:9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Micah 2 in context

Scripture Focus

9The women of my people have ye cast out from their pleasant houses; from their children have ye taken away my glory for ever.
Micah 2:9

Biblical Context

Micah 2:9 speaks of expulsion from cherished places and the loss of divine glory. It signals that outward conditions reflect neglected inner states and loyalty to the covenant of awareness.

Neville's Inner Vision

Micah is not a grievance against history; it is a map of your inner country. The 'women of my people' cast out from their pleasant houses, and the glory taken away from their children, describe states of consciousness you have allowed to be displaced by fear and distraction. The pleasant houses are the settled ways you feel safe, the inner architecture where your sense of worth lives; when you neglect them, exile follows and the glory of the I AM withdraws from your awareness. Judgment here is not verdicts on others but a law of consciousness: what you have not kept in mind as already yours becomes scarce in experience. The message is not punishment but invitation: return to the inner room where your own divine light abides, revise the scene with the I AM intact, and dwell there until the outer life mirrors the restored glory. The present practice is simple: assume the presence of your true self, feel the glory as real, and let your attention reawaken the inner houses.

Practice This Now

Assume you awaken in the presence of the I AM; feel the inner glory shining as real in your daily scene. Then revise a current situation to reflect that inner house intact, and dwell there until it becomes your outer experience.

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