Inner Judgment in Micah 3:9
Micah 3:9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Micah 3 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Micah speaks against the leaders of Jacob and Israel who hate judgment and pervert all equity. The verse exposes how power can distort fairness.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the Neville Goddard fashion, I read Micah 3:9 as a map of the inner conditions of mind. The 'heads' and 'princes' are not distant rulers but the dominant states of consciousness within you. When you 'abhor judgment' you refuse to face your own inner movements; you deny the necessity of inner accountability, and you pervert equity by twisting meaning to suit a preferred outcome. The external scene—people, laws, opinions—are but symbols of your inner climate. The call 'Hear this' invites you to listen to the still, small I AM that never wavers. Your awareness, not outward authority, is the judge of what is real, and your imagination crafts the scenes you call reality. By acknowledging responsibility for the inner state that imagines events, you turn away from blame and toward discernment. Judgment and accountability cease to be threats and become doorways: aligning with the I AM, you revise the inner narrative until justice flows through your life as harmony and clear sight.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume the feeling that the I AM is the sole governor of your mind; revise any belief that you are at the mercy of others. Repeat: I now judge with divine discernment; I see every event as the outward sign of my inner state, and feel the reality of this inner authority.
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