Inner Scales, Outer Wealth

Micah 6:10-11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Micah 6 in context

Scripture Focus

10Are there yet the treasures of wickedness in the house of the wicked, and the scant measure that is abominable?
11Shall I count them pure with the wicked balances, and with the bag of deceitful weights?
Micah 6:10-11

Biblical Context

The passage asks whether wicked treasures and deceitful measures exist in the wicked's house, and whether such wealth can be counted as pure.

Neville's Inner Vision

Note that Micah does not condemn wealth itself, but the inner posture that imagines wealth through deceit. In Neville terms, the 'house of the wicked' is the state of mind where you entertain beliefs of scarcity, manipulation, and externalizing profit. The 'balances' and 'weights' are your inner judgments that measure worth by appearance rather than truth. When you concede that such wealth can be counted pure, you are consenting to a wrong assumption about reality. The true wealth you seek is already at rest in your I AM—awareness that cannot be swayed by transient appearances. To heal, turn attention inward and revise the assumption: see the inner scales balanced by integrity; feel the certainty that provision flows from a truthful inner state, not from deceitful tactics. Make the mental move: accept the feeling, 'I am the I AM; my reality is conceived in truth.' Then observe that your outer world begins to reflect that revised state, as if the scales now align with true weight of being.

Practice This Now

Assume the feeling of abundance now and revise any sense of lack by imagining the inner scales evenly balanced, then rest in the certainty that provision is already yours.

The Bible Through Neville

Neville Bible Sparks

Loading...

Loading...
Video thumbnail
Loading video details...
🔗 View on YouTube

© 2025 The Bible Through Neville - A consciousness-based approach to Scripture