Inner Desolation to Abundant Life

Micah 6:14-15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Micah 6 in context

Scripture Focus

14Thou shalt eat, but not be satisfied; and thy casting down shall be in the midst of thee; and thou shalt take hold, but shalt not deliver; and that which thou deliverest will I give up to the sword.
15Thou shalt sow, but thou shalt not reap; thou shalt tread the olives, but thou shalt not anoint thee with oil; and sweet wine, but shalt not drink wine.
Micah 6:14-15

Biblical Context

Micah 6:14-15 depicts people laboring without lasting nourishment, signaling an inner state of lack that prevents real fruitfulness.

Neville's Inner Vision

From the Neville vantage, the verse is not a curse on external misfortune but a map of inner states. The toil to eat, to plant, to press olives, and to drink wine without lasting satisfaction reveals a mind identified with lack, as though fulfillment were distant and dependent on others or future crops. The I AM within you is the opposite: fullness is your natural state when you acknowledge consciousness as the source, not as a servant to circumstance. When you imagine yourself as already nourished, delivering what you truly desire, the external acts align with your inner picture. The sword cast into your midst is the feedback that your present image still confesses scarcity; revise it into an image of abundance and the sword drops away. You sow in the soil of your imagination and reap in awareness, not apart from God but as God in you. Your being is the field; abundance is the harvest you already possess in the one I AM, here and now.

Practice This Now

Practice tonight: assume the feeling I AM satisfied and supplied, and revise the scene so you are already reaping abundance; repeat for a few minutes before sleep.

The Bible Through Neville

Neville Bible Sparks

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