Grapes Of Inner Longing
Micah 7:1 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Micah 7 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Micah 7:1 speaks of woe as the speaker finds the harvest bare and longing for fruit. It presents spiritual drought as a condition that invites inner, not outward, renewal.
Neville's Inner Vision
Neville-style reinterpretation: The verse reveals a state of awareness complaining that even the outward harvest fails to satisfy. In Goddard’s lens, God equals your I AM, and imagination creates the world you inhabit. The barrenness is not a punishment but a cue to revise how you assume yourself. The 'no cluster to eat' mirrors a belief in lack, while the desired 'firstripe fruit' points to a realized quality already present in consciousness. By choosing to regard abundance as your permanent state and feeling it as real, you collapse the old sense of scarcity. Start from the inner knowing: fullness is now being grown in your mind, and the outer scene must reflect that inner harvest. Practice until the sensation of fruit ripens within you and life responds in kind, not by force but by alignment with awareness.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes, assume fullness now, and feel the firstripe fruit as real in your inner awareness. Repeat 'I AM abundant' until the sensation is vivid.
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