Inner Reversal of Shame
Micah 7:10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Micah 7 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Micah 7:10 portrays a turnaround where the speaker’s enemies are exposed to shame, and the one who mocked God is seen to be defeated, signaling a vindication and renewed hope.
Neville's Inner Vision
Your enemy in Micah is the old sense of separation—the voice that asks, 'Where is the LORD thy God?' In the Neville idiom, that voice is a state of consciousness, not a distant foe. The line 'mine eyes shall behold her' is a promise the inner sight awakens to the consequence of your assumed state. When you stop seeking proof outside and return to the I AM, you begin to see the denials of the past fade, as if the doubt were trodden underfoot. The 'shame' is the memory of fear, and its reversal comes as you persist in the assumption of the fulfilled goodness in you here and now. The enemy sees what you have already decided in consciousness: it cannot stand in the light of your present recognition. Thus, judgment and accountability become a gentle inner correction, aligning your outer scene with your inner declaration. The future Micah speaks of is your current frame of mind realized; the righteous state you inhabit casts the old image into the mire, making room for the victory within.
Practice This Now
Assume the end: close your eyes, picture the old doubt being trodden underfoot, and feel the I AM within you witnessing the reversal as already complete.
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