Nahum 3:4 Inner Harlot Reality
Nahum 3:4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Nahum 3 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Nahum 3:4 describes a city marked by the many acts of a well-favored harlot, a master of witchcraft, who uses her witchcrafts to sell nations and families. It stands as a symbolic portrait of idolatry—how false worship and seductive power can corrupt communities.
Neville's Inner Vision
From the Neville lens, the verse is a mirror of consciousness. The harlot is not a woman but a state of mind—an image of glamour, control, and dependence on external power. The multitude of whoredoms and witchcrafts are the habitual patterns by which we momentarily believe that separation exists, and by which we project nations and families onto pictures in the mind. When you dwell in this story, you may feel the urge to grasp power, to manipulate outcomes, or to fear what fades; these are inner movements of a belief in lack. The remedy is psychological: step into the I AM, the awareness that you are the imaginer and not the imagined. Assume a new state, that all events flow from divine law, that you are already at rest in God, and that your imagining aligns with truth rather than illusion. As you revise with the feeling of already having what you seek, the witchcraft dissolves and the harlot's influence wanes. True worship blossoms as perception returns to unity, and your inner world begins to reflect peace rather than manipulation.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: In a quiet moment, assume the feeling God governs all and picture your world as already ruled by divine order. Then feel it real by repeating I AM, letting the sense of unity erase the sense of lack.
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