Inner Wall That Stands Firm

Nehemiah 4:3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Nehemiah 4 in context

Scripture Focus

3Now Tobiah the Ammonite was by him, and he said, Even that which they build, if a fox go up, he shall even break down their stone wall.
Nehemiah 4:3

Biblical Context

Taunt by Tobiah mocks the builders in Nehemiah 4:3, but the real wall is built in mind through perseverance and faith. The verse invites us to see opposition as a test of consciousness, not a barrier of stone.

Neville's Inner Vision

Nehemiah’s scene is your inner life. Tobiah’s taunt—if a fox climbs the wall it will fall—speaks not of brick but of belief. In Goddard’s psychology the wall’s strength comes from the state you occupy in consciousness. The builders are those who, in the stillness, permit the end you desire to be true now in your imagination. The fox is mere noise, a temporary suggestion of limitation; your response is the quiet, steadfast assumption that the wall exists in form as you intend. When you act from the I AM, you affirm without words: the wall is solid, the project is protected by the law of assumption, and every distraction only reveals the depth of your trust. Therefore persevere; endurance is not labor but the practice of returning to the inner state that sustains the unseen fact. The future you hope for is already present in your inner vision; through unity of purpose with your inner faculties, you complete the structure. The outward tyrant is conquered by the inward truth you maintain.

Practice This Now

Imaginative_act: Assume the wall is finished now in consciousness. Feel its solidity, breathe into it, and rehearse the conviction that the project is protected by your I AM.

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