Anger As Inner Justice
Nehemiah 5:6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Nehemiah 5 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Nehemiah 5:6 records the speaker’s deep anger upon hearing the people’s cries. It marks a righteous indignation that demands a just response.
Neville's Inner Vision
From the Neville Goddard perspective, the verse speaks not of a mere outward anger toward others, but of a vivid inner dissonance in your state of consciousness. The cry and the words are inner movements arising because a segment of your psyche has forgotten its unity with the whole. Your I AM, the awareness you are, experiences the injustice as a signal that your inner scene must be revised. Anger, in this light, is not the obstacle but the alarm that the inner atmosphere is out of accord with justice. The remedy is to assume the end you desire: envision a realm where fairness, mercy, and liberation are already true, and allow that vision to reform the self that hears. Sit with the feeling of righteous purpose until it becomes conviction, then move to act in harmony with that conviction in your daily life. As you persist, the inner memory shifts, the sense of separation dissolves, and the outer conditions begin to reflect the inner justice you now hold. Deliverance, in this sense, is the natural byproduct of conscious revision.
Practice This Now
Assume the end: you are the I AM delivering justice; spend 1–2 minutes imagining you hearing a cry and immediately taking a decisive, fair action that restores balance in your world.
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