Inner Peaks of Pisgah
Numbers 23:13-14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Numbers 23 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Balak asks Balaam to view the people from a place where only the outskirts are visible and to curse them; Balaam is then led to Pisgah where seven altars are built and offerings are made.
Neville's Inner Vision
Notice that Balak’s request is not about the people but about controlling what you behold. He wants to shift to a place where only the outer edge is visible, a partial sight that invites a curse rather than realization. In this sense the field of Zophim and the top of Pisgah are the inner hills you climb in consciousness: seven altars represent seven fixed prayers or beliefs you use to command outcomes. The truth in this passage is not in the location but in the act of shifting perception. When you refuse the urge to see only part and instead bless the whole field with awareness, you align with the I AM, the living I that creates. The true worship is not ritual sacrifice but inner conviction that you are the one imagining your life into being. By mentally ascending to your Pisgah, you observe the entire landscape of possibility and pronounce blessing over it. Then the outer events unfold in harmony with your inner state, and prophecy and promise become realized as scenes within consciousness.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes and assume the feeling of already having the full view—the whole field from Pisgah. See yourself blessing what you once would curse, and dwell in the I AM as the creator of your reality.
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