Rising After The Fall

Proverbs 24:16 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Proverbs 24 in context

Scripture Focus

16For a just man falleth seven times, and riseth up again: but the wicked shall fall into mischief.
Proverbs 24:16

Biblical Context

The righteous can stumble many times, yet they rise again; the wicked fall into mischief.

Neville's Inner Vision

To fall is not a defeat but a signal to revise your premise. The 'just man' is a state of consciousness—a right alignment with I AM, with awareness as law. When you stumble, you are simply testing a belief; the number seven represents completeness, a full circle of revision that returns you to your true nature. Rise is not a gesture of effort but a reaffirmation of the inner I AM: you do not win by changing the world, but by renewing your sense of who you are within it. The wicked, clinging to fear and limitation, fall into mischief because they fail to revise the assumption that grants life to their experience. Therefore, when you fall, do not chase a remedy in the outer; revisit your inner premise and reaffirm, 'I am the I AM, upright and renewed.' Imagination is the law; by feeling the risen man now, you compress the entire arc of fall and ascent into the single present, and the outer scene must reflect that inner certainty. Your future of renewal grows from the moment you dwell in the risen you here and now.

Practice This Now

Assume the risen state now: I am the I AM, upright and renewed. In your imagination, place yourself just after a fall and feel the inner ascent as your new starting point.

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