Ruth 3:7 - The Inner Threshing Floor and Trust Within

Ruth 3:7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Ruth 3 in context

Scripture Focus

7And when Boaz had eaten and drunk, and his heart was merry, he went to lie down at the end of the heap of corn: and she came softly, and uncovered his feet, and laid her down.
Ruth 3:7

Biblical Context

Ruth quietly goes to Boaz at the threshing floor, uncovers his feet and lies down, signaling a humble, covenant-minded move toward provision and protection.

Neville's Inner Vision

Ruth's scene on the threshing floor is a map of your inner life. Ruth embodies loyal desire; Boaz embodies a favorable state of consciousness—provision, protection, and covenant. When your heart is merry, when you rest in the I AM, the right moment arises to move toward your good. The act of uncovering his feet is a symbol: you expose the foundations you have relied on and invite the higher resonance of your divine pattern to stand in their place. To lie down is to yield to the assumption as if it were already real; it is the feeling that the covenant is sealed by Providence. In this inner drama, mercy and loyalty flow from your unconditional acceptance of your I AM. The outward event follows the inner shift; the two become one through a consistent inner state. In Neville’s language, Ruth’s action is your invitation to revise: treat the floor as timing, treat the ground as your footing, and treat God as I AM—then wait with the quiet joy that your good is already delivered by inner law.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Quietly close your eyes, and in your imagination feel the I AM supporting you. Assume the feeling that your need is already provided for, and rest in that truth as if it were real.

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