Inner Redeemer of Ruth 4:6

Ruth 4:6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Ruth 4 in context

Scripture Focus

6And the kinsman said, I cannot redeem it for myself, lest I mar mine own inheritance: redeem thou my right to thyself; for I cannot redeem it.
Ruth 4:6

Biblical Context

In Ruth 4:6, a kinsman refuses to redeem, saying he cannot redeem it for himself. This highlights a belief that one cannot claim the inheritance without stepping into a higher role.

Neville's Inner Vision

Notice that the stone in Ruth 4:6 is not a land deal but a movement of consciousness. The kinsman who says, I cannot redeem it for myself, embodies a state of mind that fears losing its own inheritance by taking the burden of redemption. Neville Goddard teaches that every event in consciousness is an inner mutation; here, the invitation is to revise the belief itself. Redeem thou my right to thyself is the call to yield the former identity and align with a higher sense of self—the I AM that can redeem by simply assuming the state that already possesses the covenant. When you refuse to take on the role, you corroborate limitation; when you choose to accept the Redeemer state, you authorize the inward Boaz, the rightful governor of your inner economy, to act. The deliverance in Ruth arises from an inner alignment, not a worldly pedigree. So imagine you stand as the one empowered to redeem, and declare that your inheritance is yours now because you are in rightful relation to the I AM. Your life rearranges from the inside, and the outer scene follows.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and declare, I am the Redeemer of my life now. Feel the inner inheritance return as if already granted, letting that felt sense recalibrate your outer circumstances.

The Bible Through Neville

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