Inner Mercy, Outer Practice
Zechariah 7:1-14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Zechariah 7 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Zechariah 7:1-14 warns that ritual fasting without justice and mercy is hollow; true worship requires righteous judgment, compassion for the vulnerable, and listening to the inner voice of God's law.
Neville's Inner Vision
Inside you the voice of the I AM speaks, calling you to abandon surface pieties and align your inner state with justice and mercy. The command to execute true judgment and show compassion becomes a rule of consciousness: judge rightly, bless others, and refuse to imagine evil in your heart. When you extend mercy to the widow, the stranger, and the poor in your thoughts and deeds, your inner land is nourished and the spirit flows freely. Hardness of heart—adamant stone—blocks hearing and contracts the life of your mind; the inner law, once heard, speaks through your actions and your days. If you ignore this inner directive, your inner world will feel desolate, as if scattered by winds. Yet the living prophets' voice remains; by heed ing it in imagination, you rediscover a unity of judgment and mercy and restore vitality to your inner country.
Practice This Now
In a moment of stillness, assume the I AM decree: I will execute true judgment and show mercy to my brothers. Then, rewrite a hostile thought toward someone in your life as a blessing, feeling the mercy as real in your chest and letting it shape your next interaction.
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