God Given Talent

Lecture dated May 31, 1971

Approximate read 29 min

Law of ImaginationGod Given TalentImagining Creates RealityDivine ImaginationPower of AssumptionConscious CreationRod Serling extortionWilliam Blake quotes

In 'God Given Talent' Neville Goddard argues that the human imagination is God itself and that our imaginal acts are the creative force behind all phenomena. He supports this claim through scriptural reinterpretations and quotations from William Blake and William Butler Yeats, asserting that there can be no separation between God and man. By recounting stories such as the Qantas extortion influenced by a Rod Serling television plot, anecdotes of Yeats’ projecting images, and his own attempt to comfort his dying nephew, he demonstrates imagination’s power to manifest reality. Goddard warns that misuse of this divine gift produces consequences that cannot be reversed by material means, teaching that reaping and sowing equally apply to thoughts and ideas. He prescribes a practical method of assuming desired states before sleep, entering the desired scene and persisting in that assumption until it hardens into fact. Ultimately, he exhorts listeners to vigilantly monitor their imaginal acts with love, since each thought shapes individual and collective circumstances according to eternal divine law.

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