No Offence, Total Unity
1 Corinthians 10:32 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 1 Corinthians 10 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse asks us to offend none—toward Jews, Gentiles, or the church—pointing to a unity that transcends sectarian lines.
Neville's Inner Vision
Think of this verse as a key whispered to your inner state. In the Neville fashion, offense is not a moral rule alone but a symptom of a split consciousness. When you dwell in the I AM, you awaken to the fact that the Jews, the Gentiles, and the church are but forms within the same living awareness. To offend another is to deny the oneness you already are; to be offended is to forget the unity you are imagining. Therefore, see every seeming other as an expression of the one mind you claim as your own. Your true power is the capacity to hold everyone as a beloved part of the one body, with no separation in your assumption. As you practice this, your inner posture—peaceful, inclusive, sure of unity—will reflect in outward relationships. The verse invites you to revise your sense of who you are until offense falls away and harmony remains, for all the appearances are but manifestations of the I AM within you.
Practice This Now
Practice: close your eyes, breathe slowly, and repeat, 'I AM the Jew, I AM the Gentile, I AM the Church; we are one I AM.' Feel that unity as if it already exists in you now.
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