Remembering Inner Ordinances
1 Corinthians 11:2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 1 Corinthians 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Paul praises the brethren for remembering him in all things, and keeping the ordinances as he delivered them. In plain meaning, the verse calls you to honor the inner discipline handed to you.
Neville's Inner Vision
From the Neville vantage, 'Remember me in all things' is not a memory of a man but the I AM within you recalling its own instruction. The 'ordinances' are not external laws but inner habits of consciousness—the disciplined patterns you continually revert to when life unsettles you. To 'keep' them is to act from the remembered state you once consciously assumed. When you feel fear, you can revisit the inner instruction, re-implant it, and for a moment you become the custodian of that memory, choosing alignment over reaction. The verse thus becomes a practical equation: recall your inner teacher, live as if that teacher's command is already true, and your life follows the obedience of that remembered state. This is how unity arises—not by outward conformity, but by a shared inner architecture of awareness that governs thought, feeling, and action. Your community is simply the chorus of those who persist in that inner order.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and imagine the inner teacher speaking as the I AM within you; then assume the state of remembering and keeping the ordinances, letting that memory guide your next action.
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