Inner Communion Awakening
1 Corinthians 11:26 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 1 Corinthians 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Whenever believers eat the bread and drink the cup, they proclaim the Lord's death until He comes. The act is a ritual of remembrance and expectation.
Neville's Inner Vision
Take this verse as a map of inner life. The bread and cup are not external rites but symbols crossing the threshold of consciousness. The Lord is the I AM—the forever present awareness that the self is one with Life. When you partake inwardly, you are not remembering an event from history; you are witnessing the death of the old self—the belief in separation, lack, and time—so that the true you is freed to awaken. Each repetition of this inner rite is a declaration that death is a turning of attention, not a tragedy, and that the coming of the Lord is the coming of Christ-consciousness into your ordinary life. Your practice is to assume that you are already unified with the I AM, to feel the life moving through you as if you had already risen, and to revise every sense of lack by affirming your oneness. Through this imaginative act, the sacrament becomes your lived reality.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit in stillness, assume the I AM in you as your present reality, and visualize taking the bread and cup. Feel the old self dying away and the Christ-consciousness rising within you.
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