Internal Court Of Unity
1 Corinthians 6:6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 1 Corinthians 6 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse portrays 'brothers' taking legal action against one another before outsiders, symbolizing an inner division surfacing as an external dispute. In Neville's view, all such conflicts begin in consciousness and can be settled by revision and imagination.
Neville's Inner Vision
Consider 1 Corinthians 6:6 as a mirror of your own inner life. The 'brother' who goes to law with the other is not two strangers but two sides of your consciousness arguing in the court of appearances, with the world as judge. In Neville's psychology, every person and event is a movement of your own awareness; the unbelievers are the habits of separation you have unconsciously allowed to sit in judgment over your worth. When you feel compelled to settle a dispute outside, you reveal the belief that you are divided from God and from your own I AM. The remedy is to turn within and revise the premise: assume you are one, that harmony now governs 'this case.' Speak to the other aspect as one who is loved, acknowledge that the law of peace is the law of your being, and let forgiveness dissolve the illusion of division. As you feel it real—imagine the inner courtroom quiet, the two aspects bowing to a single, steadfast I AM—external appearances will follow, not by force, but by the natural action of your unity. You need not battle; you need to assume unity and let the unseen court render a new outcome.
Practice This Now
Sit quietly and imagine the two aspects as one Self; say 'I am one with all, the court is within.' Feel the sense of unity and let it radiate through your body, dissolving the sense of dispute.
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