The Inner Parent's Generosity
2 Corinthians 12:14-15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 2 Corinthians 12 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Paul promises to come without burden, prioritizing them over possessions. He is willing to spend and be spent for them, signaling a deep, familial love.
Neville's Inner Vision
Notice how in this moment of Paul's speech, the outer schedule becomes a symbol for an inner discipline: you are the states, not distant persons. The 'parents' and 'children' are inner dispositions, not people at distance. When Paul says, the third time I am ready to come, he is marking a readiness of awareness to bridge distance by generous action. In Neville's terms, you do not seek theirs or theirs alone; you seek the awareness that makes them possible. Your inner Parent is your unspent I AM, the living energy you believe you are, and every act of giving is simply the appearance of your inner wealth made visible. The more you love from that light, the less you fear loss, for love is a vibration you inhabit. By imagining yourself spending and being spent for another—yet feeling no lack—you prove that sacrifice is only the form your inner abundance takes when you are awake. Practice assumes you already possess the energy you wish to give; revision rewrites your self-concept as the source of all generous acts.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, declare, I am the Parent in my life; I gladly spend and am spent for those I love, and feel the abundance flowing through me as I give.
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