Comfort By Titus' Arrival
2 Corinthians 7:6-7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 2 Corinthians 7 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
God comforts the downcast through Titus' coming. The verse shows that their earnest desire, mourning, and fervent mind toward the divine are heard, bringing joy.
Neville's Inner Vision
Reading 2 Corinthians 7:6-7 through the Neville lens, you see that the God who comforts is the I AM in you, not some distant benevolence. The comfort given to those cast down arrives when your consciousness acknowledges that a state of ease has already been created in you. The coming of Titus is a symbolic messenger: an outer event that mirrors your inner readiness. When Titus reports your earnest desire, mourning, and fervent mind toward the divine, he confirms what your own consciousness has already known—that you are embraced by grace. Your comfort is not earned by effort but invited by inner recognition. As you listen to this inner exchange, rejoice not for an external visitation, but for the shift in your inner weather: the belief in lack dissolves into the certainty of presence. Providence then operates as your present awareness, guiding you back to the unchanging I AM, where you and the divine are one. You are being comforted by the realization that you are already whole, and every outward sign is merely the reflection of that inner unity.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Assume the state of comfort as if it is present; visualize Titus entering and declaring your desires already granted, then feel the new ease flooding your heart.
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