Remembering Your Present Truth

2 Peter 1:12-13 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read 2 Peter 1 in context

Scripture Focus

12Wherefore I will not be negligent to put you always in remembrance of these things, though ye know them, and be established in the present truth.
13Yea, I think it meet, as long as I am in this tabernacle, to stir you up by putting you in remembrance;
2 Peter 1:12-13

Biblical Context

The apostle Peter vows to keep reminding believers of essential truths so they remain firmly established in the present truth here and now.

Neville's Inner Vision

To Peter, the 'present truth' is not distant doctrine but a living state of consciousness you can inhabit now. When he says he will not be negligent to put you in remembrance, he is naming a shift of attention from memory to manifestation—the insistence that what you already know becomes your current condition. The word 'tabernacle' is your body, the temporary dwelling in which the I AM abides; as long as you live there, you owe it to yourself to stir your awareness by repeating the remembrance of who you are in God. In Neville's terms, you revise by recalling the end you desire and feel it as already done. You are not waiting for truth to arrive; you are awakening to it as the state you inhabit. Each reaffirmation is a sympathetic magical act that realigns your inner scenery: the present truth displaces fear, reason, or lack with certainty, clarity, and joy. Remembering becomes the creative act that makes spiritual reality tangible in your life.

Practice This Now

Practice: sit quietly, recall the verse, and assume the feeling of being established in the present truth now. Silently declare, 'I am the I AM, living in this truth,' until it feels real.

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