Midnight Praise, Inner Prison Breakthrough

Acts 16:25 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Acts 16 in context

Scripture Focus

25And at midnight Paul and Silas prayed, and sang praises unto God: and the prisoners heard them.
Acts 16:25

Biblical Context

At midnight Paul and Silas pray and sing unto God, and the prisoners hear them.

Neville's Inner Vision

Consider the prison as a symbol of a locked condition in your own consciousness. The midnight hour is the moment when attention is drawn to what you fear most. Paul and Silas do not plead for external relief; they awaken their I AM by prayer and song, and that inner movement travels outward as power. Their act is a decree: I am not defined by walls, I am defined by the consciousness that observes them. The prisoners hear because your inner state must be audible to the outer world; vibration precedes form. When you insist with gratitude and praise, you revise the scene from lack to abundance; the external conditions respond to the new state you assume. The night does not compel you to despair; it invites you to become the awareness that governs it. Perseverance in true worship means continuing to feel it real despite appearances, until the senses reflect your inner state. The step you take today is to embody that inner praise, and let it awaken what lies within you as if breaking through.

Practice This Now

Assume the feeling of the completed desire now: in a present moment of duress, close your eyes, declare 'I am free now,' and 'I praise God's presence in me,' and build the feeling of relief and gratitude until it is real in you.

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