Inner Acts of Peace

Acts 16:28 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Acts 16 in context

Scripture Focus

28But Paul cried with a loud voice, saying, Do thyself no harm: for we are all here.
Acts 16:28

Biblical Context

Paul declares, 'Do thyself no harm,' and asserts that everyone is present together. The moment reveals a shared inner safety grounded in presence, not panic.

Neville's Inner Vision

Notice how the verse names a crowd and yet speaks to the solitary heart. In Neville’s language, 'we are all here' is the working of the I AM within the whole of consciousness. The supreme fact is presence: God is not distant but the instant you become aware of your own being. The 'harm' to be avoided is not physical but the self-imposed harm of fear, doubt, and separation. When you incline toward the assumption 'I am here,' you dissolve the belief that you are scattered or endangered. The inner Paul acts as your quiet self-command, commanding attention to the one life that breathes in every segment of your mind—unity, mercy, and salvation. By feeling the scene as if it is already so, you reframe circumstance: fear collapses, unity proceeds, and your experience aligns with peace. The verse invites you to move from reaction to realization: assert the wholeness of your consciousness and let the impression of safety radiate outward, redeeming the 'present moment' into the Kingdom within.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: in a moment of anxiety, close your eyes, repeat 'I am here; we are all here.' Feel the unity as a single, calm I AM and let peace replace fear.

The Bible Through Neville

Neville Bible Sparks

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