Inner Assembly and True Worship
Acts 19:32-34 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Acts 19 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Acts 19:32-34 shows a confused crowd in Ephesus, pulled by conflicting cries; the event centers on multiple claims about who or what is worshipped, revealing the clash of identities within the community.
Neville's Inner Vision
Here the outward scene is a mirror of your inward state. The multitude's confusion represents the mind split between competing images of self and allegiance—the part that clings to 'Great is Diana' and the quiet voice that knows a higher allegiance to the I AM. When Alexander comes forward, you may hear a defense of a persona or belief system; yet as soon as the crowd discovers he is a Jew, their shared anchor shifts, and unity dissolves into a louder shout of the old idol. This is the dramatization of a belief that divides and commands attention. Neville would say: you are the one who imagines both the idol and the defender; all voices exist within your consciousness. The cure is revision—the deliberate turning of attention from the idol toward the indwelling I AM, the one consciousness that animates every part. By choosing the reality you accept, you dissolve the illusion of separation and let true worship—unity with your essential self—return to the center of your mind.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: In a moment of stillness, revise the scene in your mind—your inner assembly is unified and at peace. Say, I AM the unity of all; feel that truth in your chest until the sense of separation dissolves.
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