Kneeling Together in Prayer
Acts 20:36 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Acts 20 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Paul speaks and then kneels, praying with all who are present. The act frames prayer as a shared inner posture as much as an outward gesture.
Neville's Inner Vision
In this moment the outward kneeling is not ritual but a symbol of the soul's posture. When Paul had spoken, he shifts from words to silence, and in that silence the I AM within him and within the circle asserts its sovereignty. The 'with them all' becomes an inner chorus of states—faith, courage, receptivity—standing together in imagination. Prayer, in Neville's sense, is simply an act of awareness turning toward what is already true in consciousness: that there is only one life, one power, one presence—your own I AM and the I AM of the beloved community. The kneeling gathers attention to the inner state where desire and certainty unite. As you imagine yourself in that circle, you realize your circumstances bend to the clarity of your inner sense of I AM, not by petitioning an outside deity but by aligning with the truth that you are always praying within. The unity manifests as harmony in perception, and outward movement follows as a natural consequence of inner conviction.
Practice This Now
Take a moment now to kneel in your imagination, parallel to those you would stand with, and declare the I AM as your shared center. Feel the circle closing around you and rest in the conviction that the answer is already present in consciousness.
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