Appeal to Caesar Within

Acts 25:11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Acts 25 in context

Scripture Focus

11For if I be an offender, or have committed any thing worthy of death, I refuse not to die: but if there be none of these things whereof these accuse me, no man may deliver me unto them. I appeal unto Caesar.
Acts 25:11

Biblical Context

Paul declares that if he were guilty of offenses deserving death he is ready to die, but since none of the charges warrant death, no man can deliver him; he then appeals to Caesar.

Neville's Inner Vision

Within Acts 25:11 the I AM speaks through the apostle. The case is not won by clever defense, but by a state of consciousness that recognizes the inner law already established. The so-called Caesar is not a man in a courtroom but the inner authority by which you measure what is true for you. If you feel condemned by appearances, you can choose to place the entire matter under the higher jurisdiction of your own awareness. When you imagine and feel from that state—'I am innocent in the sight of the ruling I AM'—you shift the entire scene, and the external evidence begins to align with your revised posture. The practice is not resistance but alignment: revise the charge, adopt the verdict of wholeness, and let Providence respond from within you. Your imagination is the true legal clerk, recording the state you assume as fact. So the man who appeals to Caesar points you to the inside: there is a justice that transcends circumstance, and you are connected to it now through your I AM. Trust that inner judge, and your life will answer accordingly.

Practice This Now

Assume now that you are under the higher law within; feel the verdict of innocence; repeat silently, I AM the law, I am free, and imagine your life reflecting that inner judgment.

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