Inner Charges and Clear Verdict
Acts 25:25-27 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Acts 25 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
In Acts 25:25-27, Festus finds Paul innocent of any crime deserving death and seeks to write charges to send him, but admits there is nothing definite to report; Paul is brought before Agrippa for examination to obtain a proper record.
Neville's Inner Vision
Acts 25:25-27 unfolds as a spiritual map: Paul embodies your true self, uncondemned and beyond death, while Festus represents the surface mind demanding a script of accusations. The absence of a crime to write signifies that the essential self is not guilty; the appeal to Augustus registers your call to a higher jurisdiction within—the I AM that governs all. The need to bring Paul before Agrippa mirrors bringing your awareness before your inner king for examination, so a new, life-affirming record can be written. The insistence that a prisoner should have clearly stated crimes before departure becomes a reminder that you must publish a new inner verdict, not cling to old stories of limitation. See this trial not as external judgment but as your own inner alignment: you are not a condemned prisoner, but a consciousness free to redefine what you call real through imaginative acts that insist, I am clear, I am justified, and I choose a life that reflects truth rather than fear.
Practice This Now
Sit quietly and declare internally that there are no crimes against your true self. Write a brief inner charge to the I AM affirming your freedom, then feel the new verdict as your breathing deepens and you 'write' reality with imagination.
The Bible Through Neville










Neville Bible Sparks









