Speaking Before the Inner King
Acts 26:1-3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Acts 26 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Paul speaks before Agrippa, saying he is happy to defend himself and asks to be heard patiently. He acknowledges the king's expertise and prepares to present his case.
Neville's Inner Vision
Beloved, the scene before Agrippa is the inner court of your own mind. Agrippa stands for the outer authority that would question and measure you, while Paul speaks from the I AM—expanding the hand of consciousness in certainty and declaring his readiness to present the truth. The joy, 'I think myself happy,' is not vanity but the tone of a mind that knows fulfillment is already present. When you adopt that stance, you become both speaker and listener, and hearing is patient—a quiet receptivity of consciousness that already recognizes truth. The things of which he is accused—your beliefs, habits, fears—are the stories your mind tells about itself; you address them with clarity, inviting the inner witness to hear. You know the inner witness is expert in all the customs and questions of your life—the timeless, discerning I AM within. Speak as though the verdict is already established in you, and hear with that certainty. In this way your outer scene will align with the inner reality you have chosen to inhabit.
Practice This Now
In practice, close your eyes and imagine you stand before the inner king. Assume the stance 'I am heard; I speak from the I AM,' then feel the reception in your chest as the outer scene aligns.
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