Acts 28:11 Inner Departure

Acts 28:11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Acts 28 in context

Scripture Focus

11And after three months we departed in a ship of Alexandria, which had wintered in the isle, whose sign was Castor and Pollux.
Acts 28:11

Biblical Context

After three months, the travelers depart the ship that had wintered on the island. This marks a shift from stillness to forward movement, guided by an inner sign.

Neville's Inner Vision

Three months in this harbor are a season in your mind where you linger in safe beliefs. The ship is your habitual thought pattern; the island's wintering is the frozen mood of limitation that you accepted as real. Castor and Pollux are not external deities but the twin faculties of awareness: Castor as the seeing faculty that captures a form, Pollux as the faith that trusts the sign. When you notice the inner signal and claim it as your I AM, you physically depart from the inner harbor. The departure is not a journey to a distant shore, but a conversion of your inner state—your imagination becoming your new vessel. By assuming the new state and feeling it as present, you send your life into motion and the outer scenes rearrange to match your inner pattern. The past tells you what was possible; the present is your invitation to imagine anew and trust the inner guidance. Thus, the true worship is not outward ritual but the unwavering faith that your I AM has already moved on.

Practice This Now

Assume you have already departed your old state; imagine standing on a ship with Castor and Pollux as your inner guides, feel the wind of your new conviction, and affirm 'I AM, I depart now.'

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