Inner Fellowship on the Way
Acts 28:13-14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Acts 28 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
They sail to Rhegium, reach Puteoli, find brethren and tarry seven days, then move on toward Rome.
Neville's Inner Vision
Paul and his company travel through inner channels; the outward journey mirrors a shift of consciousness toward a more defined self. The south wind is not meteorology but the inner wind of conviction that propels your imagination toward its desired end. The landing at Puteoli, where brethren await, is a symbol: you now encounter the inner fellowship—the beings within you that affirm your right to be whole and to act in harmony with your goal. The seven days of tarrying signal a period of inner gathering, the stillness in which the mind consolidates its new identity. When you resume the voyage toward Rome, you move from mere wish to an established state of consciousness; Providence is the law by which your I AM orchestrates appearances to match your inner certainty. Practical stance: assume you are already among your inner brethren, feeling their recognition; dwell in that feeling, and let the next outward step be drawn by the certainty that you belong where you are headed.
Practice This Now
Assume you are already among the inner brethren; feel the wind of assurance and tarry in that state for seven breaths, then proceed as if the Rome you seek is already yours.
The Bible Through Neville










Neville Bible Sparks









