Are These Things So? Inner Inquiry
Acts 7:1 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Acts 7 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The high priest asks if the reported things are true, exposing external judgment as a mirror of inner questioning.
Neville's Inner Vision
To the inner listener, the court of Acts 7:1 is not a crowd outside you, but the I AM within testing the content you have accepted as true. The high priest’s question, Are these things so? becomes a gate of awareness: what you have believed about yourself, your past, and your world, is it really solid, or merely a story you repeat? Neville says that God is the I AM and imagination is its instrument. Thus the scene asks you to stop citing appearances and instead feel the reality you desire as already present. The 'things' are not events in space but states of consciousness you have accepted as true. When you answer with quiet certainty that they are so, you align your inner state with that truth until it resonates through every sense. Your remembering becomes architecture; your belief becomes the atmosphere you breathe. The moment of inner assent collapses the old condition and births a new one, not by force, but by consenting to the reality already within.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Close your eyes, declare 'It is so,' and feel the truth of the desired state as already real. Then imagine a brief scene where that truth is evident in your day—clarity, confidence, or a fulfilled need—so the feeling lingers in your body.
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