Inner Deliverance: Acts 7:19
Acts 7:19 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Acts 7 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Acts 7:19 describes oppression that persecuted the infants, symbolizing fear suppressing new life and potential within us.
Neville's Inner Vision
To Stephen’s indictment, I say the 'same' who dealt subtilly with our kindred is the stubborn state of consciousness that fears its own vitality. The infants cast out were not mere children in time and place, but newborn ideas and powers seeking to awaken within you. In Neville’s posture, such oppression reveals a dream-made wall of limitation, erected by habit and mistaken separation. Yet the I AM is always present as awareness. When you cease resisting and begin to imagine from that inner throne, you reverse the decree. You no longer obey fear; you revise the scene with the feeling that you are already free, already delivering your inner children and talents into freedom. The act of recalling your identity as consciousness shifts the dominant mood from tyranny to liberation. The external 'subtilty' dissolves when you inhabit the inner state of unlimited possibility; the outer environment reflects your inner unblocked life. Remember: imagination creates reality, and deliverance begins with a single, unwavering assumption.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: In quiet moment, assume the feeling of deliverance and say, 'I AM free; my inner children live and flourish.' Then revise a present fear as if the outcome is already accomplished, letting that feeling linger.
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