Inner Deliverance in Acts

Acts 7:28 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Acts 7 in context

Scripture Focus

28Wilt thou kill me, as thou diddest the Egyptian yesterday?
Acts 7:28

Biblical Context

Acts 7:28 frames an inner confrontation: the question Wilt thou kill me reveals fear of exposure and judgment within the psyche.

Neville's Inner Vision

That question is not about a literal assailant but the inner prosecutor within your mind. Wilt thou kill me is the cry of the old self clinging to its identity, the Egyptian yesterday whose violence or fear you imagine you must survive. The Moses moving through the crowd is your awakened awareness—the I AM quietly rising, not to condemn but to restore you to your true life. When you hear it this way, the threat loses its sting, because you understand you are not the body facing a world but the I AM that animates that world. Deliverance is not an escape from people; it is the reversal of belief: you are already protected by the One Life within you, and the external scene reflects your inner state. Justice follows as you align with that state—your acts, choices, and feelings become a natural expression of the inner law you acknowledge. The moment you revise from fear to faith, you dissolve the need for punishment or defense. You awaken to a sovereign consciousness that cannot be killed by appearances and, in that awakening, true liberation dawns.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: sit quietly and declare I am the I AM delivered and unthreatened, and feel that assurance as real for two minutes, then imagine the surrounding scene revised to reflect safety and liberation.

The Bible Through Neville

Neville Bible Sparks

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