Inner Accord in Action
Ezra 10:12 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezra 10 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The congregation speaks with one voice, pledging to follow through on what has been decided. The verse points to an inner agreement that turns decree into lived reality.
Neville's Inner Vision
In Ezra 10:12 the crowd's loud assent is not merely compliance; it is a demonstration of a shared inner state. When they say, 'As thou hast said, so must we do,' they are signaling a shift in consciousness—a decision to align the inner image with outward action. In Neville terms, the group embodies one dominant state of I AM: a trust in the decree as an inner law, not a temporary mood. The commandment is a picture formed by authority, but the effect follows not from external enforcement but from the inner acceptance that the image is finished. Your mind, too, can choose this unity of purpose, and the world must reflect it, for life is sent forth from the inner realm. To apply: refuse to exist as divided between belief and behavior. Decide now that your assumption is the law, feel its truth in your chest, and keep it until your subconscious moves to actualize it. The 'we' you feel is your collective mind claiming coherence between what you intend and what you experience.
Practice This Now
Imaginative_act: Sit quietly, assume the I AM as your ongoing state, and declare, 'As I have said, so I do.' Then feel the unity of purpose until it grips your heart and becomes your first impression.
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