Inner Hospitality Illuminates
Hebrews 13:2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Hebrews 13 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Hebrews 13:2 urges us not to neglect hospitality; welcoming strangers can reveal the divine presence.
Neville's Inner Vision
Seen through the I AM, 'entertaining strangers' is not a social duty but a shift in inner posture. Every person you meet is a figure of awareness, a living suggestion of your oneness with all that exists. When you extend welcome—listen with your whole attention, offer space, food, or a kind word—you do not give to another alone; you converse with the divine presence you carry. The 'angel' you may entertain is the portion of God within you that other consciousness reflects back. Thus, the act of hospitality becomes an inner revision: you move from separation to unity. Your imagination is the instrument; the generosity you practice trains the feeling-state of abundance and mercy. As you regard the stranger as a manifestation of your own I AM, you awaken the memory that you are always host to the divine. In time, the outward kindness mirrors an inward reality—compassion and love become your natural mode, and the world responds as you become the equivalent of the angel you once sought.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume you are already entertaining a stranger in your mind's house; feel the warmth of welcome as if they were a beloved part of your own I AM. Let that feeling linger until it feels real and carries into your next encounter.
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