Lazarus Unbound: Inner Liberation
John 11:44 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read John 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Lazarus comes forth wrapped in grave clothes, alive but bound. Jesus says, 'Loose him, and let him go,' signaling liberation from bondage.
Neville's Inner Vision
To the storm-tossed mind, John 11:44 is not a history lesson but a map of consciousness. The corpse in cloths is your present awareness when you dream of lack, fear, or separation; even in life the I AM may be bound by old stories. When Jesus commands loose him, the act is not about a man in a tomb but about the inner act of awakening: you must consent to a new state. The freeing word arises from within, the same power that created a thought turning it into form. Practice begins with a simple assumption: I am already free now. In imagination, feel the bindings fall away and your face become clear, unshadowed by the napkin of doubt. When you persist in that feeling, you re-suture the scene so that the benighted state dissolves into light, and the body of experience follows the altered consciousness. Mercy becomes the law of your life as you accept the redemption of perception, not of fate. The miracle is ongoing every moment as you dwell as the liberated consciousness that gives life its true direction.
Practice This Now
Sit in quiet, assume the state I am already free; revise a current limitation by picturing the grave clothes loosening and you stepping forward with your face unveiled, feeling it real.
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