Glorify Your Inner I AM
John 12:27-28 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read John 12 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jesus speaks of a troubled soul, questions what to say, and then commits to the hour for a higher purpose; he asks the Father to glorify the name.
Neville's Inner Vision
Here, the scene is not a historical moment alone, but a revelation of your inner state. 'Now is my soul troubled' is the alarm of a mind that believes in separation from the I AM. The cry 'what shall I say?… save me from this hour' is the human tendency to plead with circumstance rather than remembering you are the thinker of the scene. In Neville's vein, the hour is never out there; it is the current focal point of your consciousness, inviting you to revise it. When you declare 'for this cause came I unto this hour,' you acknowledge that the challenge is the very door through which your higher self enters. The call 'Father, glorify thy name' becomes a command to the I AM presence inside you to affirm its own glory through you. The voice from heaven—'I have both glorified it, and will glorify it again'—is your inner assurance that the reality you seek is already done in awareness. Rest in that I AM, and let the world reflect your inward victory.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, revise the scene to declare, 'I came for this hour,' and feel the I AM affirming, 'Father, glorify thy name' until the inner voice confirms, 'I have glorified it, and will glorify it again'.
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