Belief Now: Inner Awakening
John 16:31 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read John 16 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jesus asks, 'Do ye now believe?' revealing belief as a momentary state rather than a fixed end. The question implies that true faith is something that can be tested and revised from within.
Neville's Inner Vision
John 16:31 invites you to witness your own state of consciousness. In Neville's terms, Jesus' question 'Do ye now believe?' is not a challenge to others but a call to your inner I AM to revise itself. Belief is not a future event waiting for proof; it is a living inner posture you maintain. If you assent, 'I now believe' you are not convincing God; you are aligning your awareness with the outcome you desire. Begin by assuming the end in mind and feeling its reality in the present moment. Imagine that the conviction you seek already resides in you and allow the feeling of it to saturate your chest, your breath, your imagination. As you persist, the external scenes begin to echo the new inner state, not by force, but by alignment. The moment you say, 'I believe now,' you shift from lack to fullness. This is the practice of revision: you revise your present sensation until it matches the goal. The question becomes your invitation to awaken.
Practice This Now
Practice: close your eyes, breathe into your heart, and repeat 'I now believe' until the feeling sits as fact. Let the conviction rise from within and align your outer world.
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