Inner Provision at Cana
John 2:3-5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read John 2 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
At a wedding, they run out of wine; Mary tells Jesus, who notes his hour has not yet come, and Mary instructs the servants to do whatever he commands.
Neville's Inner Vision
Consider the scene as a parable of your inner life. The lack of wine is the appearance of limitation in the soul; the mother figure within—your awakened I AM—signals a different order already present. Jesus’ reply, Mine hour is not yet come, is not denial but a reminder that outward form follows inner state. In this reading, the servants are your thoughts and habits awaiting direction. When the inner voice—your true I AM—speaks, obedience is immediate: Whatsoever he saith unto you, do it. The water you carry represents your worn-out needs; as you hearken and act, that water becomes wine—an overflow of joy, abundance, and grace. Neville's practice is to revise the sense of lack by assuming the inner provision is now. It is not about conjuring miracles outside you but aligning consciousness with the truth of your nature as I AM. The hour you seek arrives when you answer the call inwardly, and manifestation flows from the certainty that you are the source of all supply.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Assume the I AM is the wine now flowing within you. Listen for inner instruction and act on it immediately, feeling the transformation as water becomes wine in your consciousness.
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