The Inner Feast of Being
Luke 14:21-24 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Luke 14 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The master commands his servant to go into the city to bring in the poor and afflicted; when there is still room, he sends them further to ensure the house is full.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within Luke 14:21-24, I invite you to see the master as your higher self, the I AM who hosts your life. The servant is your imagination, summoned to roam the streets and lanes of your consciousness, seeking every part that has been neglected or cast aside. The poor, maimed, halt, and blind are not persons to pity, but states of awareness you have disowned: fear, limitation, doubt, and denial. When the servant reports the rooms have been filled, yet there is room, the master sends him further, compelling the reach into highways and hedges. This is your inner practice: extend your attention beyond familiar beliefs, draw in the unreconciled parts, and declare that all guests belong at the feast of your being. When you finally include every aspect, your mind becomes a house filled with the abundance of consciousness. The warning is not judgment of others but an invitation to you: if you cling to a limited idea of who belongs, you starve your own feast.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: In a quiet moment, repeat 'I AM the host; all parts are welcome.' Then vividly feel your mind filling with a banquet of awareness as every neglected part is invited in.
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