Inner Sabbath Healing

Luke 14:3-6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Luke 14 in context

Scripture Focus

3And Jesus answering spake unto the lawyers and Pharisees, saying, Is it lawful to heal on the sabbath day?
4And they held their peace. And he took him, and healed him, and let him go;
5And answered them, saying, Which of you shall have an ass or an ox fallen into a pit, and will not straightway pull him out on the sabbath day?
6And they could not answer him again to these things.
Luke 14:3-6

Biblical Context

Jesus challenges the legality of healing on the Sabbath, then heals the man. The Pharisees' silence reveals their refusal to engage when mercy is demonstrated.

Neville's Inner Vision

Luke 14:3-6 invites you to see healing as a matter of consciousness, not schedule. The sabbath is the inner stillness where the I AM resides and where imagination can move perception. When Jesus asks, Is it lawful to heal on the sabbath day, he is teaching you to abandon a legal mind and to trust the inner law of mercy. The healed man represents a state of wholeness already present in your awareness quietly awaiting a revision. A pit is a stuck belief, a habit of fear, which you draw yourself out of by a new assumption. The scribes' silence shows that the old state cannot answer to mercy; the new state does. As you assume, feel it real, that you are healed now, you cooperate with the I AM and let the inner movement become outward form. Healing follows the inner shift, for imagination creates reality when you dwell in the end you desire.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Sit in stillness and assume the state 'I am healed now.' Feel the release, imagine the pit opening and you stepping free, then carry that sense of wholeness into the day.

The Bible Through Neville

Neville Bible Sparks

Loading...

Loading...
Video thumbnail
Loading video details...
🔗 View on YouTube

© 2025 The Bible Through Neville - A consciousness-based approach to Scripture