Prodigal Return, Inner Resurrection
Luke 15:24 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Luke 15 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Plainly, the verse speaks of a son who was spiritually dead and lost, but returns to life and foundness. Joy and reconciliation follow the inner reestablishment of wholeness.
Neville's Inner Vision
Beloved, Luke 15:24 invites you to watch your own inner drama reversed. The prodigal is not a person out there, but a state of consciousness that wandered into separation from the I AM. The sense of being dead, of being lost, is only a belief in a cut-off identity; the moment of awakening comes when the I AM in you declares that this son is alive, and the inner atmosphere shifts to wholeness. The father’s words are not history but recognition: your awareness is not divided but one, and your return to that awareness makes the feast possible now. When you vividly feel that you are the one who returns, you dissolve the illusion of distance and your world reconfigures to reflect unity, forgiveness, and celebration. The inner merry is the realization of forgiveness as a fact of your being, not an event to be earned. So you do not chase change in the outer; you assume and feel from the end: you are alive in God, found in the living I AM, and the imaginal act itself brings the shift from death to life, reuniting you with the fullness you already are.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, revise the script in your mind: the consciousness is alive in God, I am found in the I AM. Then feel the inner feast—the warmth, forgiveness, and merry peace—as if it is already real.
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