Inner Sight by Faith

Luke 18:41-43 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Luke 18 in context

Scripture Focus

41Saying, What wilt thou that I shall do unto thee? And he said, Lord, that I may receive my sight.
42And Jesus said unto him, Receive thy sight: thy faith hath saved thee.
43And immediately he received his sight, and followed him, glorifying God: and all the people, when they saw it, gave praise unto God.
Luke 18:41-43

Biblical Context

A blind beggar asks Jesus to restore his sight; Jesus says his faith has saved him, and he is healed, then follows and praises God.

Neville's Inner Vision

That plea of the blind man is not a request from a separate soul to a distant power; it is a statement of consciousness. Luke records that Jesus answered, "thy faith hath saved thee," and the man’s inner sight flashed into experience. In Neville’s light, sight is always a state the mind assumes and recognizes. The beggar did not beg for mercy but affirmed a vision already present in the I AM, and Jesus—the affirmation of divine law—authorized the inner act by saying, "Receive thy sight." The healing is not a miracle apart from your consciousness; it is the moment when belief shifts from lack to awareness. When you believe you are already seeing, you synchronize your senses with that inner sight. The crowd’s praise follows the changed consciousness, not after a distant event—it is the outward testament of an inward realization. Follow him by living as the fully aware presence, letting gratitude flow from the inner sight into outward praise. The salvation here is the awakening of trust in the one life within you, your I AM, through which all things become visible.

Practice This Now

Sit quietly and assume you already see. Repeat to yourself I am seeing clearly now, feel the lift of sight in your inner being, and move through your day with that inner vision.

The Bible Through Neville

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