Inner Exoneration Dialogue
Luke 23:14-15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Luke 23 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Pilate examines the charge and finds no fault in this man, declaring that nothing worthy of death has been done. This echoes an inner truth: exoneration begins in consciousness, not in external verdicts.
Neville's Inner Vision
Luke 23:14-15 invites us into the drama inside our own mind. Pilate’s verdict—'I find no fault in this man'—becomes a doorway to the awareness I AM. The crowd crying for judgment represents the restless thoughts that would define you by appearances and circumstance. When you stand in the light of awareness, you may declare that nothing in your experience is worthy of death, for the essence of you is innocent and uncondemned. The external sentence is not final; it reflects your current state of consciousness, not the living truth within. By refusing to agree with any claim of guilt, you reset the verdict to 'no fault' and permit the inner Jesus to rise as your true nature. This is not a struggle with history but a revision of inner law: exoneration must precede transformation. Your task is to align with the fact that you are the I AM who judges in consciousness, and your world must reflect that sovereign truth.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit in quiet, repeat silently, 'I am the one who finds no fault in myself,' and feel that certainty as already accomplished. If guilt arises, revise it by returning to this verdict until it dissolves.
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