Innocence Inside the Crowd

Luke 23:4-5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Luke 23 in context

Scripture Focus

4Then said Pilate to the chief priests and to the people, I find no fault in this man.
5And they were the more fierce, saying, He stirreth up the people, teaching throughout all Jewry, beginning from Galilee to this place.
Luke 23:4-5

Biblical Context

Pilate declares no fault in the man, while the people insist he stirs up the crowd moving from Galilee to this place.

Neville's Inner Vision

Within you, Pilate stands as the Watcher, the I AM surveying a belief about your life. When you say, I find no fault in this man, you are naming the essential you that observes the scene without blame. The crowd that grows fierce represents the stubborn thought-forms that cling to a story of disturbance and danger. Their charge that he stirs the people is the image of belief spreading through Jewry, moving from Galilee to this moment. Notice how the inner movement travels—from a general teaching, a Galilee of potential, to a particular circumstance. In Neville's terms, the condition you call reality is an outcome of how you diagnose the self; you can revise the scene by placing the I AM as sole judge of what is right and true. When you insist on innocence, you invalidate the need for fault; what arises outwardly is simply the echo of your inner verdict. The inner witness bears no blame; your responsibility is to maintain that awareness until the fear dissolves and the outer events align with the truth you have declared.

Practice This Now

Assume the I AM finds no fault in this moment; revise the scene by affirming I find no fault in this situation, and feel that truth as real for a full minute.

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