From Idle Tales to Inner Certainty

Luke 24:11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Luke 24 in context

Scripture Focus

11And their words seemed to them as idle tales, and they believed them not.
Luke 24:11

Biblical Context

Luke 24:11 records the disciples dismissing the women's report as idle tales and not believing it.

Neville's Inner Vision

To Luke 24:11, the inner teaching says: the apostles’ doubt is a condition of consciousness, not a fact about events. The women’s report is alive and certain, yet the disciples hear it through a mind that has already decided how things should be. In Neville's psychology, the phrase idle tales exposes the resistance of a current state to revise itself. Belief is not a matter of evidence but of vibration—an inner assumption that becomes the outer seeing. The resurrection is not something external to be proven; it is the shift of awareness from lack to fullness. If you accept this, you will notice that your own certainty creates the world you call real. The moment you treat the new truth as the only fact, you begin to inhabit it. So revise your state now: imagine the truth as already present, feel it as real, and let your awareness align with the outcome you desire. The tale of disbelief dissolves as you awake to who you truly are: the I AM.

Practice This Now

Assume the new truth now—say, 'This is the reality I accept.' Feel it in the body as present, and dwell there until certainty arises.

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