Calling Inner Sight to Wholeness
Mark 10:49-52 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Mark 10 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jesus calls the blind man to come near, the man casts off his garment, and asks to see. His healing is declared as wrought by faith, and he joins Jesus on the path.
Neville's Inner Vision
Consider Mark 10:49-52 as a map of your inner state. The blind man is a consciousness awakened to its I AM; Jesus standing still and calling him is your inner attention pausing to notice a longing. The act of casting away the garment represents discarding a false sense of self—the former identity that limits what you can see. When Jesus asks, What wilt thou that I should do unto thee? your reply—'that I might receive my sight'—is the practical assumption by which your world rearranges itself. Go thy way; thy faith hath made thee whole means the moment of belief has already completed the work; the healing is the shift in state, not a distant mercy. And immediately he receives his sight and follows Jesus in the way: you are invited to move in the path of your realized state, letting sight guide your steps. Healing is a function of consciousness aligning with its own truth; the outer event mirrors the inner resolution.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, assume the feeling of true sight now, and declare silently 'Thy faith hath made me whole'; imagine shedding old garment of limitation and walking forward in the certainty of restored sight.
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