Inner Entry Of The Kingdom
Mark 11:7-11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Mark 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The crowd lays garments and branches as Jesus enters Jerusalem, proclaims his coming and the kingdom, then Jesus inspects the temple before withdrawing to Bethany.
Neville's Inner Vision
Look at this scene as a drama of consciousness. The colt upon which Jesus sits is your body awaiting direction by the I AM, the one eternal I within you. When they cast garments upon him and spread branches, you are surrendering outer identities—old opinions, worn roles, calculated separations—in favor of a single bearer of awareness. Hosanna, they cry, a shout of praise not to a man, but to the awakening presence that comes in the name of the Lord—the I AM within. Blessed be the kingdom of our father David indicates the royal line of consciousness in you, the heir to every promise, established in the now, not in future time. As Jesus enters Jerusalem and looks round about on all things, your inner ruler surveys your beliefs, your temples of thought, and your sense of separation. And then, in the eventide, he retires to Bethany with the twelve—the twelve signs of consciousness that accompany you in quiet communion. The story invites you to embody a kingdom that does not toil for recognition but rests in the awareness that you are the dwelling place of God.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and imagine you are riding the colt of your imagination into your inner temple. Feel the old garments of doubt being laid aside and declare, 'The kingdom of God is within me now.'
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