Hosanna Within: The I AM Arrives
Mark 11:9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Mark 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Mark 11:9 records the crowd's jubilant cry, recognizing one coming in the name of the Lord. It signals an inner acknowledgment of divine presence entering consciousness.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the Neville lens, the scene is not about a man riding into Jerusalem but about your own states of awareness. The words 'Hosanna' and 'Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord' are sounds you can tune to. They that went before and they that followed are the two streams of thought—the anticipatory and the lingering—both crying for salvation. When you accept that the 'he' who comes is the I AM, the Lord of your own consciousness, the kingship you seek is already present as your present awareness. The 'name of the Lord' is not a distant deity but the recognition that your awareness is the authority through which life expresses. Thus true worship is not ritual outside yourself but the inner acknowledgment that God is present now; presence is salvation; redemption is the shift in feeling from lack to fullness. The entry of the king is a movement of consciousness into your experience, not history; as you dwell in that I AM, your world rearranges to confirm the inner reign. This is the Neville path: assume it, feel it, and the outer witnesses will align.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, place a hand on your chest, and declare, 'I AM come in the name of the Lord.' Stand in that conviction and feel the inner king entering your consciousness, allowing your surroundings to reflect this reign.
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