Inner Denial Awakening in Mark

Mark 14:66-68 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Mark 14 in context

Scripture Focus

66And as Peter was beneath in the palace, there cometh one of the maids of the high priest:
67And when she saw Peter warming himself, she looked upon him, and said, And thou also wast with Jesus of Nazareth.
68But he denied, saying, I know not, neither understand I what thou sayest. And he went out into the porch; and the cock crew.
Mark 14:66-68

Biblical Context

Peter denies knowing Jesus when questioned by a maid in Mark 14:66-68, then goes out to the porch as the cock crow.

Neville's Inner Vision

In the story, Peter identifies with a self that trembles in the shadow of an accusation. The maid's word is the waking thought that says, 'You belong to the Nazarene reality,' and the old identity answers, 'I know not.' But this is not a history lesson; it is a script of your interior life. You are the I AM moving through the crowd of belief, and every fear is a cue to revise. The denial reveals a moment when consciousness forgets its unity with Jesus, the inner Christ, and clings to the porch of separation. The cock’s crow is not judgment but a signal that the mind’s clock has rung, calling you back to your true state. Neville teaches that every scene in Scripture is a present-state image: you can shift now by returning to the conviction that you are indeed the I AM aware of Jesus within you. In that awareness, the past denial dissolves and a new obedience unfolds, not by effort but by recognizing who you truly are.

Practice This Now

Imaginative_act: Close your eyes, assume you are the I AM in the scene, and revise the denial by feeling, 'I know the Lord within me now.' Let that inner certainty fill the space where fear once spoke.

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