Mark 15:15 Inner Redemption
Mark 15:15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Mark 15 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Pilate yields to the crowd, releases Barabbas, and delivers Jesus to be scourged and crucified.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within Neville's approach, the scene is a theater of your mind. The crowd represents a habitual outer thought, an urge to seek approval from appearances. Barabbas embodies the lower self—your restless, impulsive self you once believed must be freed to run the show. Jesus is not a man outside you, but your true I AM—the unified, awakened awareness that you are. When Pilate 'delivers Jesus to be crucified,' you are told that your old stories and identifications must meet a death in consciousness to reveal the living state. The scourging is the purge of fear and blame; the crucifixion is the symbolic death of limitation. Yet in true Neville fashion, this is not punishment but release: as you stop feeding the old self with your attention, the higher Self ascends in your palpable life. The moment you assume the end-state—Jesus crowned as I AM—the outer drama dissolves into a new sense of being, and redemption becomes simply waking to what you already are.
Practice This Now
Assume the I AM as ruler of your inner theatre and revise the scene: Barabbas is released only as the old self dies, while Jesus lives in you as the I AM; feel that truth filling your life.
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