Inner Repentance and Revelation
Matthew 11:20-22 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Matthew 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jesus upbraids Chorazin and Bethsaida for not repenting despite witnessing mighty works. The passage warns that greater responsibility rests on those with more revelation.
Neville's Inner Vision
Here the cities Chorazin and Bethsaida stand as inner states of consciousness that have seen the mighty works of your life but refuse the simple turning of attention that repentance implies. The woe you read is not punishment coming from an angry sky but the natural consequence of clinging to a familiar script while the miracles are crying to be made real through a new feeling. In Neville’s terms, the inner day of judgment is the moment you recognize that your assumption governs the world you experience. A state that would repent would not abandon the miracle but realign with a higher pattern of feeling and belief, and thus it would invite fresh acts of power into its life. If Tyre and Sidon had received the same works, the inner motion would have chosen differently, and the old state would have collapsed into a new awareness. For you, the charge is greater: you have tasted the works and are asked to turn once more toward the feeling that your I AM is the source of them. Practice simply: dwell in the conviction that the miracle is already true in your consciousness, and let the old pattern fade.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Pick one pattern you’ve witnessed changeable by faith and, for a few minutes daily, assume the state of the I AM already operating through it; feel the new reality as real in this moment.
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