Inner Net of Judgment
Matthew 13:47-50 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Matthew 13 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The parable speaks of a net that gathers every kind from the sea; the good are kept and the bad are cast away. At the end, a final separation occurs where the wicked are set apart from the just and face judgment.
Neville's Inner Vision
In Neville’s view, the net is the reach of your consciousness, cast into the sea of inner life, gathering every thought, feeling and circumstance you have given attention to. What you decide to call real becomes the vessels that hold your experience; the ‘good’ are the impressions you affirm as true and lasting, the ‘bad’ are those you revise or release. The end of the world is not a future catastrophe but a shift of awareness when you refuse to identify with limitation and you claim the I AM as your permanent state. The angels are higher states of consciousness—discernment, faith, quiet authority—that sweep through your inner sea and separate belief from fear. When you cling to fear you invite the furnace of fire—trial and discomfort—that gnashes at you; when you revise and dwell in the I AM, that fire purifies without destroying your essence. The net does not condemn; it reveals your inner order. You are both net and sea and the act of judgment you fear becomes a waking to your true identity.
Practice This Now
Assume the state of the aware observer: imagine a net cast into your sea of consciousness and deliberately draw the good into vessels while releasing the rest. Then feel the reality of that choice as if it already is yours.
The Bible Through Neville










Neville Bible Sparks









