Inner Feast of Provision
Matthew 14:19-20 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Matthew 14 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jesus blesses five loaves and two fishes, then passes them to the disciples to feed the crowd. All eat and are filled, with twelve baskets of fragments left over.
Neville's Inner Vision
Consider this as a teaching about your own inner provision. The multitude you see is your own restless thoughts gathered on the grass of consciousness. When He looks up to heaven and blesses, He represents that moment in you when you acknowledge the I AM as the source of every good thing. The five loaves and two fishes are the small, habitual ideas by which you feed your life—habits of care, generosity, faith. Blessing them is the act of affirming their sufficiency, not their scarcity. By breaking and distributing them through the disciples you are practicing the movement of consciousness: a constant sharing of inward resources with the world. The emptying is not loss but abundance changing form, and the twelve baskets are the leftovers as new beliefs that persist after the so-called event. As you dwell in this pattern, you notice that what is given outwardly corresponds to inward provision. Providence and Presence are not distant; they are the living texture of your awareness, multiplying when you claim them.
Practice This Now
Sit quietly, assume the I AM as the source of all sustenance within you, blessing and distributing your inner resources to others. Feel the expansion: as you give, you are fed, and the sense of scarcity becomes abundance.
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