Forgiveness in the Inner Treasury
Matthew 18:26-27 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Matthew 18 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
An earthly servant pleads for time to repay a debt, and the merciful master cancels the debt. The passage reveals that forgiveness springs from an awakened inner state, dissolving lack and guilt.
Neville's Inner Vision
Viewed through the law Neville teaches, the parable is a statement about your inner economics of consciousness. The servant is a thought-form clutching a problem; the lord is the I AM—your inmost awareness that feels for you with true compassion. The plea, 'have patience with me, and I will pay thee all,' expresses a belief in time and effort to repay a supposed balance. Yet when the sovereign nature of your being awakens to share mercy, the ledger is loosed and the debt is forgiven. The forgiveness is not an external favor; it is the recognition that you are never truly separate from abundance. When you practice this, you do not bargain with God, you align your mind with the fact that nothing is owed in the present moment. In that realization, fear and guilt dissolve, and grace becomes your default condition. Observe how your world begins to respond to the new inner term: a sense of ease, clarity, and release toward every lack. The mercy you seek is the mercy you are, and the release you crave is the release already present in your I AM.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume the role of the king within your own consciousness; declare, 'I forgive and release all debts.' Then feel the relief as though the burden never existed, and carry that feeling into the rest of your day.
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