Two Blind Men, Inner Mercy

Matthew 20:30 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Matthew 20 in context

Scripture Focus

30And, behold, two blind men sitting by the way side, when they heard that Jesus passed by, cried out, saying, Have mercy on us, O Lord, thou son of David.
Matthew 20:30

Biblical Context

Two blind men along the road cry out to Jesus for mercy. They call him 'the Lord, the Son of David' and seek healing.

Neville's Inner Vision

In this Matthew 20:30 scene, the two blind men are not distant sufferers but inner states of consciousness crying to be recognized. Their voices rise when they sense the Presence moving by, and mercy answers as the activity of awareness itself. They call Jesus the Son of David—the inner King, the rightful rule of mind when it rules with compassion. To cry out is to admit that certain faculties within you have been veiled by fear or limitation and that a higher state of consciousness is passing through your field. The healing, then, comes not from an external physician but from the discipline of imagination: to see is to be seen by the I AM. When you align with the I AM as the Son of David, you declare that the mind’s true ruling is mercy, clarity, and wholeness. Faith, in this sense, is trust in your own awakened awareness; mercy flows as you dwell in the assumption that you already possess the sight you seek. The two blind men awaken because the inner king has voiced your release; you are invited to claim the same revelation now.

Practice This Now

Sit quietly and imagine the call 'Have mercy' arising within you as the I AM; respond by assuming you are already seeing with the inner sight of the Son of David. Hold this state a few breaths, then notice your outer world shifting to reflect your realized vision.

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