Inner Flight Of Consciousness
Matthew 24:16-20 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Matthew 24 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage directs those in Judea to flee danger and not cling to possessions; it also warns that bearing a child worsens the peril, and it cautions to avoid flight during winter or on the Sabbath.
Neville's Inner Vision
See this scene as a blueprint for the inner traveler. The call to flee to the mountains is a summons to leave a lowering state of mind and ascend to a higher center of awareness. The housetop and the field are not geography but habits of thought; you are asked to abandon the impulse to grab outward things or to cling to an old identity for safety. The woe pronounced on those with child signals the burden of fear-based projections about the future; in your practice, release those attachments and refuse to let imagined conditions rule you. The instruction to pray that your flight be not in winter or on the Sabbath points to the timing of your shift: let it occur where you feel timeless and sure, not bound by weather, schedule, or worldly ritual. In this inner flight you become the consciousness that does the traveling; the mountains symbolize the fixed, elevated state from which you can observe and govern all circumstance. Your crisis is a signal to adjust the state you occupy, not a catastrophe outside you. When you dwell in I AM, you find the flight already complete.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes and declare, 'I am in the mountains of my consciousness now.' Feel the relief as you revise fear, and imagine your flight as already complete—your I AM safely overseeing all.
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