Inner Compassion Practice Matthew 25:35-36

Matthew 25:35-36 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Matthew 25 in context

Scripture Focus

35For I was an hungred, and ye gave me meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink: I was a stranger, and ye took me in:
36Naked, and ye clothed me: I was sick, and ye visited me: I was in prison, and ye came unto me.
Matthew 25:35-36

Biblical Context

Matthew 25:35-36 calls you to see needs in others as inner signs of your own life and to respond with practical mercy. It frames acts of compassion as demonstrations of the awakening I AM within.

Neville's Inner Vision

These verses invite you to awaken to the truth that you are the I AM, the awareness behind every hungry, thirsty, or imprisoned image. When you imagine feeding the hungry, you are not merely feeding another; you are rehearsing the feeling that you already possess fulfillment within. The outer acts of mercy then become signs that your internal state has shifted. Hunger becomes intention; thirst becomes longing satisfied by the presence you insist upon in yourself. By assuming you are the giver and the receiver, by feeling it as real now, you reframe the scene: the stranger is you, the jailed is your fear, and mercy flows from the only power you acknowledge—your own awakening. This is not philanthropy apart from spirit but the turning of your mind toward abundance. In such revision, Matthew 25:35-36 ceases to be a distant admonition and becomes a lived, current fact in your inner life, a demonstration that you are the source of every act you see.

Practice This Now

Imaginative Act: Sit in stillness, assume the feeling of having already given and received; repeat, 'I am the I AM, the source of all provision.' Visualize feeding, sheltering, visiting—let the sensation of abundance become your present reality.

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