The Inner Christ Practice
Matthew 25:37-40 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Matthew 25 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jesus affirms that the righteous fed the hungry, welcomed strangers, clothed the naked, and cared for the sick and imprisoned. He then declares that whatever is done for the least of these, is done for him.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the story, the King and the righteous stand as a mirror of your own consciousness. The 'King' is the I AM you, not an external judge, and the 'least of these' are living facets of your inner world—bits of need, fear, or neglect awaiting recognition. When you imagine feeding the hungry, giving drink, inviting the stranger, clothing the naked, or visiting the sick, you are not performing charity to others so much as re-enacting a shift within your awareness. Each act of mercy is an inner movement that reorders your state of being; to do it unto the least is to do it unto your own Christ, the embodiment of God-awareness. The moment you see the Christ in another, you illuminate a neglected part of yourself; the outer world simply mirrors this inner change. Therefore, righteousness is not an external rule but a continuous revision of your inner climate until you inhabit wholeness. When you believe you have already supplied what was needed, you awaken the reality that all beings are your own self-expression of the divine.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume you are feeding the hungry, inviting a stranger, or clothing the naked. Feel the warmth, gratitude, and wholeness of the act, then carry that revised state with you into your day.
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