Forgiven I Am: Inner Healing

Matthew 9:5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Matthew 9 in context

Scripture Focus

5For whether is easier, to say, Thy sins be forgiven thee; or to say, Arise, and walk?
Matthew 9:5

Biblical Context

Jesus contrasts forgiving sins with healing the body, showing that inner authority and release of guilt precede outward restoration.

Neville's Inner Vision

Consider the scene as a declaration of consciousness, not a demand upon a distant God. To say, 'Thy sins be forgiven thee' is to acknowledge a released state within your I AM—an inner verdict that guilt has lost its grip and you are intact in divine reality. In Neville's view, forgiveness is the inner condition that dissolves the cause of illness as surely as any external remedy. When you stand in that conviction, the body follows the inner movement; the constraint disappears, and 'arise and walk' becomes the natural expression of a mind restored. The authority Jesus embodies is the authority of awareness, the fact that you can revise your inner story and thereby alter your experiential landscape. The healing you seek is born in revision: you imagine you are already forgiven, already unbound, and you feel the truth of wholeness transmitting through every cell. Do not seek outward proof first; let the inner state be your fact, and the outward form will follow as a perfect echo of the inner conviction.

Practice This Now

Assume the end: you are forgiven and whole here and now, and dwell in the feeling of I AM until the sense of separation dissolves.

The Bible Through Neville

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