Remembered by the I AM
Nehemiah 13:14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Nehemiah 13 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Nehemiah 13:14 is a prayer asking God to remember the speaker and not wipe away the good deeds done for the house of God and its offices. It frames remembrance as an act of devotion and stewardship.
Neville's Inner Vision
In Neville Goddard’s voice: Remembering is not nostalgia for the past but a shift in consciousness. Nehemiah speaks as the I AM's own activity, affirming that the deeds done in service to the inner temple are not lost but retained as living stone within your psyche. The 'house of my God' and its 'offices' symbolize your inner sanctuary and its functions—worship, stewardship, and disciplined action. To 'remember me' is to hold those deeds in the light of awareness, so they remain active as you move in the now. 'Wipe not out' becomes a mental revision: you reset the mind to accept that what you did remains operative, credit in the ledger of your consciousness, guiding present conduct and future choices. Your petition then becomes a practical technique—treat your past acts as a continuous inner resource. When you dwell in this truth, you invite resilience, clarity, and faithful service to arise from within, as though the inner governor were affirming, through your imagination, that your deeds are eternally acknowledged by the I AM.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and declare: I AM remembered by the I AM for my faithful service to the inner temple; my deeds endure and guide my present action. Revisit one specific good deed in your memory and feel it as a living credit in your consciousness, inviting more inspired stewardship.
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