Silence of the Inner God
Revelation 13:6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Revelation 13 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Revelation 13:6 presents a figure who opens his mouth to blaspheme God, His name, His tabernacle, and those who dwell in heaven.
Neville's Inner Vision
From the Neville Goddard vantage, the blasphemy is not an external crime but a condition of consciousness. The mouth that opens against God represents the habit of denying the I AM within, the belief that God is distant, that you are not the temple where God resides. Blaspheming his name and his tabernacle is the inner act of naming separation from the truth that you are the dwelling place of God. The dwellers in heaven are your higher states of awareness—peace, wholeness, and the presence you long for—yet they exist only as possibilities in your current assumption. When you identify with separation, you project a drama into the world. The remedy is to reverse the movement: assume, here and now, that you are the I AM, that the inner temple is intact, and that heaven is your present awareness. Persist in that revised consciousness, feel the presence as real, and the outward scene aligns with this truth. God is not outside; God is I AM, and imagination creates your reality.
Practice This Now
In a moment of quiet, assume the I AM now and revise the memory of separation, and feel the temple within glowing with God.
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