Inner Temperature Of Faith

Revelation 3:15-16 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Revelation 3 in context

Scripture Focus

15I know thy works, that thou art neither cold nor hot: I would thou wert cold or hot.
16So then because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth.
Revelation 3:15-16

Biblical Context

The verse speaks to a church that is neither fully committed nor entirely opposed; lukewarmness signals indecision in inner life. The call is to choose a firmer inner stance and act with conviction.

Neville's Inner Vision

Revelation speaks not to places in time, but to states of consciousness. Lukewarmness is an inner weather pattern where the mind is neither hot with faith nor cold with doubt; it is the self's reluctance to commit to a clear intention. God, the I AM within you, does not judge from a distance but responds to your inner posture. When you linger in the middle, you signal resistance to life and your imagination remains unreleased, so your experiences reflect that steadiness of ambiguity. The remedy is not rhetoric but a decisive psychic act: adopt a definite stance and revise your inner picture until that stance feels true and alive. Imagine you are already hot with trust, and breathe the certainty into every sense until it becomes your habitual mood. Feel the wind of possibility as you would feel warmth on your skin, until the inner image dominates and your outer world begins to align. You are accountable only to the consistency of your inner state, for consciousness precedes form and you as I AM creator fashion what appears before you.

Practice This Now

Imaginative_act: Sit quietly, close your eyes, and assume the hot state of unwavering trust as real now. Stay with that feeling until your inner weather shifts and you begin to act from certainty rather than doubt.

The Bible Through Neville

Neville Bible Sparks

Loading...

Loading...
Video thumbnail
Loading video details...
🔗 View on YouTube

© 2025 The Bible Through Neville - A consciousness-based approach to Scripture