Inner Mind, Reprobate Outcomes
Romans 1:28-31 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Romans 1 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
It shows that denying God in knowledge leads the mind to a reprobate state. That inward state then expresses itself as a catalogue of unrighteousness.
Neville's Inner Vision
Remember that in my teaching, you are not watching a distant drama called sin; you are awareness itself, imagining from a state of consciousness. When Romans 1:28-31 speaks of men who refuse to retain God in their knowledge, it is describing a choice of the I AM to forget itself. The mind then contracts, becomes a reprobate state, and all manner of conduct—envy, deceit, backbiting, disobedience—arises as an outer reflection of that interior contraction. This is not punishment, but an inner condition you once entertained. Your imagination, left ungoverned by the I AM, will animate whatever you assent to. If you dwell in separation, you generate fear, craving, and conflict; those images harden into acts and judgments. Yet imagination is your faithful servant when yoked to God within. Decide now to keep God in knowledge as your constant awareness, to feel the I AM as the one who never leaves, and to envision from that state. Practically, you can revise any sense of lack by assuming wholeness and acting from unity; soon the outward scene aligns with the inward conviction.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Assume the I AM presence now; feel it-real that you dwell in unity. Revise one current condition by imagining it already aligned with wholeness and watch the outer scene follow.
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