Inner Grafting of Consciousness
Romans 11:19-22 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Romans 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Romans 11:19-22 speaks of spiritual grafting: unbelief causes old branches to break away, faith sustains a new life, and humility is required to remain in that life; neglecting this inner goodness can lead to the loss of one's established state of consciousness.
Neville's Inner Vision
Romans 11:19-22 is a map of inner states rather than external history. The broken branches symbolize your old identifications—doubt, limitation, fear—that you once believed were you. The grafting in is the inner realization that you are already one with the I AM, and that faith is the steady state of consciousness through which life flows. Do not be highminded, but fear—humble your mind before the power you are awakening, for to deny the God within you invites the collapse of your former patterns. If the natural branches are not spared, take heed that you too may fall away when you cling to separation. See the dual face of the Divine as the inner mood of your life: goodness toward those who stay in faith, and severity toward those who waver. By continually choosing the inner goodness—dwelling in unity with the I AM—you sustain the life that once seemed grafted, and your old conditions yield to the new conception of self.
Practice This Now
Assume you are already grafted into the Life of God; silently affirm, 'I am one with the I AM now.' When fear arises, revise it by settling deeper into the feeling of unity and continue in that consciousness.
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