Mercy Through Unbelief: Inner Awakening

Romans 11:30-31 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Romans 11 in context

Scripture Focus

30For as ye in times past have not believed God, yet have now obtained mercy through their unbelief:
31Even so have these also now not believed, that through your mercy they also may obtain mercy.
Romans 11:30-31

Biblical Context

Romans 11:30-31 says that in the past you did not believe God, yet you obtained mercy. It also says that those who presently do not believe may obtain mercy through the mercy you extend.

Neville's Inner Vision

Viewed through Neville Goddard's lens, this passage is not about distant redemption but your inner weather. Past unbelief and present mercy are states of consciousness, not facts about others. The mercy spoken of is the inner benevolence you awaken toward life, the feeling that all are already included in your I AM. When you extend mercy to those who appear to disbelieve, you are not granting them anything separate but aligning your own mind with unity. Through your mercy, the rhythm of belief and unbelief within you softens, and a new sympathy arises that allows every part of you to awaken. The phrase even so have these also now not believed becomes an invitation to revise your inner scene: choose mercy, imagine the other as already forgiven, and let that imaginal act invert the sense of separation. The result is a single field of awareness where mercy is the normal condition, and through that field you experience reconciliation, both within and with others.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and feel mercy as your current state; revise a judgment you hold about someone and imagine them already living in mercy, then rest in the sense that you and they are one in consciousness.

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