Inner Acceptance, Outer Peace
Romans 14:1-4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Romans 14 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Receive those who are weak in the faith without doubtful disputations. Do not judge or despise them, for God has received them.
Neville's Inner Vision
Think of the 'weak in faith' as a state of consciousness within you—doubts, cravings, or a habit of limitation. The command to receive them without disputation means you stop arguing with that part of yourself and instead acknowledge its presence as belonging to the one mind. When one believes he may eat all things and another eats herbs, you are looking at two inner attitudes, not two separate people; both stand before the same Master—the I AM within you. 'Who art thou that judgest another man's servant?' is the prompt to drop the judge you carry in consciousness and rest in the truth that God hath received your whole being. God is able to make him stand; in other words, the Life within you is sufficient to support every state of mind you entertain. In practice, assume that all believers are revered by the divine, and that your inner world is large enough to hold every conviction without fracture. By this inner alignment, your relationships soften, for you have changed the inner condition first, and the outward scene follows.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, breathe deeply, and assume the posture: I AM the Lord of my inner kingdom, receiving every belief without dispute. See in your mind the other mind stood before you with grace, and feel the peace that comes when you bless it as God has blessed you.
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