Inner Faith, Inner Freedom

Romans 14:22-23 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Romans 14 in context

Scripture Focus

22Hast thou faith? have it to thyself before God. Happy is he that condemneth not himself in that thing which he alloweth.
23And he that doubteth is damned if he eat, because he eateth not of faith: for whatsoever is not of faith is sin.
Romans 14:22-23

Biblical Context

The passage asks whether you have faith and urges you to keep that faith as a private matter before God. It warns that acting in doubt is not of faith and is treated as sin.

Neville's Inner Vision

Your faith is not a public credential but the inner state you cultivate as the I AM. When you hold Romans 14:22-23 in consciousness, you are being asked to inhabit the moment with the conviction that God approves your choice. Doubt is a disturbance of that state; acting from doubt strains the inner alignment and registers as a small sin against your own real nature. Therefore, return to the heart’s quiet certainty: I am loved, I am guided, I am free, and this decision is aligned with that being. In this light, the outer acts become the natural expression of your interior faith, not a battlefield of right and wrong. You are not saved by external rules but by the steady, private practice of feeling your I AM as the source. So treat every decision as a test of your present awareness, revise the scene until your action feels inevitable, and let the imagination ease you into the truth that the universe is your own unspoken state becoming seen.

Practice This Now

Assume the feeling of 'I am free and accepted by God' before making any choice; revise the scene so that your next action flows from faith, then dwell in that assured state until it feels real.

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