Grace Within: Sin and Grace
Romans 6:1 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Romans 6 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Romans 6:1 asks whether we should continue in sin so grace may abound. It points to a transformed identity: grace is not a license to sin but the power of awareness that reveals a new self.
Neville's Inner Vision
To the seeker, Romans 6:1 is not a moral verdict but a question about the state of consciousness. If you persist in identifying with sin as your reality, grace will appear as a magnifier of that inner posture, yet grace in Neville’s teaching is the awakening of awareness to a new self, not permission to repeat old patterns. The shift occurs within: you are the I AM, the consciousness that experiences life, and your outer world mirrors that inner state. When you behold yourself as the I AM—already righteous, eternally connected to God—the impulse to indulge loses its grip, because you no longer identify with the old self. The end is not achieved by struggle but by revision: dwell in the truth you seek, and the old tendency dissolves. The question is answered by your present assumption: “I am the I AM in whom grace abounds.” Let that truth fill your chest, and let your choices arise from that realized state rather than from fear or guilt.
Practice This Now
Imaginative_act: Assume the end now: 'I am the I AM and grace abounds in me.' Throughout the day, catch any impulse toward old patterns and revise it by affirming this new identity while feeling it real.
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