Inner Discipline of Titus 3:8
Titus 3:8 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Titus 3 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Believers are urged to affirm constantly that they should maintain good works. These works are described as beneficial and profitable to others.
Neville's Inner Vision
Your inner life is the real theater of power. The verse does not bid God to act from afar; it invites you to assume a state of consciousness in which belief in God—the I AM—frames every choice. To 'affirm constantly' is to dwell in a mood of invincible vitality where you see yourself as the one who naturally maintains good works. When you believe you are already aligned with divine awareness, the moral behavior follows as a natural expression, not a rule enforced by fear. The 'good and profitable unto men' becomes the outward sign of an inward shift: your world rearranges itself to reflect your inner standard. Practice shows that the I AM within is not separate from action; each decision is a small echo of that state. By repeatedly returning to that state, you revise your self-image and invite situations that honor honesty, service, and compassion. In this light, Titus is a gentle invitation to live from your essential consciousness, and the fruits you bear are the proof of your inner discipline becoming visible in daily life.
Practice This Now
Practice: close your eyes, rest in the I AM presence, and declare: 'I am the one who maintains good works; I act from divine wisdom in every moment.' Then proceed as if this is true.
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