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Neville Goddard Bible Interpretations

Neville read scripture as a psychological drama unfolding in the individual. These pages collect the verses he referenced most, with his interpretation drawn from the lectures and books that cite each passage.

160 pages

Acts 13:22

Neville Goddard interprets David in Acts 13:22 as the personification of Humanity, and his father Jesse as 'I AM', revealing that all human experience fulfills the will of God.

Acts 28:23

Neville Goddard explains Acts 28:23 as Paul's attempt to convince others that Jesus is not an external man, but an inner pattern of salvation that inevitably divided his listeners.

Amos 8:11

Neville Goddard interprets the famine in Amos 8:11 not as a lack of food, but as a divinely sent hunger for a direct, personal experience of God.

Daniel 7:13

Neville Goddard interprets Daniel 7:13 as a personal, spiritual experience where one is presented to God and given complete control over all forces.

Daniel 12:6

Neville Goddard interprets the question 'How long?' from Daniel 12:6 as both a specific 1260-day spiritual interval and the metaphorical anguish of the journey to find the Father.

Daniel 12:7

Neville Goddard interprets the prophecy in Daniel 12:7 as a 1,260-day period marking a series of profound, personal spiritual events that unfolded within his own consciousness.

Deuteronomy 30:15

Neville Goddard explains that Deuteronomy 30:15 signifies man's complete freedom to choose his experience, with imagination being the indifferent creative power that produces his…

Deuteronomy 32:8

Neville Goddard interprets Deuteronomy 32:8 to mean that every human born into this world is one of the numbered 'sons of God,' who are the Elohim.

Deuteronomy 32:18

Neville Goddard teaches that the 'Rock' in Deuteronomy 32:18 is not external but is your own skull, which contains the Christ you have forgotten.

Deuteronomy 32:39

Neville Goddard teaches that the God who kills and makes alive in Deuteronomy 32:39 is not an external being, but is your own wonderful human imagination.

Ecclesiastes 3:11

Neville teaches that Ecclesiastes 3:11 describes God placing 'eternity'—the total experience of humanity—into your mind, to be revealed as your son, David, proving you are God.

Ecclesiastes 3:15

Neville Goddard explains that Ecclesiastes 3:15 is addressed to the Imagination, as its meaning cannot be grasped by the rational mind which relies on sensory evidence.

Ephesians 1:4

Neville Goddard explains that 'chosen in Him before the foundation of the world' means all humanity is part of a single divine being who deliberately fell to experience life.

Ephesians 1:9

Neville Goddard interprets Ephesians 1:9 as the revelation of God's divine plan and purpose for humanity to awaken as God in the fullness of time.

Ephesians 4:4

Neville Goddard teaches that Ephesians 4:4 reveals the ultimate truth that all humanity is destined to be incorporated into the single body of the Risen Lord, Jesus Christ.

Exodus 3:13

Neville Goddard teaches that Exodus 3:13 reveals God's true and eternal name as 'I AM,' which is the name of your own consciousness and the creator within.

Exodus 3:14

Neville Goddard teaches that Exodus 3:14 reveals God's eternal name is 'I AM', which is not an external being but your very own consciousness and awareness of being.

Exodus 3:15

Neville Goddard interprets Exodus 3:15 to mean that God's eternal name is "I AM," which is not an external being but your own inescapable consciousness of being.

Exodus 23:19

Neville Goddard explains that the scripture 'Steep not a kid in its mother's milk' is widely misunderstood as a literal dietary law because people mistakenly read the Bible as his…

Exodus 33:22

Neville Goddard teaches that in Exodus 33:22, the phrase 'my glory' is synonymous with God's own being, the 'I', which is ultimately given to humanity.

Galatians 1:16

Neville Goddard explains Galatians 1:16 as the personal revelation of God's Son within you, an experience that makes conferring with the rational mind of 'flesh and blood' futile.

Galatians 2:20

Neville Goddard teaches that Galatians 2:20 reveals the crucifixion is a past, ecstatic event and that Christ, your real being, now lives in you as you.

Galatians 4:19

Neville Goddard interprets Galatians 4:19 to mean that Christ is not an external person but a divine consciousness that must be spiritually formed within every individual.

Galatians 6:7

Neville Goddard teaches that Galatians 6:7 reveals an inescapable law: your imagination is God, and your imaginal acts are the seeds you sow to create your reality.

Genesis 1:26

Neville Goddard teaches that Genesis 1:26 describes the Elohim, a plurality of gods, becoming human to reproduce their divine image, Christ, within every person.

Habakkuk 2:3

Neville Goddard teaches that Habakkuk 2:3 reveals that every imaginal act has its own specific time to mature and will surely come to pass if you remain faithful to the assumption.

Hebrews 11:1

Neville Goddard interprets Hebrews 11:1 to mean that faith is not blind hope, but a loyal conviction in an unseen reality from which all visible things are made.

Hebrews 11:3

Neville Goddard interprets Hebrews 11:3 to mean that every visible effect in the world has an invisible, spiritual cause originating from within human consciousness.

Isaiah 1:11

Neville Goddard quotes Isaiah 1:11-14, which decries vain oblations and burdensome feasts, in lectures alongside other verses about singing a new song.

Isaiah 9:6

Neville Goddard interprets Isaiah 9:6 as two separate mystical events: the birth of a child and the giving of a son, which are signs of God awakening within the individual.

Isaiah 28:16

Neville Goddard interprets the 'precious cornerstone' of Isaiah 28:16 as the foundation stone of human imagination, a principle the world has rejected.

Isaiah 30:29

Neville Goddard presents Isaiah 30:29 to illustrate the inner 'song' and 'gladness of heart' that corresponds to the feeling of a prayer already having been answered.

Isaiah 43:3

Neville Goddard interprets Isaiah 43:3 to mean that the only savior is God, and that God is your own wonderful 'I AM', the consciousness within you that saves you from any state.

Isaiah 44:23

Neville Goddard interprets the singing and shouting in Isaiah 44:23 as the expression of a joyful heart, the only acceptable gift signifying the wish is fulfilled.

Isaiah 45:5

Neville Goddard interprets Isaiah 45:5 to mean that your own consciousness, your 'I AM', is the one and only God and the sole creator of everything in your world.

Isaiah 45:7

Neville Goddard teaches that the 'I' in Isaiah 45:7 who creates both good and evil is your own wonderful human imagination, the sole creative power.

Isaiah 45:12

Neville Goddard interprets Isaiah 45:12 to mean that human consciousness is the one and only reality, the creative power that makes the earth and commands all its hosts.

Isaiah 48:10

Neville Goddard explains that the 'furnace of affliction' in Isaiah 48:10 is the necessary suffering that molds you into a perfect being capable of receiving God's glory as yourse…

Isaiah 51:11

Neville Goddard interprets Isaiah 51:11 as a metaphor for prayer, where 'coming with singing' means assuming the joyful feeling of the wish fulfilled to impress your consciousness.

Isaiah 54:5

Neville Goddard interprets Isaiah 54:5 as a mystical statement that your own Maker, God, is your spiritual husband who sires a divine birth within you.

Isaiah 55:11

Neville Goddard teaches that Isaiah 55:11 refers to your own inner words and desires, which are the Word of God and must accomplish the purpose for which you send them.

Isaiah 64:8

Neville Goddard teaches that Isaiah 64:8 reveals a profound truth: the Potter is our own imagination, and we are the clay it shapes into being.

Jeremiah 18:2

Neville Goddard teaches that the Potter in Jeremiah 18 is human imagination, which has the power to reshape the 'clay' of our lives into any form it desires.

Job 33:15

Neville Goddard interprets Job 33:15 as the process where God opens our ears and seals instructions through dreams and visions that occur during deep sleep.

Job 42:5

Neville Goddard interprets Job 42:5 as the pivotal shift from merely hearing about God to directly experiencing yourself as God through an inner revelation.

Joel 3:10

Neville Goddard teaches that 'Let the weak say, I am strong' is a command to disregard appearances and assume the state of your desire until it becomes your reality.

John 1:1

Neville Goddard teaches that 'the Word' from John 1:1 is not a spoken utterance, but is God Himself, the creative meaning and intention behind all of existence.

John 1:3

Neville Goddard teaches that the creative power described in John 1:3 is not an external God but is, in fact, your own wonderful human imagination.

John 1:13

Neville Goddard teaches that John 1:13 describes a personal, spiritual birth from above where one becomes self-begotten, an experience necessary to enter the Kingdom of Heaven.

John 1:14

Neville Goddard teaches that John 1:14 reveals a profound truth: the Word of God, which is your own human imagination, became flesh and now dwells *within* every person.

John 1:18

Neville Goddard teaches that God is made known only through His son, who awakens within you to reveal your own true identity as God the Father.

John 1:45

Neville Goddard teaches that the scriptural declaration 'We have found him' signifies the personal discovery that Jesus Christ is your own wonderful human imagination.

John 2:4

Neville Goddard teaches that in the scripture John 2:4, 'Jesus' is your own self and his 'mother' is your own consciousness, the cause of all that you experience.

John 2:19

Neville Goddard interprets the 'three days' in John 2:19 as a symbolic time interval for saturating the mind with a new state of consciousness to make it a reality.

John 3:2

According to Neville Goddard, the scripture 'I John 3:2' reveals that when Christ appears, you will recognize him because you will be exactly like him.

John 3:3

Neville Goddard teaches that being 'born from above' is both a psychological act of assuming 'I am God' and a literal, supernatural event that marks entry into the Kingdom of God.

John 3:14

Neville Goddard teaches that John 3:14 describes a literal, mystical experience where the individual 'I', the Son of Man, is lifted up after being split by a bolt of lightning.

John 3:27

Neville Goddard teaches that the 'heaven' from which all things are given is not an external place, but is one's own consciousness or subconscious mind.

John 4:7

Neville Goddard cites the story of Jesus and the woman at the well, quoting the request, 'Give me to drink,' from the fourth chapter of the Gospel of John.

John 4:9

Neville Goddard quotes John 4:9 to recount the dialogue between Jesus and the woman of Samaria, setting the stage for the offer of 'living water'.

John 4:10

Neville Goddard quotes the scripture John 4:10, where Jesus speaks of 'living water' to the woman of Samaria, though the provided source material does not offer an interpretation.

John 4:12

Neville Goddard quotes John 4:12 to contrast the external, physical well of Jacob with the internal, spiritual 'living water' that becomes a permanent spring within a person.

John 4:13

Neville Goddard includes the biblical passage of John 4:13, concerning the water that quenches thirst forever, within his lectures and books without direct interpretation.

John 4:17

Neville Goddard quotes the scripture 'I have no husband' from John 4:17 in the context of the woman at the well meeting the Messiah.

John 4:31

Neville Goddard uses the disciples' offer of food in John 4:31 to contrast linear time with the immediate reality of the harvest, which is already complete.

John 4:32

Neville Goddard interprets the 'meat ye know not of' as the inner satisfaction of seeing one's desire as an already accomplished fact, transcending the illusion of time.

John 4:35

Neville Goddard interprets John 4:35 to mean that all desired outcomes already exist now in a dimensionally larger world, accessible through a shift in perspective.

John 5:6

Neville Goddard presents the story of the impotent man at the pool, who is asked the pivotal question, 'Wilt thou be made whole?' before being commanded to rise and walk.

John 5:7

Neville Goddard uses the story of the impotent man at the pool (John 5:7) to challenge the literal interpretation of biblical healing miracles.

John 5:8

Neville Goddard teaches that the story of the lame man in John 5 is not about an external miracle worker but points to a deeper, psychological truth.

John 5:9

Neville Goddard explains the story of the lame man being made whole in John 5:9 as a psychological drama that occurs entirely within the individual's own consciousness.

John 5:26

Neville Goddard explains that 'having life in yourself' signifies the individual's journey from being a part of God to becoming a self-sustaining creative center, just like the Fa…

John 6:44

Neville Goddard interprets John 6:44 to mean that your own consciousness, the 'Father' within, is the sole power that draws you into any state or condition you experience.

John 6:66

Neville Goddard interprets John 6:66 as the story of those who reject the difficult teaching that they are solely responsible for their lives because it is easier to blame others.

John 7:24

Neville Goddard interprets John 7:24 as a command to ignore sensory evidence and judge from the state of your fulfilled desire, not from outward appearances.

John 8:9

Neville Goddard interprets John 8:9 to mean that Jesus Christ is God the Father, and to see one is to see the other, revealing their fundamental oneness.

John 8:10

Neville Goddard interprets John 8:10 as a lesson in non-condemnation, where enlightened reason sees only the lovely and refuses to acknowledge the unlovely in others.

John 8:11

Neville Goddard interprets Jesus's words in John 8:11 as the power of enlightened reason to transform any state by refusing to see or condemn the unlovely.

John 8:23

Neville Goddard taught that John 8:23 describes an internal conversation between your true self 'from above' (within) and your rational mind 'from below' (without).

John 8:24

Neville Goddard teaches that John 8:24 is a psychological command to believe your 'I AM' is God, and to assume you are already the person you desire to be.

John 8:32

For Neville Goddard, the truth that sets you free is not an external fact but the inner reality of a desired state of consciousness that you assume and believe.

John 8:58

Neville Goddard interprets 'Before Abraham was, I AM' not as a historical claim, but as a revelation that your own awareness, your I AM, is the timeless origin of all things.

John 10:17

Neville Goddard interprets 'laying down one's life' as the voluntary act of abandoning a current concept of self to assume a new one, thereby molding your world.

John 10:30

Neville Goddard interprets 'I and my Father are one' to mean that your own consciousness, your 'I AM', is God the Father, and you are one and the same being.

John 10:37

Neville Goddard interprets John 10:37 to mean that the 'works' you produce are the ultimate proof that you are one with God, your Father.

John 11:25

Neville Goddard teaches that 'I am the resurrection, and the life' refers to the power of human imagination to make alive any desired state or experience.

John 12:24

Neville interprets the 'grain of wheat' in John 12:24 as both God dying to become man and as your own assumption dying in the subconscious to bring forth new life.

John 13:27

Neville Goddard references John 13:27 to pivot from the biblical narrative to the practical instruction of controlling one's attention in a prepared mind.

John 14:1

Neville Goddard teaches that John 14:1 is not an external command but an internal dialogue where 'me' refers to your own imagination, the divine presence within you.

John 14:2

Neville Goddard teaches that the 'many mansions' in your Father's house are infinite states of consciousness that you can occupy through the power of your imagination.

John 14:6

Neville Goddard teaches that 'I am the way' refers not to an external person, but to the eternal 'Pattern Man,' Jesus Christ, which is buried in every individual and must unfold f…

John 14:8

Neville Goddard interprets John 14:8 as Jesus's direct and unambiguous declaration that he and God the Father are one and the same being.

John 14:9

Neville Goddard teaches that John 14:9 reveals the ultimate identity of Jesus and God the Father, a truth that applies to every individual who discovers they are the Father.

John 14:12

Neville Goddard teaches that to do the works of Jesus, one must believe *as* he believed—that you are God—making such works a natural expression of your own being.

John 14:26

Neville Goddard teaches that the Holy Spirit mentioned in John 14:26 is not an external being but is the return of memory, revealing your true identity as God the Father.

John 14:29

Neville Goddard explains John 14:29 as proof that events exist in a higher dimension before they occur in our world, with their eventual appearance meant to inspire belief.

John 15:1

Neville Goddard teaches that the 'true vine' of scripture is not a plant, but your own consciousness, your I AMness, which is the source of all your experiences.

John 15:5

Neville Goddard interprets 'I am the vine, ye are the branches' to mean that your consciousness is the source from which all circumstances and people in your world derive their re…

John 16:28

Neville Goddard interprets John 16:28 as the soul's journey: forgetting its divine origin to enter the world, and then returning to the Father.

John 17:4

Neville Goddard teaches that 'I have finished the work' signifies the fulfillment of scripture within oneself, culminating in a return to the glory of God you possessed before the…

John 17:5

Neville Goddard interprets John 17:5 as a prayer for the restoration of the divine glory and memory one possessed before descending into the world of man.

John 17:7

Neville Goddard interprets John 17:7 as a promise, parallel to Joshua 1:3, that all things you can desire are already gifts from God, waiting to be claimed by acceptance.

John 17:10

Neville Goddard interprets John 17:10 as a universal promise, paralleling the one in Joshua, that all things are given to you, though not in a physical sense.

John 17:12

Neville Goddard interprets John 17:12 to mean that in the divine economy nothing can ever be lost, and that all scripture must be personally fulfilled within the individual.

John 17:19

Neville Goddard interprets 'for their sakes I sanctify myself' to mean that the only way to make others holy or change the world is to first change your own self-concept.

John 18:8

Neville Goddard uses the scripture John 18:8 to illustrate that 'I AM', your own awareness of being, is the one and only power you seek.

John 18:39

Neville explains the story of Pilate and Barabbas as an illustration of a law that must grant the people whatever they request.

Joshua 1:3

Neville Goddard explains that the promise in Joshua 1:3 is psychologically true: whatever you can mentally stand upon, you can realize and experience in your world.

Joshua 1:11

Neville Goddard interprets the 'three days' in Joshua 1:11 as a symbolic promise that faithfully maintaining a mental diet of the wish fulfilled will bring it into reality.

Joshua 24:15

Neville Goddard teaches that 'Choose this day whom you will serve' refers to your freedom to choose the mood you assume and to serve your own Imagination as the one true God.

Luke 2:12

Neville Goddard teaches that the babe in swaddling clothes is not the one who is born, but a sign that God has been born within the individual.

Luke 9:62

Neville Goddard interprets 'looking back' in Luke 9:62 as returning to your former state of consciousness due to doubt, which prevents your desire from being realized.

Luke 10:22

Neville Goddard teaches that Luke 10:22 describes the mystical experience where God's Son, David, appears to reveal your own true identity as God the Father.

Luke 16:16

Neville Goddard interprets taking heaven 'violently' (Luke 16:16) as a literal, powerful mystical experience of ascending the spine and entering one's own skull with thunderous fo…

Luke 17:21

Neville Goddard teaches that 'the kingdom of heaven is within you' means all reality originates in your own consciousness, which he identifies as God and your imagination.

Luke 23:34

Neville Goddard teaches that 'Forgive them' means recognizing people are not their actions, but are temporarily occupying eternal states of consciousness.

Mark 1:15

Neville Goddard teaches that 'repent' in Mark 1:15 means a radical change of mind ('metanoia'), not regret, to subjectively appropriate the opposite of what you currently see.

Mark 5:8

Neville Goddard interprets the story of Jesus casting out the 'unclean spirit' in Mark 5:8 as a psychological drama representing enlightened reason restoring a man to his right mi…

Mark 5:30

In the provided lectures, Neville Goddard recounts the biblical story from Mark 5:30 where Jesus feels virtue leave him after a woman touches his garment in faith.

Mark 5:34

Neville Goddard presents the story of the woman healed of an issue of blood to demonstrate that it is one's own faith that makes them whole.

Mark 5:36

Neville presents the story of Jairus's daughter to illustrate the principle of rejecting fear and external evidence, choosing instead to 'only believe' in a different reality.

Mark 5:39

Neville Goddard presents the scripture 'The damsel is not dead, but sleepeth' to show Jesus correcting the crowd's perception of a final condition and excluding their doubt.

Mark 5:41

Neville Goddard presents the story of the damsel arising from sleep in Mark 5:41 as a direct, symbolic picture of the individual's own present state.

Mark 5:43

Neville Goddard interprets the story in Mark 5 as a metaphor for awakening from a state of consciousness defined by the 'dead past' of old prejudices and false beliefs.

Mark 9:23

Neville Goddard teaches that Mark 9:23 refers to the creative power of your own imagination, which is the God-in-man to whom all things are possible.

Mark 10:27

Neville Goddard teaches that 'With God all things are possible' means that all things are possible to man, because God is man's own wonderful human imagination.

Mark 11:13

Neville Goddard teaches that the fig tree in Mark 11:13 is not an external object but a symbol for your own consciousness, your I AMness, which you can alter from within.

Mark 11:20

According to Neville Goddard, the fig tree in Mark 11:20 is not an external tree but a symbol for your own consciousness, your 'I AMness', which you can alter from its roots.

Mark 11:24

Neville Goddard teaches that Mark 11:24 reveals the law of creation: to receive your desire, you must first assume the feeling and belief that it is already an accomplished fact.

Mark 13:21

Neville Goddard interprets Mark 13:21 as a definitive statement that Christ is never to be found in another person but must be discovered and awakened from within oneself.

Mark 14:49

Neville Goddard teaches that 'Scripture must be fulfilled in me' refers to the individual's internal experience of the Bible's pattern, not changing the external world.

Matthew 5:17

Neville Goddard taught that the 'I' who comes to fulfill the law and the prophets is the human imagination, and that the entire law is psychological.

Matthew 5:27

Neville Goddard teaches that Matthew 5:27 reveals all acts are psychological, committed in the heart through imagination, regardless of physical restraint.

Matthew 5:48

Neville Goddard teaches that 'be ye perfect' refers not to moral behavior but to the divine end ('telos') where God faithfully reproduces Himself in man.

Matthew 6:33

Neville Goddard teaches that to 'seek first the kingdom' is to turn inward to your own I AM and assume the feeling of already possessing your desire.

Matthew 11:12

Neville Goddard teaches that 'taking heaven by violence' describes the thunderous, forceful spiritual experience of ascending one's spine and re-entering the skull.

Matthew 16:13

Neville Goddard teaches that the question 'Who do you say that I am?' is about equating the 'Son of Man' with your own fundamental self, your 'I AM'.

Matthew 19:26

Neville Goddard teaches that 'all things are possible to God' because God is your own wonderful human imagination, the creative power within you.

Matthew 22:42

Neville Goddard interprets Matthew 22:42 to mean that because David called Christ 'Lord,' Christ is revealed to be David's father, not his son.

Matthew 22:43

Neville Goddard interprets Matthew 22:43 to mean that David calls Jesus 'Lord' because Jesus is the Father and David is the Son, reversing the physical genealogy.

Matthew 27:46

Neville Goddard teaches that the cry 'My God, why hast thou forsaken me?' symbolizes God's total incarnation, where He so completely became man that He forgot He was God.

Philippians 1:6

Neville Goddard interprets Philippians 1:6 as the divine promise that God the Father is transforming every person into Himself, a work that culminates in awakening as God.

Philippians 2:5

Neville Goddard interprets 'Let this mind be in you' as an instruction to adopt the belief that you are God, equal with God, and therefore are that which you believe yourself to b…

Proverbs 8:22

Neville Goddard interprets Proverbs 8:22 as describing God's inherent Wisdom, personified as Christ, which was possessed from the beginning, not created as a separate act.

Psalms 2:7

Neville Goddard teaches that Psalms 2:7 describes the mystical experience where David is born from within you, revealing your true identity as God the Father.

Psalms 4:4

Neville Goddard interprets Psalms 4:4 as a directive to commune with your own Self or mind, which he identifies as God, through the silent, internal act of imagination.

Psalms 22:1

Neville Goddard explains the cry 'My God, why hast thou forsaken me?' as the genuine expression of God having completely emptied Himself of divinity to become human.

Psalms 31:5

Neville Goddard interprets Psalms 31:5 as the cry from the cross signifying that redemption is an already accomplished fact, known even at the beginning of the divine drama.

Psalms 40:7

Neville Goddard interprets Psalms 40:7 to mean that the entire Bible is your personal biography, a divine history written exclusively about you.

Psalms 50:12

Neville teaches that Psalms 50:12 reveals you are God, owning the world, and you don't ask for desires but simply appropriate what is already yours.

Psalms 82:1

Neville Goddard interprets Psalms 82:1 to mean that we are gods, part of a divine council, who have descended into a human experience and will 'die like men'.

Psalms 82:6

Neville Goddard teaches that Psalms 82:6 is a literal statement that all individuals are God, fragmented from a single divine being who 'fell' into the human experience.

Psalms 89:20

Neville Goddard teaches that 'finding David' is the scriptural term for the mystical experience where God's Son reveals you to yourself as God the Father.

Psalms 89:26

Neville Goddard explains Psalms 89:26 as the mystical scriptural event where David cries out, identifying the Lord as his Father, God, and the Rock of his Salvation.

Romans 1:20

Neville Goddard interprets Romans 1:20 to mean that God's invisible power is perceived through the created world by developing a spiritual outlook independent of the senses.

Romans 4:17

Neville Goddard teaches that Romans 4:17 reveals the creative process: assume your desire is real, and the unseen state will become a visible, physical fact.

Romans 6:5

Neville Goddard interprets Romans 6:5 to mean that humanity's crucifixion with Christ is a past event, while the resurrection is a future, individual experience for all.

Romans 8:28

Neville Goddard interprets Romans 8:28 as proof of a predestined plan where all events, good and bad, work toward conforming every individual to the image of God.

Romans 11:32

Neville Goddard teaches that God deliberately consigned all humanity to disobedience so that He could ultimately extend His mercy to all, making salvation a gift of grace, not mer…

Titus 1:15

Neville Goddard teaches that the world you perceive is a reflection of your own state of being, as your experience is colored by your concept of self.