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Be Still and Know That I Am God — Neville Goddard Explained

Be still, and know that I am God.

Psalm 46:10

This verse is often used to encourage quiet or prayer. But through Neville Goddard’s teachings, it points to something more powerful: a reminder to silence the noise of doubt and recognise the creative power within.


Stillness Is Inner Control

To "be still" doesn’t mean to do nothing. It means to step away from reaction. To stop looking to the outside world for answers. Neville taught that your imagination is God—the "I AM" within you.

When you quiet the fear, the overthinking, and the constant effort to change things from the outside, you create space to feel the truth of “I AM”—that your awareness itself is the source of all creation.


Know It’s Already Done

To know that I am God is to realise:
Your inner state creates your outer world.

You don’t have to struggle to make it happen. You need to become still enough to believe it’s already done in imagination.


In Short:

  • "Be still" = Stop reacting to the world.

  • "Know" = Trust your imagination as the source.

  • "I am God" = Your awareness creates your reality.

Stillness isn’t passive—it’s powerful. It’s the quiet confidence that your assumption, held in imagination, is enough.


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