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Reading the Bible As If You’re God Speaking

The Bible can be hard to make sense of if you read it as stories about other people and a God outside of you. But everything starts to shift when you read it as if you are the one speaking—as if every “I” in the Bible is your voice.

In the Old Testament, when it says “I am the Lord thy God,” you’re not meant to hear it as a voice from the sky. You read it as your own inner being speaking—your awareness, your sense of “I AM”. It’s not someone else in charge of your life. It’s you. You’re the one declaring, creating, and moving through the story.

Suddenly, the Bible becomes less about following orders and more about recognising your own creative power. You’re not watching from the outside anymore. You’re speaking the words yourself—“Let there be light,” “I will never leave you,” “I am with you always.”

Later, in the New Testament, the same approach applies. You read as if you are Jesus speaking—not to others, but to your own mind, your own thoughts, your own states of consciousness.

When Jesus says things like, “I am the way, the truth, and the life,” you’re not reading it as a statement about someone else. You’re affirming it to yourself. Jesus becomes the voice of your awakened self—your higher awareness, guiding your inner world.

So when he says, “Your faith has made you whole,” or “Go, and sin no more,” you hear it as your own mind instructing itself, helping you shift into a better state.

Reading the Bible this way makes it personal. You’re not looking up to someone greater—you’re looking inward, speaking with power, claiming your identity, and shaping your reality.

It turns the Bible from a confusing book of distant events into something direct and useful. It becomes a tool for understanding your own consciousness—and how to change it.


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