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In My Father’s House Are Many Mansions: The Meaning of John 14:2–3

“In my Father’s house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto myself; that where I am, there ye may be also”
— John 14:2 KJV

This verse has long been read as a comforting promise of physical dwellings in the afterlife, but through Neville Goddard’s understanding of the Bible as psychological truth, its meaning is inward and immediate. The “Father’s house” is not a location beyond the sky—it is consciousness itself, the dwelling place of the “I AM.” And the “many mansions” are states of being, inner rooms in the house of imagination, already existing and awaiting habitation through assumption.

The moment you assume a new self-concept—when you feel yourself to be that which you desire to be—you enter a new mansion.

The Mansions Are Inner Rooms of Awareness

Neville teaches that all states already exist. The “many mansions” are these states, these psychological dwellings within the house of God, which is your own imagination. You do not create them—they are prepared. You enter them by preparing yourself inwardly, by aligning with the feeling of being what you seek to be.

When Jesus says, “I go to prepare a place for you,” he is not speaking of a literal journey, but of the inner movement of consciousness. Jesus symbolises the awakened imagination, going before you into the state you are to inherit.

To persist in an assumption is to walk the path to that mansion. To feel yourself there now is to live in it already.

“All things exist in the human imagination.”
— Neville Goddard

Elohim and the Architecture of Consciousness

To deepen the symbolism, consider that in Genesis 1, the name for God is Elohim—a plural noun meaning “gods,” “rulers,” “judges,” and “mighty powers” (Strong’s H430). Although plural in form, Elohim acts with singular authority. It points not to many gods, but to the many within the One—the multitude of powers and judgments alive within consciousness.

In Neville’s interpretation, Elohim symbolises the many faculties of imagination: the moods, assumptions, beliefs, and inner decrees that together construct your experience. The Father’s house, then, is Elohim in action—the pluralised power of imagination functioning through inner rulership.

Each mansion is a space carved by inner judgment. You move into them not by physical effort, but by accepting their truth internally. The house is already built. Your awareness chooses the room.

“Your world is your self-pushed out.”
— Neville Goddard

To dwell in lack is to live in a lower mansion. To assume the reality of provision is to ascend. All states are fixed. The shift is in you.

From Heaven and Earth to Room and Being

In Genesis, when Elohim creates heaven and earth, it is not a historical act, but the beginning of awareness—the division of inner and outer experience. “Heaven” is the unseen imagination, and “earth” is its manifestation. The same principle applies here: each mansion is first felt in imagination before it is seen as fact.

So when Jesus says, “I go to prepare a place,” he speaks as Elohim—the inner judge, ruler, and creative faculty—making ready the experience by way of assumption.

And when he says, “where I am, there ye may be also,” it means that once a state has been realised in imagination, it is accessible to all. The prepared place is simply a state of consciousness made ready for you to enter.

You Are Always in a Mansion

Whether you are aware of it or not, you are always living in one of these mansions. To be rejected, poor, or unwanted is to occupy one room. To be accepted, prosperous, or beloved is to occupy another.

The power to shift is in you. The house is not changed—it remains what it always was: consciousness, imagination, Elohim. But the room you dwell in is changed by feeling. The “I AM” is the door to every mansion, and the Law of Assumption is the key.

To live as if your desire were already true is to walk the corridor into that state. You do not make the mansion—you abide in it.

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