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The Bitter Cup: What Was Refused at the Cross

“They offered him wine to drink, mixed with gall, but when he tasted it, he would not drink it.”
(Matthew 27:34, ESV)

At the moment of greatest vulnerability, Jesus—the awakened imagination—is offered a bitter drink: wine mixed with gall. The drink is tasted, but refused.

This act is deeply symbolic.

Bitter water appears throughout the Bible as a sign of "non-pleasantness" the antithesis to the psychological dwelling of Eden. Here, in this final offering, it represents the bitterness of the world, the disillusionment that threatens the inner vision.

Neville Goddard teaches that Jesus represents imagination in the action of saving —the assumption, the inner knowing of "I AM." To drink this sour wine would mean accepting the narrative of despair, which is the foundational premise given as sin.

But it is refused.

The bitterness is acknowledged, but not absorbed. This is true mastery: the ability to face pain and limitation without becoming tainted by them.

Walking this path means knowing your assumption even when the outer world seems contrary. It means standing firm in vision, saying, “No—I will not let bitterness take hold.”

Refusing the bitter cup honours the inner world, preserving the creative waters—the living Mem—pure and fertile, ready to bring forth what has been faithfully imagined.

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