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Marriage Series

Marriage Series unveils biblical symbolism and the principles of manifestation through the law of Assumption, as taught by Neville Goddard

Whose Wife Will She Be? Neville Goddard and the Seven Brothers

In Luke 20:27–40, the Sadducees approach Jesus with a curious question designed to mock the idea of resurrection. They describe a woman who was married to seven brothers in succession, each dying without leaving her a child. Finally, they ask: “In the resurrection, whose wife will she be?” Jesus replies with a profound spiritual insight: “They which shall be accounted worthy to obtain that world… neither marry, nor are given in marriage… for they are equal unto the angels.” Neville Goddard, known for interpreting Scripture as symbolic instruction for psychological transformation, invites us to see beyond the literal narrative. It's not a riddle when it's interpreted psychologically. To Neville, this is not about earthly marriage but about the inner union of awareness and the subconscious mind — the true creative marriage at the heart of spiritual awakening. The Archetypal Union in Genesis Genesis 1:26 describes the creation of man in the image and likeness of God. Th...

Ruth’s Loyalty and Naomi’s Rebirth: Manifestation through Faith and Imagination

The Book of Ruth, when read symbolically through Neville Goddard’s psychological teachings, becomes a spiritual allegory—a drama of inner movement from barrenness to manifestation. This is not the story of ancient women, but of the soul’s journey: from identification with loss to union with imagination and the birth of a new state of being. Naomi, Ruth, and Boaz are not individuals, but aspects of you , representing phases in the process of creating reality. Naomi’s Widowhood: Trapped in the Parental Framework Naomi symbolises the conscious identity stuck in the inherited framework —the “father and mother” of Genesis 2:24. That verse reads: “Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife: and they shall be one flesh.” Psychologically, this is not about literal marriage , but the law of creation: To manifest, consciousness must leave inherited beliefs and unite with imagination. Naomi, as a widow, is cut off from her “ husband ”—the I AM , the as...

Why Jesus Distanced Himself from His Earthly Parents

One of the great misunderstandings of the Bible is that it’s a historical or moral record. But as Neville Goddard taught, it is psychological symbolism — a spiritual autobiography — describing the movement of states within consciousness . And crucially, every major moment in the Bible is rooted in the symbolic definitions first set out in Genesis . ⚑ Genesis is not just the beginning of the Bible — it is the blueprint. Every character, miracle, and shift in identity draws its meaning from the inner laws established in those early chapters. One of the most foundational verses is: “For this cause will a man go away from his father and his mother and be joined to his wife; and they will be one flesh.” (Genesis 2:24, BBE) This is not merely about physical marriage . It symbolises the inner process of psychological assumption . To “leave father and mother” is to detach from the assumptions and beliefs you inherited — and to “ cleave to your wife ” is to consciously join yourself ...

Levi: The Joined One — Union, Crucifixion, and the Law of Assumption

“After this, Jesus went out and saw a tax collector by the name of Levi sitting at his tax booth. ‘Follow me,’ Jesus said to him, and Levi got up, left everything and followed him.” — Luke 5:27 (NIV) This brief but profound moment in the Gospel reveals much more than a simple calling of a disciple. Through the lens of Neville Goddard’s Law of Assumption and biblical symbolism, Levi’s story unfolds as a symbolic narrative of transformation, union, and love. Levi: The Meaning of ‘Joined’ The name Levi literally means “joined” or “attached” in Hebrew. This joining is not superficial; it speaks to a deep spiritual and psychological union that is central to the process of manifestation. Levi’s role as a tax collector—a man rooted in a fixed, worldly identity—makes his sudden call to “follow” Jesus all the more significant. It is the moment where the old self, attached to limitation and external validation, is invited to join fully to a new identity: one awakened by imagination and a...

Genesis 2:24 — Love as the Union of Imagination and Fulfilment

Neville Goddard taught that the Bible is not a historical account, but a psychological drama — a symbolic unfolding of the inner world and its divine imagination. Its verses speak in symbols, tracing the movement of consciousness through longing, identity, union, and transformation. One of the most quietly pivotal verses in the entire narrative is Genesis 2:24: “Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and shall cleave unto his wife: and they shall be one flesh.” This is not a description of physical marriage . It is the emotional structure behind every transformation in the Bible. It is a symbolic instruction: to leave inherited belief (the “father and mother”) and to unite with the state of being one longs to become (the “ wife ”) until it is embodied.  To “cleave” in this way is an act of love in its deepest biblical sense. In Neville’s framework, love is not mere affection — it is the union of the self with the desired state . Love, here, is not passive; it is ...

"Called Woman": Neville Goddard on Genesis 2:23 and the Birth of Manifestation

“This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh: she shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man.” – Genesis 2:23 To the literalist, this verse describes the first woman being formed from a man's rib. But to the one who sees with the eyes of imagination, as Neville Goddard teaches, this is a profound unveiling of spiritual law. The verse is not about anatomy or gender, but about consciousness and manifestation , the inner and outer aspects of your own creative power. The phrase “she shall be called Woman ” here is more than a simple naming; it is a calling forth —a declaration of her essential function and destiny within consciousness. Woman is called to be the receptive power, the creative womb within the mind that gives form to the desires conceived by Man . She emerges not just as a label but as a vital, active force of creation. Man as Awareness, Woman as Manifestation And Adam called his wife's name Eve; because she was the mother of all living. - Genes...

The Dove in the Rock: Paul, Jesus and Cephas

“And when Jesus beheld him, he said, Thou art Simon the son of Jona: thou shalt be called Cephas, which is by interpretation, A stone.” – John 1:42 (KJV) This moment may appear simple on the surface - Jesus renaming a man. But when we understand the Bible as Neville Goddard did, as a psychological document rather than a historical account — this single verse opens into a powerful sequence of inner transformation. Simon means “he who hears.” He is the faculty within us that listens, receives, and contemplates. The son of Jona , meaning “dove,” hints at the spiritual or subconscious dimension from which this hearing emerges. But Jesus, the symbol of awakened imagination — looks at Simon and calls him by his potential , not his present state. “Thou shalt be called Cephas.” Cephas (Peter) means “a stone.” It is not passive hearing anymore — it is something fixed , something stable , something certain . In Neville’s teachings, this is the moment we move from passively hearing truth t...

The Marriage Supper of the Lamb: Entering Union Through Assumption

“Blessed are they which are called unto the marriage supper of the Lamb.” — Revelation 19:9 The Book of Revelation is often mistaken for a cryptic prophecy of end-times events. But as Neville Goddard taught, it is not about external history — it is about inner transformation . The Marriage Supper of the Lamb is one of the clearest symbolic illustrations of the Law of Assumption in all of Scripture. It describes what happens when you no longer court your desire as something outside yourself — but instead unite with it, embody it, and live from it. You marry the state you seek. You become one with it. This is not a metaphor for romance — it is the mystical process of manifestation. Let’s explore this sacred imagery through Neville’s teachings: Let us be glad and rejoice, and give honour to him: for the marriage of the Lamb is come, and his wife hath made herself ready. — Revelation 19:7 Neville often spoke of preparing the state — entering into the assumption with readiness, sincerit...

Ask, Believe, Receive: Reaching for the Delightful in Selective Creation and Spiritual Marriage

When people first hear the phrase “Ask, believe, receive,” it can sound like a spiritual vending machine. But this principle, highlighted again and again by Jesus in the Gospels, is not about making requests to a distant God —it’s about an inner relationship: the sacred interplay of desire, imagination, and feeling. It's significant that it's a phrase spoken of in all four gospels: “Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and the door will be opened to you.” — Matthew 7:7 “And whatever you ask for in prayer, if you have faith, you will receive it.” — Matthew 21:22 “Whatever you ask for in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours.” — Mark 11:24 "And I say to you: Ask, and it will be given you; seek, and you will find; knock, and the door will be opened to you.” — Luke 11:9 “Ask, and you will receive, that your joy may be full.” — John 16:24 These verses are not instructions to beg, but invitations to assume . Neville G...

The Question about the Resurrection: Luke 20:28–33

The Sadducees, who deny the resurrection, pose a scenario about a woman who marries seven brothers, each dying childless. They ask whose wife she will be in the resurrection. This question is not sincere—it reflects the logical mind mocking spiritual truth . The Sadducees, symbolic of the outer reasoning man, are trying to trap the deeper, imaginative self in a web of physicality and linear thinking. The woman passed between seven brothers symbolises a state —a soul—seeking fulfilment through external means. Each "marriage" represents an attempt to generate life from outer law, but none can produce the fruit of manifestation. The true union of 'marriage' is emotively described in the Song of Solomon. Neville Goddard would say that without understanding the inner law—that imagination creates reality—all these outer “husbands” (attempts) are barren. Resurrection is not about dead bodies returning to life; it is the awakening of the inner man to his true nature , where...

The Woman at the Well and the Song of Solomon: The Soul’s Union with ‘I AM’

The Song of Solomon is not a romantic poem—it is assumption in action . It is the symbolic outpouring of a soul so fully possessed by the image of its beloved that it becomes one with it. This is not outer romance, but inner realisation . It is the dramatisation of the soul’s longing and eventual union with its imagined fulfilment—what Neville Goddard would describe as the creative act of assuming the feeling of the wish fulfilled. When read alongside the story of the Woman at the Well in John 4 , the Song of Solomon unveils itself as a commentary on spiritual marriage —the union of consciousness with the subconscious , or in Neville’s terms, the impregnation of the subconscious by the conscious assumption. What appears to be a casual conversation between Jesus and a Samaritan woman is, in fact, a mystical courtship, culminating in the recognition of the true Beloved: the ‘I AM’ within. “I Found Him Whom My Soul Loves” In the Song of Solomon 3:1–4, the feminine soul searches restl...

Bride at the Well: Parallels Between Rebekah, Rachel, and the Song of Solomon

“Then the man said, ‘This is now bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh; she shall be called Woman, for she was taken out of Man.’” —Genesis 2:23 “That is why a man leaves his father and mother and is united to his wife, and they become one flesh.” —Genesis 2:24 The stories of Rebekah and Rachel, each meeting their future husbands at a well, are profound enactments of the spiritual union celebrated throughout the Bible. This sacred joining is the heartbeat of the Song of Solomon—the timeless poetic dance of bride and bridegroom , symbolising the soul’s yearning for and fulfilment in divine union. Wells and Rivers: Sources of Life, Abundance, and Spiritual Encounter The river that goes out to water the garden is called Abundance. It is the source that flows from the two trees. These waters nourish and feed many wells —among them the very wells where Rebekah and Rachel first appear. Such places are steeped in symbolism as sources of life, refreshment, and revelation. In an...

Understanding Deuteronomy 22: Practical Laws for Manifesting

Neville Goddard taught that the Bible is not a historical account, but a symbolic map of the inner man. Beneath its seemingly literal laws lie profound psychological principles. Deuteronomy 22, when viewed through the Law of Assumption, becomes an early and somewhat primitive attempt to express the inner workings of imagination, identity, and belief—foreshadowing what would be fully realised through the ministry of Jesus . What a "Brother" Symbolises In Neville’s interpretation, a “brother” symbolises a mental state closely related to your current identity,  a familiar thought pattern or belief state within your imaginative household. 1. Restoring Lost States — Deuteronomy 22:1–4 “If you see your brother’s ox or his sheep wandering, do not go by without helping, but take them back to your brother. And if their owner is not near, or if you are not certain who he is, then take the beast to your house and keep it till its owner comes in search of it, and then you are to give i...

Marriage and Imagination: 1 Corinthians 7 Summary

1 Corinthians 7 and the Symbolism of Marriage: A Neville Goddard Interpretation Paul’s discourse in 1 Corinthians 7, often seen as a manual on relationships, holds a far deeper, more symbolic message when viewed through the teachings of Neville Goddard. This chapter speaks not of literal marriage, but of spiritual alignment, assumption, and the power of conscious union with a desired state. Below is a symbolic summary of the chapter, reimagined to reflect how it maps the inner mechanics of manifestation and the disciplined use of imagination. Summary of Symbolic Themes in 1 Corinthians 7 1. Assumption as Union Marriage represents a union between belief and feeling. To “marry” a state is to assume it as true, and that union will produce visible results in your world. 2. The Discipline of Remaining “Unmarried” Remaining unmarried symbolises staying detached and open—disciplined enough not to rush into union with a state you don’t truly desire or aren’t ready to commit to. 3. The ...