Neville Goddard 3-23-1959
If you are with us for the first time, this is what we believe and teach here.
We firmly believe that you, the individual, can realize your every dream, and
the reason is that God and man are one. We believe that the difference is not in
the mentality with which we operate, but only in the degrees of intensity of the
operant power itself, and that we call human Imagination.
Keats said: "You can take any one great and spiritual passage and it will serve
as a starting point to lead you to the two-and-thirty palaces." Take this simple
one in Paul's letters to the Corinthians: "I die daily," or Blake's statement in
his letter to Crab Robinson: "Death is the best thing in life. There is nothing
in life like death, but people take such a long time in dying. At least, their
neighbors never see them rise from the grave." If you understood Blake you would
not think of death as the world thinks of death, but you would see that no one
can grow without outgrowing. But man is not willing to outgrow, [and] yet he
wants other things than those he has. But if you remain in one state, you will
forever have to suffer the consequences of not being in another state. (From the
"Hermetica") If I remain in the state of poverty, I must suffer the consequences
of not being in the state of wealth. So I must learn the art of dying. Paul
says: "I die daily." Blake says: "People take such a long time in dying." Man
does not outgrow his state of ill health or his old job or his environment. We
must learn the art of dying, and this week is the great death and we are told
that God dies that man may live.
We say that the Imagination of God and man are one, no matter how far it goes.
Universes are created and sustained by "the same power that sustains our
environment." We say the power is the same, but we recognize a vast difference
between the power that sustains the universe and that which sustains an
environment. The difference is only in the degree of intensity of the center
of imagining. So, if we increase the intensity [in] the center of imagining, we
will create greater and greater things. So I see my dream, and I must learn to
die to what I AM in order to live to what I want to be.
Now this is the mystical meaning of a death in the Bible - the death of Moses, a
story familiar to all of us. We are told that Moses comes out of the land of
Moab (Deuteronomy 34) and then scales the mountain of Nebo, goes to Pisgah, sees
Gilead, and finally he looks into the promised land of Jericho. But the Lord
tells him: "I will let you see the land, but you cannot go into it." Then Moses
dies. (The present state cannot be carried into the new; it has to die as a
consequence of the new made alive.) "But his eye was not dim and his natural
force was not abated." And no one knows his burial place. First remember that
all the characters of the Bible take place in the mind of man. I am Moses, you
are Moses. It means to "lift up" or to "draw out of." We are told in the very
beginning of the story that he was pulled from the bulrushes. The word ["Moses"
- in Hebrew, "Moshe"] spelled backwards in the ancient Hebrew means "the Name" [haShem]
or "I AM." So I am drawing out of my own being, or the I AM. Moses comes from
"Mo ab." This comes from two Hebrew words meaning "Mother-Father," or "womb."
Then he scales the mount of Nebo, which means "to prophesy," or which represents
the subjective state I long for. I will prophesy for you, or you for another.
You single out a person's longing. If he longs for something it means that he
does not have it, else there could be no longing. But Moses climbs Nebo - that
is, he participates in seeing the state longed for. I single out something that
implies I am the man I want to be. I scale the mountain. Then comes Pisgah,
which means, "to contemplate." I contemplate what I want to be. Then he sees
Jericho, which means "a fragrant odor." I will contemplate the desired state
until I get the feeling or reaction that satisfies. I have not only scaled Nebo
but I have reached Pisgah and looked into Jericho. I am filled with the emotion
that implies the act is completed. Then there is Gilead, which means, "hills of
witnesses." Then I, as Moses, die. I cannot go into the promised land, and no
one can find where I am buried.
What does it mean? If I am poverty-ridden and frightened and then you meet me
and see me as free as a bird and happy, then I am not the man you knew who was
frightened. Then where is that other man buried? For Moses is the power in man
(generic man, male-female) to draw out of himself anything in this world he
desires, and to so enact the drama that he dies to what he was, that he may live
to what he is enacting. That is Moses - and no one can know where he is buried.
But we are told: "His eye was not dim nor his natural force abated." That is [to
say], when I die, that is when I enact the drama. I do not wait for signs to
appear; it is when I am most aware of my restrictions and feel the pressures,
then is when I must learn to die. I must learn to let go of what my senses
dictate and "go mad" and yield to what is only a dream. But sustaining it and
living in it, I die to what was physically real as I gradually lift up what was
only the dream. You knew only the frightened man and not the other one. No one
can tell where the other has gone.
So this is how the art of dying is dramatized in the Bible as the death of a
man. But it has nothing to do with any certain man, for the story of the Bible
takes place in the mind of every man. I will crucify myself, for God crucified
himself in me that I might live. But now I must nail myself upon the thing I
desire and, remaining faithful to it, lift it up as God nailed himself upon me.
(The present body) is believing himself a man called Neville, giving Neville the
same power that is his (but keyed low) in the hope that I will lift up the power
to bigger things in my world to which I can nail myself, and so lift them up.
There is no possibility of man making his dream alive unless He nails himself to
this cross that is man. We are living because God nailed himself to us. Now man,
keyed low, yielding to other states and not to what the senses dictate, becomes
one with the state and nails himself to it (fixes himself in the state through
emotion and feeling) and then he will be lifted up.
For crucifixion comes before resurrection. Crucifixion without resurrection
would be unthinkable; it would be the utter triumph of tyranny. If I could yield
myself to my dream and it would not become flesh, it would be complete tyranny
over this wonderful concept of life. But you cannot fail if you yield. If you
hold back within yourself, wondering "What will I play as my last card if this
doesn't work?" then you have not yielded, you have not nailed yourself to it. It
is a complete yielding. It is the great cry "My God! My God! Why hast Thou
forsaken me?" If you know that you're God doing it, you can yield. But there
must be complete abandonment as though it were true and then you make it a
reality. The cost is that form of mental abandonment that Blake calls "madness."
But man is afraid; he dare not so abandon himself to a dream, and so never
"dies." So Blake was right when he said: "There is nothing like death: the best
thing in life is death."
Many people only age, but never change inwardly. They only mature physically,
but they have not died in the mystical sense. There is no transforming power in
the physical death, and they will still be anchored in a larger world with all
the trends of this world. To our senses they seem to be dead but they will
still, on another plane, have to learn the art of dying. I can anywhere so
completely detach myself from what is taking place that I can "die" to that
state. So every little death is the lifting of the divine image. This means
dying as the mystic means it. It means dying mentally. Man dies to ill health,
or poverty, or to disharmony, etc., but he does it by yielding to the other
states.
Blake looks on all states as permanent, as in his great poem regarding the Halls
of Los: "I curse the earth for man and made it permanent." So states remain and
man passes through states, as though cities. If I do not pass through some state
but remain in it, I think [it] is the only reality. You cannot conceive of a
state that is not, for the whole is finished; but man is awakening only by dying
to state after state.
You take a friend who is not well or cannot set himself free from some state.
You represent that friend to yourself as he should be seen by the whole world,
and to the degree that you are faithful to that representation, to that degree
you will bring him out of the old state. It does not matter if he knows you did
it or not; he does not have to know. But remain faithful and you will bring him
out of the old state into the new state that you are seeing. All things are
burned up when we cease to behold them. Moses could see the promised land but he
could not go into it. If I am true to the likeness of what I behold, then I -
the "old" man - cannot go into the new state. Something called the power goes
into it, but [no one] recognizes it, for they cannot recognize the transformed
being.
We all feel so secure in recurrence. If we know that a thing is fixed and that
next week things will be as they are today, I feel secure in that recurrence. I
can have done something that violates the moral codes, I can have come from the
wrong side of the tracks, but I can accept that, for I am used to it. But to say
that something awakes in me and can become what it will - that is frightening to
man. So we are told to awake out of sleep, for recurrence brings security to the
whole vast world. One does what he does as if he did it in a nightmare. For God
had to "forget" he was God to become man, and that whittling down to this level
is [the] very limit of contraction, But then comes the awakening from that deep
dream into which he threw himself to make me alive. So this lifting-up power
goes about setting men free, for God became every man, that every man may in
time awaken as God. Eventually the whole [world] will awaken and the poem will
be in full bloom and it will be noble beyond our wildest dreams. And then it
will exist for us and we will be one with the creator of the great poem. That is
[the] art of dying.
Next Sunday is the great drama. I am riding a beast and I am at the crossroads.
"Bring me a colt on which no man ever sat, that is tied by the road where two
ways meet." Here is state I have never ridden before. It is so unnatural to feel
myself to be the man I want to be and to actually get into that state and ride
it without being thrown by reason, which tells me I am mad. But if you know the
Lord is your Imagination, you can ride it into Jerusalem. We [are] told [we]
will find the animal at a crossroads where two roads meet. We are always at a
crossroads of what I am and what I want to be. So, can I ride the beast I find
at the crossroads and ride it into Jerusalem? Then I am going toward "heaven,"
but it is not continuous on my line of motion. It is contiguous. It is adjacent
to where I am, for heaven is a state of consciousness. I try to catch the
feeling that would be mine if [I were] the man I [want] to be, but that involves
a death. I must abandon myself to my dream as if it were true, and - living in
it - I lift it up and make it real. Everyone must pass through this state, for
this is the only true religion in the world. Religion, like charity, begins at
home, with one's self. The mother seed of all religious beliefs lies in the
mystical experiences of the individual. All ceremonies are but secondary growths
superimposed upon it.
Religion means, "to be tied or devoted to." But if I am not in love with what I
am tied to, I must yield to something more lovely and make it real. I must bear
my cross. I go so far and then I want to cross to the other line where my heaven
is. For everything is interrelated. We all interpenetrate each other. We are all
one. So there is interpenetration of the whole world and then comes conflict,
and from that comes the solution of the conflict. For we must conflict if we are
all interpenetrated. But then we must bring about reconciliation. Whatever the
solution is, that is the reconciliation. But we cannot stay in a state or any
condition forever. Each new state bears within it the seeds of new conflict.
Every heaven becomes in time hell. A thing is ours for a moment, but as we
continue in it, it will bring about conflict. As long as there is
interpenetration there is always conflict. So live in any desired state and then
as conflict arises resolve it and die to it and then move into another state.
Thus we grow and outgrow; thus man awakes.
No man can be born in one environment and ever realize another if he does not
yield to the state desired. So Blake was right: "The best thing in life is death
but it takes man so long to die that his friends never see him rise from the
grave." Can you not see then how it is with your friend who always tells you the
same things, even though you have not seen him for ten years? Everything is
still recurring, nothing is new, but that makes him feel secure. Man does not
want change; it frightens him.
I tell you that your Imagination is God. Believe it. Exercise it. It is keyed
low, but as you lift it up you intensify it and then vision after vision will be
yours as you begin to awake. Do not think you are greedy because you are
demanding things or the changing of things. You are here to create as your
Father creates. Want what you want and yield to it and create it. Then you will
want higher and higher things. But nothing blesses a man unless it comes down
from its heavenly state and takes on flesh. You are the only one who can clothe
it in reality. But it remains a state unless you yield to it.
This drama in the Bible is all about you, for the Christ Jesus of the gospels is
your own wonderful Imagination. There is only an infinite God and the creation
he loved. And he so loved it, he wanted to make it alive and then share it and
even change it, so God became man that man may become God. That is the great
story of the gospels. Every mystic in the world tells this same story. Then
every man is free. There is no judgment, for no matter what man has done, it is
God's doing it in a nightmare. There is only complete forgiveness of sin - no
judgment and no argument, but man can change facts. The past can be unmade. So a
man has done this or that. Use your strange Imagination and "turn the great
wheel backward until Troy unburns." It means to revise.
I know a lady who burned her hand and then "unburned" it. She poured boiling
water on her hand. She lay on the couch and tried to undo mentally what had been
done. It was difficult because of the pain but she kept trying. She redid the
scene and poured the boiling water on the tea and brewed it and then she drank
the tea. She did it over and over and finally in the act of thus making the tea
she fell asleep. When she awoke some hours later there was no trace of the burn.
She wrote: "You would have thought I should go right to the hospital, but now
there is not even a sign of the burn."
Comment: The past and present are one in a greater moment.
Now let us go into the silence.