Neville Goddard,Mitch Horowitz

The Law and the Promise

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IMAGINING CREATES REALITY
«When man solves the mystery of imagining, he will have discovered the secret of causation, and that is: Imagining creates reality. Therefore, the man who is aware of what he is imagining knows what he is creating; realizes more and more that the drama of life is imaginal—not physical.» This book is Neville's last book, and is the summation and capstone of his career. As he states, “The purpose of this book is to show, through actual true stories, how imagining creates reality.” Neville Includes many success stories from his students, and concludes with his description of four of his mystical experiences.
NEVILLE GODDARD (1905–1972) was one of the most remarkable mystical thinkers of the past century. In more than ten books and thousands of lectures, Neville expanded on one core principle: the human imagination is God. He was a compelling presence at metaphysical churches, spiritual centers and auditoriums. Neville was not widely known during his lifetime, but today his books and lectures have attained new popularity. His principles have influenced several major spiritual writers, including Carlos Castaneda and Joseph Murphy.
In this beautifully designed “deluxe edition” you benefit not only from Neville’s radical statement, but also from a comprehensive and enthralling analysis and biography of Neville, “Chariot of Fire,” by spiritual thinker Mitch Horowitz, who is considered the most powerful interpreter of Neville’s ideas today. Mitch’s comprehensive essay is a spiritual and historical journey in itself. This edition is rounded out with Mitch’s timeline of Neville’s life. Here is a resource book that you will turn to again and again.
This book is currently unavailable
177 printed pages
Original publication
2021
Publication year
2021
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Quotes

  • Seljanhas quoted3 years ago
    He said that we experience definite time intervals and that a time interval is part of the nature of our existence. I may want a new house and I may want that house right now, and I may think from the end of having that house, but he said, in effect, “The fact of the world that we experience here and now is that the trees have to grow to produce wood. The wood has to be harvested and the carpenter has to cut it. There will be time intervals.” And he would say, “Your time interval could be an hour, it could be a month, it could be weeks, it could be years.” There is a time interval. You nonetheless must stick to the ideal and try to make it just exquisitely effortless. He didn’t endorse using the will. This isn’t about saying, “I’m going to think this way.” It is going into this meditative or drowsy or hypnagogic state, picturing something that confirms the realization of your desire, and feeling it emotionally; he said that when the method fails maybe it’s because you’re trying too hard. Neville wanted people to understand that there is an exquisite ease that one should feel with exercises.
  • Seljanhas quoted3 years ago
    What you’re hearing now is something to try. Neville’s challenge was as ultimate as it was simple: “Put my ideas to the test.” Prove them to yourself or dismiss them, but what a tragedy would be not to try. It’s all so simple.
  • Seljanhas quoted3 years ago
    You exist in this world of infinite possibilities and realities, and that, in fact, when you mentally picture something, you’re not creating it—it already exists. You’re claiming it. The very fact of being able to experience it mentally confirms that in this world
    of infinite possibilities, where imagination is the ultimate creative agent, everything that you can picture already is.
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