How to Revise Correctly The Method That Changes the Past | Neville Goddard

How to Revise Correctly The Method That Changes the Past | Neville Goddard

You Keep Living From Yesterday | Neville Goddard    • You Keep Living From Yesterday | Neville G...   Why Most Prayers Are Cancelled | Neville Goddard    • Why Most Prayers Are Cancelled | Neville G...   This video is a reconstruction built from Neville Goddard’s recurring teachings, woven into one message that reflects the central principles found across his lectures and books. It is not a direct recording of any single lecture, but a faithful composition of his repeated ideas on imagination, identity, and the Law. You are not suffering from what happened. You are suffering from what you continue to feel. Revision is not denial. It is not pretending. It is not emotional excitement. It is the deliberate changing of the ending. Tonight, choose one scene. A money moment. A relationship moment. A word that lingered longer than it should have. Return to it. Do not argue with the facts. Do not fight the memory. Enter it again — and end it differently. When the ending changes, the state changes. And when the state changes, events must follow. The world is yourself pushed out. There is no power outside consciousness. Test it. Not tomorrow. Tonight. References — Neville Goddard (Books & Lectures) “Revision is the pruning shears of consciousness.” — The Pruning Shears of Revision, Lecture, 1954 “You do not revise the facts. You revise your reaction to the facts.” — Revision, Lecture, 1954 “Every event of the past has a tendency to repeat itself unless it is revised.” — The Pruning Shears of Revision, Lecture, 1954 “As a man revises the past, he changes the future.” — The Pruning Shears of Revision, Lecture, 1954 “The past exists only as it is remembered in consciousness.” — The Pruning Shears of Revision, Lecture, 1954 “Memory is imagination.” — The Pruning Shears of Revision, Lecture, 1954 “Prune the vine of memory.” — The Pruning Shears of Revision, Lecture, 1954 “Go back in memory and make it conform to what you wish had taken place.” — The Pruning Shears of Revision, Lecture, 1954 “Enter the scene and make it what it ought to have been.” — The Pruning Shears of Revision, Lecture, 1954 “The past is always recreated in the present.” — Revision, Lecture, 1954 “What you remember is what you continue.” — Revision, Lecture, 1954 “An event gains all its meaning from the feeling with which it is remembered.” — The Pruning Shears of Revision, Lecture, 1954 “Change the feeling, and you change the meaning.” — The Pruning Shears of Revision, Lecture, 1954 “Rewrite the letter. Change the words. See it as you wish you had seen it.” — The Law and the Promise, 1961 “You are not changing the past. You are changing the cause.” — Revision, Lecture, 1954 “The cause of every event in your life is your state of consciousness.” — Consciousness Is the Only Reality, 1949 “Creation is finished.” — The Pruning Shears of Revision, Lecture, 1954 “Persist in the assumption that it is already so.” — Assumptions Harden into Fact, Lecture, 1969 “Dare to believe in the reality of your assumption and watch the world play its part relative to its fulfillment.” — The Law and the Promise, 1961 🌿🌿🌿 If these lectures bring you light and strength, consider supporting the ongoing creation of these videos by joining our channel membership. Your support helps keep Neville’s words alive and shared with the world.