Neville Goddard Lectures, Christmas, Mans Birth as GOD

by on October 21, 2012

Neville 12-13-68

CHRISTMAS – MAN’S BIRTH AS GOD

“In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God. The Word became
flesh and dwells in us.” (John 1) Our physical birth is God’s incarnation, for incarnation signifies the
assumption by a divine being of human or animal form. When you were born your little human form was
assumed by God. Christmas marks the departure from God’s incarnation and your birth as God.
There are two births: one when God assumes your human form and the other when you assume the divine
form as God! The first birth is from below, while the second birth – called Christmas – is from above. Every
child born of woman is God incarnate, or the child could not be aware that he is. His consciousness is God’s
incarnation. The world, not knowing this, celebrates the wrong event; for Christmas is when man becomes
conscious of being God.

Here are a few paradoxes which disturb many people. All of these are actual quotes or interpretations of a
quote:
“I shall no longer speak to you in figures, but tell you plainly of the Father.”
“I came out from the Father and came into the world. Again I am leaving the world and going to the Father.”
“I and my Father are one.”
“I am going to the Father, for the Father is greater than I.”
“When you see me, you have seen the Father.”
“He who you call God, he is my Father, but I know my Father and you know not your God.”
“Show us the Father. If you knew me you would not ask, for no one can know me in the true sense and not
know God, for He and I are inseparable.”

Who is the father who is one with his son, yet greater than he? Can he be the son of God, yet God the
Father? And how can I ever know that I and my Father are one? Let us try to solve these strange
contradictions.
In the last chapter of the Book of Revelation, God says: “I am the root and the offspring of David, the bright
morning star.”God is the root, the source, the cause of all life. He is the father of David, yet his offspring!
As the source God is David’s father, called Jesse or I AM. As the offspring David is called the son of God.
The prophet Samuel spoke to David, saying: “God declared that when your days are fulfilled, and you lie
down with your fathers, I will raise up your son after you who will come forth from your body. I will be his
father and he shall be my son.” (II Samuel 7)

Here we see that the root and the offspring are one. I (the root of David) am the cause of all life. In spite of
that I come out of David, recognize him and say: “Thou art my son, today I have begotten thee.”
As God the Father, I assume the limitations of the flesh; and using one who is a man after my heart and will
do all my will, I become conscious of being a rich man, a poor man, a beggar, and a thief, until David reveals
me as his father. “I came to do the will of my Father yet I am the Father, for God the Father and the Son of
God is one I AM.”

There is only God in the world. As the father God created a perfect play. As the son God plays all the parts.
As the son God is restricted in his activities. But when the drama is finished God leaves the world of Caesar -
greatly expanded – and returns to himself, the Father.

As the son God suffers. Ask a man who is suffering and he will answer, I am! That’s the Father, who has
become incarnate by assuming human form. When the play is over for him, God will leave the world as the
son, to return to the kingdom of heaven as the Father. In our mystery this event is called Christmas. Your
entrance into this world is God’s incarnation. His departure occurs when his promise to himself is fulfilled in
you and you experience a wonderful series of mystical events.

Like Paul, I pray that those who believe my message of salvation will know it is true; that the name I gave
them for God is not mere poetry, but fact – that you are the Father. I have told them what happened in me.
Grant them to know it is true. I am sure my departure will quicken the pace for those who have heard,
accepted, and believed my words.

Now, a gentleman wrote, saying: “I fell asleep and dreamed I was reading the newspaper, looking at a
full-page advertisement for Western Airlines. They were announcing their new P.D. system, which would
eliminate all passenger congestion when boarding the plane. Suddenly the page became animated and I am in
the picture, grinning from ear to ear as I awoke.” In his letter he wondered why the initials P.D. He thought
the D could be for departure, but could not understand the P. although he used the word “plan” throughout
his letter.

Everything contains within itself the capacity for symbolic significance. This gentleman is in advertising so
naturally, in the dream he is looking at an ad. In this modern world we have planes which take man from earth
to the skies and bring him back again. But this is a plan of transportation.
In the Book of Ephesians, we read: “He has made known unto us the mystery of his will in all wisdom and
insight according to his purpose which he set forth as a plan in Christ for the fullness of time to unite all things
in him, things in heaven and things on earth.”

My friend called it the departure. This does not necessarily mean that he goes tonight or in the next forty
years. To me as the interpreter of the dream it means that he has finished the journey. Like Paul, the time for
his departure has come. He has fought the good fight. He has finished the race and kept the faith. Henceforth,
there is laid up for him the crown of righteousness.
This crown is not something filled with jewels, but is the victor’s crown. Only when one has finished the race
can the crown be given. He has fought his own battle with himself, and he has won. His flight into the heavens
is a plan which will erupt, causing him to depart this world of Caesar to personally experience Christmas.
Christmas is not the incarnation of God, but the departure of Man as God; for God became Man that Man
may become God. In my friend’s dream he took the images of the twentieth century, and since everything
contains within itself the capacity for symbolic significance, an airplane symbolizes that which takes off
towards the heavens. It’s destined to rise above the earth. The “P” is the plan of departure which begins with
a spiritual birth, followed by the revelation of man’s true identity.

There is no way of knowing who you really are until God’s Son reveals it, for “No one knows who the Son is
except the Father, and no one knows who the Father is except the son and anyone to whom the Son chooses
to reveal him.” The Son must choose to reveal you, for only then do you know you are God the Father.
I am the way. I am the truth. I am the light. No one comes to the awareness of being the Father except by
God’s plan. Diet will not do it. Wearing certain clothes, hibernating in some so-called holy place, or being a
priest and going up the ranks will not do it. There is only one way to the Father, and I – all imagination – am
the way!

My friend is a happily married man with three children, yet he is so hungry for the truth; so I say: Father, let
the truth of my words be known, that he and all those who believe my words know that the love with which
thou has loved me may be in them, and I in them.
One day you will discover that God – the Father who became you – has completed his work. And because
he was God when he became you, when his work is complete you will become aware that you are God.
There is only one way to know this for a fact, and that is when God’s son, David, stands before you and
reveals you as his father. Then the temple of the Living God – which is spirit -is split in two, and you ascend
into heaven as a fiery serpent. And finally, the symbol of the Holy Spirit in the form of a dove descends, and -
clothing you with Himself – once more sends you back into this world, to tell your story to those who will
listen.

This gentleman had a wonderful dream. He may some day devise a plan that Western Airlines will use to ease
the boarding congestion, but that was not the message of the dream. He is departing this world of Caesar.
Having already had these experiences, he has forgotten them. But he will remember and know that when the
time comes for him to depart this little section of time, he will not be restored to life, but will enter the New
Age. Being one with the body of God he will know no restrictions, only the complete freedom of being God
the Father.

Having entered the world, God the Father of all life incarnated himself in your flesh and blood body as the
son. When God’s work is complete, He will depart this body and return to his heavenly body as the Father,
redeeming you. This is the way to redemption, and there is no other way.
Although the words, “I and my father are one, yet my father is greater than I” appear to be contradictory,
they are true. When I – the awareness – take on the limitation of flesh, I am aware of limitation. Finding myself
in the form of a slave, I become obedient until death upon the cross called Man, where I remain as God,
restricted by my incarnation. Then a predetermined plan erupts and delivers me from my self-imprisonment,
and I return to the being I was – but now enhanced because of my self-imposed restriction. Then I can say
with Paul: “I have fought the good fight. I have finished the race. I have kept the faith. Now there is laid up for
me the laurel leaf – the crown of righteousness.”

I am reminded of a story told of Charles William Eliot, who – when he retired as president of Harvard
University – was given a gift by an old friend in Boston which he treasured greatly. His friend sent him an
envelope containing a single laurel leaf. Its message was clear. He was being told he was victorious. Everyone
will eventually receive that crown of righteousness, as the same crown is given to all who come to the end of
the journey.

Coming out from the awareness of being God the Father, you came into the world, becoming aware of being
Man. You are predestined to return to the awareness of being God the Father once more. This is the story of
Man.
God comes into the world by assuming human form. He incarnates himself at the birth of a child in order for it
to breathe. While here God goes through literal hell, because his life does not end with the grave. Making his
exit from this world of death, God is restored to life to continue the journey; to die and be restored once
more, over and over again, until he finds this series of supernatural events which leads God to his home – and
Christmas.

Christmas marks the birth of man as God, not the birth of God as man. There is all the difference in the
world. Matthew and Luke tell the story of the birth, not as a little physical child, but as a sign of an individual’s
birth as God, for God is born that day in the city of David.

When God is born in you it will be in the city of David. At that moment you are born as God. And from then
on you will grow in stature. You will grow in favor of the Father because you will know yourself to be one
with him. You will continue to remain incarnate, however, until that moment when you express your last
breath. Then you will discover yourself to be life itself, for you will have entered the one body, one Spirit, one
Lord, one God and Father of all.

Once individuality became defused in all, as told us in the 82nd Psalm: “I say, ‘You are gods, sons of the
Most High, all of you; nevertheless, you will die like men and fall as one man, O princes.’ “Here is this
universal diffusion of the one I AM. You say, I am. I say, I am. We say, I am. That’s the one being who fell,
incarnating himself by becoming Man.

I don’t care what is said about Buddha’s or Confucius’ way; I have told you the only way back to the Father.
My testimony is not based upon theory, but upon my own personal experience, and I tell you a truth: there is
only one way. I am  the way!

Another gentleman (an artist by profession) wrote, saying: “I found myself at the bottom of a deep well.
Looking up I could see a beautiful blue sky with little clusters of white clouds which became doves, with their
wings spread as though floating. Then I said to myself: ‘This is what Neville teaches. The dove really does
float’.”

I am thrilled that in this man’s dream, he recalled the teaching. In the Book of Genesis we are told that when
the flood of illusion is over, the dove appears bringing back the laurel leaf [sic]: the sprig of victory. And the
dove actually floats upon the crystal clear water.
I have seen this great flood of illusion as crystal clear atmosphere and now know that for me, the ark, the
flood, is over. Man is either the ark of God or a phantom of the earth and sea – and he is not a phantom!
Man is the ark of God, containing everything within himself.

Recently a great doctor was asked about the flu which is spreading all over our country. Questioning where
the bug goes when the flu subsides, he answered: “It doesn’t go anywhere. It remains in man to be activated
again.” I say moods activate it.

Leprosy doesn’t come from without. Cancer doesn’t either. Everything is within man. Read the paper and
react. That reaction sets a feeling in motion, be it anger, frustration, or irritation. When the feeling leaves,
where does it go? Back to sleep within you, for you contain the world and all that is in it.
God became you and, containing all, God is absolute. The world teaches that God is all good and never evil.
But if there is evil, and God is not evil, then God is not absolute.

If you can experience something that God cannot then you must be greater than God, and that is not possible.
When you read of an innocent boy who was murdered and you react, you activate something within you. It
may be tomorrow’s tooth or stomach ache. I do not know what it will be, but God is not mocked. As you
sow a reaction you reap an act, for you and God are one.

God actually became as you are the moment you breathed, for breath and spirit are one and the same word
in Hebrew and Greek. When you were spanked on the behind, took one deep inhalation and breathed, God
became incarnate in you. Then you go through the furnaces of experience to reach the end, when you
experience this series of events. No other event or events will take you back.

The first event is your awakening and resurrection from the skull where God entered. Then your birth as God.
Coming out of your skull, all of the symbolism of scripture as described in Matthew and Luke is before you.
The three witnesses are there, as well as the child wrapped in swaddling clothes. The witnesses talk about
you, but cannot see you, as you are now spirit.

Then, because no one has ever seen God but his only begotten son who is in the bosom of the Father, the
second event occurs, when God’s son stands before you and makes you known to yourself. Then you, too,
will say: “I am the root and the offspring of David.” For, coming out of the garment you have worn throughout
your journey in the world of death, you are David, God’s only begotten son!

There is no other way back to the realization of being God the Father, for He literally became you that you
may become God. We are told that Jesus Christ is God’s son, yet it is he who claims: I and my Father are
one. He who sent me has seen the Father. Claiming to be the son who is the Father is a paradox; yet it is
resolved when you realize that the son – coming out from the Father – remains the Father, but is restricted by
incarnation.

God the Father takes upon himself the form of a slave, and – becoming the son – he is obedient until death,
even death upon the cross of Man. This God wears, as He moves from one state to another, to another in
what the world calls death, until God experiences the one definite plan to return to himself – the Father. So
Christmas marks, not the incarnation of God, but the birth of man, as God.
Now let us go into the silence.

Neville Goddard, Summa Theologica, Manly P Hall, A Course In Miracles

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