At Your Command
Description
At Your Command is a book by Neville Goddard, first published in 1939. In this concise, practice-focused work Goddard lays out the core of his teaching: that imagination and the sense of “I AM” are the active, creative principle by which each person manifests reality.
The book reads as practical metaphysics — short, direct chapters that teach readers how to use feeling, assumption, and inner awareness to transform poverty, illness, lack, and limitation into their intended outcomes. Goddard frames manifestation as a conscious art rather than wishful thinking: it is not the repetition of words but the inner decree of being that effects change.
Readers searching for guidance on the law of assumption, creative visualization, or how to manifest desires will find compact, testable techniques here — from assuming the feeling of the wish fulfilled to the crucial discipline of inner attention. That focus on “imagination as God” makes the book a foundational primer for students of modern manifestation and New Thought.
Because At Your Command is short and sharply argued, it’s ideal for newcomers who want a single, readable statement of Neville’s method as well as seasoned practitioners who appreciate its distilled clarity. Expect a blend of biblical exegesis, metaphysical argument, and practical instruction — all aimed at giving readers a repeatable way to shift inner states and therefore outer results.
The book’s brevity makes it a quick read but one whose principles repay careful study and daily practice.
- Formats
- PDF, EPUB, AZW3
- Page Count (PDF)
- 15
Note: All of the books available here were first published generations ago. Care has been taken to produce clear, readable files, and each ebook is fully formatted with features such as a linked table of contents and clearly structured chapter headings. Where applicable, illustrations and footnotes have also been carefully presented for ease of reading. None of these ebooks are DRM-protected. As with any historical text, occasional imperfections may remain.