Inner Salvation Through Hope
Lamentations 3:26 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Lamentations 3 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
It says it is good to hope and quietly wait for the LORD's salvation. The emphasis is on inner trust and patient anticipation rather than frantic striving.
Neville's Inner Vision
To Neville, the 'salvation of the LORD' is not a distant rescue but the stirring of your own consciousness into alignment with the I AM. 'Hope' is the disciplined imagining that you are already brought into wholeness; 'quietly waiting' is the inner posture of stillness in which you refuse to define life by present lack. The line teaches a law: entertain the end in the heart now, and the outer scene will reflect it. When you refuse to argue with appearances and instead dwell in the awareness of your true nature, you live in the salvation that is always present as your essential identity. So long as you cling to the sense of absence, you keep the door closed; when you cultivate the feeling of completion, you step through it. Practice is simple: assume the end, revise every thought to confirm it, and feel it real until it becomes your natural mood. Let gratitude be your atmosphere, and watch as the Lord's salvation reveals itself in your world as a visible reality.
Practice This Now
Take a moment, close your eyes, and assume you are saved now; repeat, 'I am saved now' in the present tense and feel the relief as a living current within you. Hold that feeling for a few minutes, then step back into daily life with this inner assurance.
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