Rooted in the I Am: Psalm 1:4
Psalms 1:4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 1 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse contrasts the ungodly with the grounded, saying they are like chaff driven away by the wind. They are unstable and easily moved by circumstances.
Neville's Inner Vision
Let the word 'ungodly' be understood as a state of consciousness not anchored in the I AM. When you identify with that shifting, wind-blown sense of self, you become like the chaff, easily dislodged by every gust of circumstance. The wind here is your thoughts and external events moving you because you have not claimed a fixed inner reality. The remedy is not to chase righteousness as an external rule, but to awaken to the truth that you are the I AM, the unchanging awareness behind all appearances. By assuming and dwelling in a feeling of already having what you seek—stability, clarity, endurance—you insulate yourself from being blown about. The 'not so' spoken of the ungodly becomes a correction in your own interior life: you cease identifying with the changing weather of life and begin identifying with the imperturbable you who remains regardless of gusts. Imagination, rightly used, is the wind that lifts the chaff into its rightful place and places you at the foot of your own inner sun.
Practice This Now
Assume the feeling: 'I am the I AM, rooted and unshaken.' Sit with it, revise any sense of instability, and let that inner ground hold you steady as the winds of life pass by.
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