The Destitute Prayer Regarded
Psalms 102:17 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 102 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse states that the destitute's prayer is not despised; it is regarded by God. In Neville's terms, this prayer is a state of consciousness seeking alignment with the I AM.
Neville's Inner Vision
When you read Psalms 102:17, hear that the cry of lack is not rebuffed by a distant deity, but noticed by the I AM that you are. Destitution here is not a condition of the world; it is a state of consciousness longing for its own recognition. God does not despise the prayer; he registers it as an inward movement toward wholeness. In this light, the apparent need becomes a signal to shift your inner assumption. By imagining yourself already living in fullness, you draw the I AM’s attention from absence to presence. The moment you feel that you are heard, you stand within a new premise: the end is possible now because you have chosen it in imagination. The prayer becomes the cue to revise, not to plead, and the I AM responds by transforming the inner scene until it aligns with your awakened consciousness.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and imagine the I AM listening to your quiet petition. Then revise the scene by affirming, 'I am now provided; I live in abundance,' and feel it real.
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