Existence in a Moment: Psalms 103:15-16

Psalms 103:15-16 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Psalms 103 in context

Scripture Focus

15As for man, his days are as grass: as a flower of the field, so he flourisheth.
16For the wind passeth over it, and it is gone; and the place thereof shall know it no more.
Psalms 103:15-16

Biblical Context

The psalm says human life is brief and easily blown away; outward conditions fade and are forgotten.

Neville's Inner Vision

These lines reveal more than seasons of life; they reveal your inner weather. Days are states of consciousness, not mere clock ticks. A man's days are as grass: a belief, a mood, or circumstance that seems to flourish, only to bend in the wind and vanish. The flower of the field symbolizes outward form - an appearance that glitters briefly and then fades. When you know the I AM as your true self, the wind passing over the field is but changing thought, not the end of life. The phrase 'the place thereof shall know it no more' points to the erasure of a former identity, not the erasure of you. In Neville's language, time is inner movement in awareness; revise your self-image to the eternal I AM and feel it real: you are the constant witness, unbound by transient conditions. As you sustain this assumption, appearances shift to reflect the steadiness of your innermost self, and what seemed fleeting becomes a revealed, resplendent reality.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and declare, 'I AM the enduring I AM.' Feel timeless awareness as the wind across the grass, and let your sense of self remain constant while appearances shift.

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