Inner Praise, Salvation Vision
Psalms 106:1-5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 106 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 106:1-5 blesses the Lord for His goodness and mercy, asks for remembrance and salvation, and desires to rejoice in the richness of God's inheritance among the faithful.
Neville's Inner Vision
All the words are addressed to your own awareness. When the text says 'Praise ye the LORD,' it is describing the act of praising the Presence that you ARE. Your inner climate becomes a ledger of mercy; to say 'for his mercy endureth for ever' is to dwell in the unending patience of your own I AM. The question 'Who can utter the mighty acts of the LORD?' invites you to realize that the acts occur inside, as you imagine and revise. To 'remember me' with favor is the art of assuming you are already blessed by your inner God, and to 'visit me with thy salvation' is to invite a transformation of consciousness that breaks the sense of lack. When you 'see the good of thy chosen,' you acknowledge the inner outcomes of righteous thoughts and loving deeds; you rejoice in the inheritance, which is your state of abundance and wholeness. Therefore this psalm is a practical mysticism: cultivate the feeling of being favored, live from the end, and watch the outer form follow because you have changed the inner vision.
Practice This Now
Act: Close your eyes and assume you are already favored by your inner God; imagine you have already been saved by your own I AM. Hold that feeling for a minute, then carry that end into your day.
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