Memory's Inner Reckoning
Psalms 109:14-15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 109 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 109:14-15 speaks of the iniquities of fathers and the sin of the mother being remembered before the Lord, kept before Him continually. It presents a stark image of memory as a force that can be cut off from the earth.
Neville's Inner Vision
To Neville, this psalm is not about external punishment but about the inner memory you carry in consciousness. The 'fathers' and 'mothers' symbolize habitual states—guilt, grievance, judgment—that you permit to inhabit your awareness. When you allow these memories to stand before the I AM, you are rehearsing a perpetual court scene in your mind. The Lord, your I AM, remembers them because you insist on the identity of that story. The remedy is to shift states: replace the remembered sin with a new assumption about your self and your line. By treating the act as a finished thing—believing that you and all patterns are already dissolved in the light of your consciousness—you erase the 'memory' from your earth. The command to keep it before the Lord is a cue to keep attention on a higher state, not a punitive decree; it invites you to choose a different present, a different relationship to the past. Remember: imagination is the law; by imagining a state where ancestral patterns are no longer active, you bring that state into manifestation. The psalm becomes a guide to inner sovereignty, the moment you awaken to the fact that you are the I AM that remembers.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume you are the I AM, the observer of all memory. Silently repeat, 'From this moment, I dissolve all ancestral memories that no longer serve me,' and feel the relief as the memory fades.
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