Inner Deliverance By Mercy
Psalms 109:21 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 109 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 109:21 expresses a plea for deliverance, grounded in the Lord’s mercy and the honor of His name. It suggests that true rescue begins in the consciousness that mercy is good.
Neville's Inner Vision
To the I AM within, this verse is not a petition to a distant power, but an invitation to wake to your true identity. 'God the Lord' names the one awareness you inhabit; 'for thy name's sake' invites you to act in harmony with the divine nature you already are. When mercy is described as good, it is the subjective atmosphere of your mind—compassion you can rest in. Deliverance, then, arises as an inner movement: a release from fear, a reorientation of belief, a return to the peace that accompanies the recognition of self as the expressions of the I AM. Your psalmist's cry is a practical guide: refuse to accept lack, align with mercy, and watch the outer world mirror the inward state. The moment you persist in seeing yourself as the recipient of divine mercy, the sense of danger dissolves and a new reality takes root. The verse becomes therapeutic: it teaches you to dwell in the consciousness where deliverance is not sought but remembered as your natural condition.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Sit in quiet and state, 'I am delivered now by the mercy of my I AM.' Visualize a radiant light of mercy filling you, and feel the relief as you hold this assumption until it feels true.
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