The Right Hand of Mercy
Psalms 109:26-31 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 109 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The psalm pleads for God's mercy and salvation, hoping others will recognise God's hand at work, and it ends with praise and the Lord’s defense of the poor.
Neville's Inner Vision
In this psalm, you are invited to inhabit a state where mercy is not sought from without, but demonstrated as the I AM-aware Self saving you. When you declare, "help me, O LORD my God; save me according to thy mercy," you are rehearsing a new identity: the Self who is mercy and the instrument through which power flows. The cries of adversaries become signals of old, limiting dispositions; let them be ashamed not by struggle, but by your inner conversion: you no longer argue with lack but affirm the present demonstration of supply. "He shall stand at the right hand of the poor" translates to the right-hand awareness sustaining the humble—your inner poor, the beliefs saying you are not enough. Your task is to assume that this mercy is already given, to feel that the hand of God has saved you, and to let others perceive this reality as proof of power. Praise arises from a consciousness that recognizes and dwells in the immediate act of salvation.
Practice This Now
Assume the state: 'I am saved by the mercy of the I AM,' and in a quiet moment feel that restoration as real; when fear rises, revise to 'this is the hand of God at work in me' and let the affirmation flood your being.
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