Inner Praise, Great Works
Psalms 111:1-2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 111 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 111:1-2 invites wholehearted praise to the LORD both in the heart and in the imagined assembly. It proclaims that the works of the LORD are great and available to all who delight in them.
Neville's Inner Vision
To the seeker of Neville's path, Psalm 111:1-2 becomes a map of consciousness rather than ceremony. Praise is not merely words spoken aloud, but a deliberate alignment of the I AM with its own glorious activity. When you say you will praise the LORD with your whole heart, you are choosing a single, undivided awareness—an inner union where all conflicting thoughts bow to truth. The 'assembly of the upright' and the 'congregation' become the inner company of states of consciousness that honor life and order, rather than the exterior crowd. In this light, the 'works of the LORD are great' refers to the magnificent manifestations that arise from such alignment: opportunities, harmony, healing, inspired ideas—things that reveal the operative nature of divine law in your experience. Those who seek and delight in these works become partners with their own inner creation. Thus praise is a revision of reality: by repeatedly dwelling in this exalted state, you invite the vast, orderly works of God to express themselves through you and as your life.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes, enter the inner assembly of the upright, and feel yourself praising the I AM with your whole heart. Then affirm boldly that the works of the LORD are great in your life, and let that truth settle as present fact in your consciousness.
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