The False Tongue Within

Psalms 120:3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Psalms 120 in context

Scripture Focus

3What shall be given unto thee? or what shall be done unto thee, thou false tongue?
Psalms 120:3

Biblical Context

Psalms 120:3 asks what is given to the tongue that speaks falsely, pointing to the power and consequences of speech.

Neville's Inner Vision

To the inner listener, Psalms 120:3 speaks not of external punishment but of your state of consciousness. The 'false tongue' is the habit of thoughts that deny truth—judgment, blame, and projection—that you have entertained as real in the mind. When you ask, 'What shall be given unto thee?' you are being shown that speech is a mirror of your inner atmosphere. If you condemn the tongue, you are condemning a part of yourself that believes separation and fear. The remedy is not repression but reorientation: assume the I AM is the source of all utterance; revise every hostile thought and careless word to reflect integrity and truth. Let your imagination declare, 'I speak as truth speaks through me'; feel the reality of that inner alignment in your chest and solar plexus. As you sustain this feeling-it-real, the outer world softens, conflicts resolve, and judgments fall away. In that inner work, you witness your words becoming guardians of unity rather than weapons of separation.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and notice any inner 'false tongue' in action; revise with, 'I AM truth; I speak from I AM; my words align with love and integrity.' Feel it real by repeating it three times with a heartbeat at the center.

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