Lift Your Eyes to Inner Help
Psalms 121:1-4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 121 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 121:1-4 speaks of looking to the hills for help, declaring that true assistance comes from the LORD, the Creator; God watches over and protects, never allowing our footing to fail.
Neville's Inner Vision
Here the hills are not distant cliffs but the inner heights of awareness. The speaker, in Neville's psychology, does not seek God afar; he imagines that the I AM is the source of every help and that the hill represents a state of consciousness of security. Your help comes from the Lord, the One who made heaven and earth—the built-in order of your own being. The line 'He will not suffer thy foot to be moved' is a promise that your inner stance, once fixed in the perception of your divine foundation, cannot be toppled by the transient appearances of fear. The keeper of Israel who neither slumbers nor sleeps translates to your own attention and I AM awareness, always awake, always tending to your experience. Recognize that Providence is an inner activity: the moment you realize 'I am kept,' you stop oscillating between doubt and faith; you rest in unshakable vigilance that follows you as you move. This text invites you to dwell in a steady consciousness that is always present, always protective, and always near.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, lift your inner gaze to the I AM, and repeat, 'My help comes from the Lord, the maker of heaven and earth,' feeling this as your immediate reality.
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