Inner Deliverance Psalms 129
Psalms 129:2-4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 129 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The psalm recalls being afflicted since youth, yet not prevailing. The furrows of oppression mark the struggle, but the Lord's righteousness cuts the cords of the wicked.
Neville's Inner Vision
Observe that the afflictions spoken of are not external chains alone but movements of consciousness in time. The youth of oppression means a long habit of believing one is at the mercy of others; yet the speaker adds, they have not prevailed against me—the I AM within remains untouched. The furrows laid upon the back are the grooves of belief that you are defined by what happens to you. But righteousness is not a moral verdict; it is the inner radiation of rightness—the God in you—that cuts the cords of the wicked. When you, as the I AM, persist in a single, vivid assumption—that you are free, intact, and supported by Providence—the bonds dissolve. The external trial then becomes a signpost pointing inward, inviting you to revise the sense of self until it matches the truth of your divine birth. Providence steps forward as you hold this inner conviction, and the outer scene rearranges to reflect it.
Practice This Now
Practice: close your eyes, repeat, 'I am the I AM, free and unbound,' and feel the cords of limitation falling away as you align with inner righteousness.
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