Inner Psalm Of Patience
Psalms 13:1-2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 13 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 13 voices a cry of seeming abandonment, asking how long the divine presence will be hidden and sorrow will persist.
Neville's Inner Vision
Your cry in Psalm 13 is not a plea to an external deity; it is a call to awaken from a state of separation you have temporarily accepted as real. Remember, God is the I AM within you, and the moment you insist on its presence, the long night dissolves. The 'how long' question marks the duration of a belief you have inhabited—forgetfulness of your own identity as awareness. When you take counsel in your soul and feel sorrow, you are simply rehearsing a false story. Shift the scene by assuming the opposite: that the LORD's face is ever upon you, that you are never forgotten by the One within. Hold that assumption until it feels true in the body, until eyes see with the light of inner knowledge. As you continue to dwell in that awareness, the external enemy—fear, doubt, loss—begins to lose its grip, because you are no longer supporting it with attention. The psalm becomes a practice of returning to consciousness, the return to the I AM.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: In the next moment, revise the thought 'God has forgotten me' to 'God is here now as I AM.' Feel the warm light of awareness saturate your chest and rest there as you affirm 'I AM.'
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