Deep Cries to the I AM

Psalms 130:1 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Psalms 130 in context

Scripture Focus

1Out of the depths have I cried unto thee, O LORD.
Psalms 130:1

Biblical Context

Psalm 130:1 speaks of crying out of the depths to the LORD, signaling a deep inward petition rising from a sense of separation. It invites turning toward an inner source rather than seeking relief from without.

Neville's Inner Vision

Out of the depths is not a cry to a distant god but a turning of attention to the I AM that you are. The depths are the beliefs of lack, fear, and guilt hidden in the subconscious; the cry is merely the motion of consciousness waking to its own Source. When you hear the cry as a signal to shift your identity, you have not left the depths behind; you have redefined them as the very space where the I AM can appear. Mercy and compassion are the fruit of recognizing that the I AM is present now, here, as your true self. The external world rearranges as your inner state is revised; you begin to experience events as the effects of a belief rightly chosen. Thus the psalm becomes a practical law: assume the state of your own God-given presence, revise the belief of separation, and feel the reality of being loved, protected, and whole.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Sit quietly and, in your own words, declare, 'I AM within me now.' Hold that identification for a minute, feeling the relief that comes with the shift from plea to presence.

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