Depths To Divine Listening
Psalms 130:1-2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 130 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The psalmist cries from a deep place and asks God to hear. The cry seeks attention to the voice of supplication.
Neville's Inner Vision
Out of the depths is the cry of a mind pressed by longing, but in truth the depths are the hidden rooms of your own consciousness. The LORD in this psalm is not a distant person but your I AM—your uninterrupted awareness that hears and answers. When you cry, you are signaling a movement of attention within: you are calling your own inner God to attend to the voice of your supplications. Hear and attend are the same action: as you persist in the feeling that you are heard, you align with the assumption that the wish is already known and granted. The moment you imagine the response of God, you are not petitioning from lack but conducting a realignment of your state. The ears that attend are your inner faculties waking to the truth that you are the living temple where mercy and presence reside. Your prayer becomes not a plea to an external God, but a returning of consciousness to its own highest state, where all requests are already satisfied in the I AM.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, place your attention in your chest or forehead as the I AM, and declare, 'I am heard.' Then, dwell there for a minute, feeling the inner reply as if your desire has already been granted.
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