Dawn Inside: The Soul Waits

Psalms 130:6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Psalms 130 in context

Scripture Focus

6My soul waiteth for the Lord more than they that watch for the morning: I say, more than they that watch for the morning.
Psalms 130:6

Biblical Context

The verse portrays a soul that waits for the Lord with a deeper longing than the watchmen who await morning, signaling steadfast hope and trust.

Neville's Inner Vision

To Neville, 'waiting for the Lord' is a declaration of inner validity. The Lord is not a distant person but the I AM who awakens as your own awareness. When the soul says 'I wait,' it is the deliberate posture that the dawn of fulfillment exists here and now. The watchmen who long for morning look to an external sunrise; the true dawn is the inner state you carry. So the verse teaches a conscious revision: assume the feeling of the wish fulfilled and dwell there until your experience mirrors it. The I AM is patient, persistent, and unshaken—the very current that moves thoughts, feelings, and events toward their manifest form. If you practice consistent alignment, the daybreak you seek is already present in imagination, and your outer world will catch up to the inner conviction. Therefore, wait not with anxiety, but with the quiet certainty that you are already where you intend to be, and every moment reinforces that glorious dawn.

Practice This Now

Sit quietly and assume the feeling of the fulfilled wish, stating 'I am the I AM, and this dawn is mine now.' Visualize a warm light expanding from your chest as if the outcome is already real, and linger there until the sensation stamps itself into your being.

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