Inner Mercy: Psalm 130 Reframe
Psalms 130:7-8 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 130 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 130:7-8 invites hopeful reliance on the LORD’s mercy and abundant redemption, promising deliverance from all iniquities. In Neville’s lens, 'Israel' is the inner state of consciousness seeking release.
Neville's Inner Vision
Consider this psalm as a map for the inner man. The cry 'Let Israel hope in the LORD' is not a distant petition but a switch of consciousness: turn your attention to the I AM within, where mercy abounds and redemption is plenitude. When you dwell in that awareness, you are not begging for forgiveness but choosing to live from it. The word 'redeem' points to a transformation of your inner weather—the guilt, the sense of separation, the iniquities you carry—being dissolved by the act of imagined realization. In Neville’s practice, you do not seek favor from a far deity; you declare that the I AM has already enacted mercy, that your state is washed in that redeeming light, and your thoughts align with it. The shift is personal, instantaneous, and total: a remembered truth returning to your consciousness, re-creating your present as redeemed and free.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit quiet, enter the I AM, and revise any sense of unworthiness by declaring, 'I am redeemed now.' Feel that mercy as a tangible sensation flowing through your consciousness.
The Bible Through Neville










Neville Bible Sparks









