Hear Me Now: Inner Petition
Psalms 141:1 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 141 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse pleads for swift attention and a listening ear as the speaker cries out. It emphasizes urgent petition and a desire to feel heard.
Neville's Inner Vision
Imagine this psalm not as a precise movement of your own consciousness. The cry 'Lord, I cry unto thee' is the moment you acknowledge the I AM, your ever-present awareness, listening to the call you have voiced. When you assume you are heard, you invite the inner atmosphere to respond with immediacy; haste becomes the felt shift of state, the stamp of belief that you are already attended. Neville teaches that prayer is not begging but the act of dwelling in the assumption that what you desire is already true. Thus the voice you cry with is your inner voice, and the ear you seek is the vibrating awareness inside you that honors your request. If you practice that modified sense of being—feeling the presence, accepting the answer, and living from that realization—the outer circumstances align with your inner condition. The verse thus becomes a technique: remember you are heard because you are, in truth, the I AM hearing itself.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Sit quiet, place a hand on your chest, and repeat 'I AM heard; I am attended' until a sense of being already answered settles in. Then move as if the matter is settled, carrying the feeling of warranted attention into your next action.
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