Bones at the Grave: Inner Resurrection
Psalms 141:7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 141 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse presents a vivid picture of mortality—bones scattered at the grave's mouth—symbolizing dissolution and endings. It suggests that what seems final is an inner movement of dispersion within consciousness.
Neville's Inner Vision
Imagine that the 'bones scattered' are not a literal coffin, but the scattered thoughts and beliefs that keep you from the life you desire. The 'grave's mouth' is the boundary you have drawn in your own mind between what you are now and what you wish to be. In Neville's terms, death is a state of consciousness, not a fate written in stone; you are the I AM, the awareness that never dies. By assuming a new sense of being, you can assemble the scattered bones into a single frame of life. Dare to dwell in the feeling that the entire self is already present, whole, and renewed, here and now. When you revise the impression of lack and imagine your wholeness, the inner movements rearrange the outer world. Your attention, not outside events, is the architect of the future; imagination creates reality. If you do this with calm conviction, the dispersed parts of you rejoin, and a fresh birth awakens in your experience.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, revise the scene: 'I am the I AM, and I gather every fragment into wholeness.' See the bones reassemble and life flow anew, then feel it as real in this moment.
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