Inner Deliverance Psalm 141:7-10
Psalms 141:7-10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 141 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The psalmist faces danger and snares, but his true sight is toward God, trusting that divine presence preserves his life. He prays for protection and escape from the nets of iniquity.
Neville's Inner Vision
The lines invite you to read danger as a symbol within consciousness, not a fixed fate. The bones at the grave's mouth signify an old self, imagined death, and separation from God; your true sight is the I AM, the constant awareness unto which you turn your gaze. ‘In thee is my trust’ declares that trust resides in consciousness itself, not in external conditions, and therefore cannot be displaced by a scene of threat. To be kept from snares and gins is to maintain a deliberate mood of impregnable inner certainty, refusing to identify with fear-based thinking. The ‘wicked’ and their nets are projections of a restless mind; when you rest in the awareness of God, you rise above them and the outer drama dissolves into your inner state. Let the wicked fall into their own nets is a vision of justice enacted internally, not a command to retaliate. The movement is clear: assume the end—deliverance, safety, and oneness with God—and live from that end until the world mirrors it.
Practice This Now
Assume you are already delivered by the I AM. Sit quietly, repeat quietly, “I am held safe in God; I am not destitute,” and envision the nets dissolving as your inner gaze remains fixed on the divine center.
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