Inner Mercy Deliverance Psalm 143:12

Psalms 143:12 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Psalms 143 in context

Scripture Focus

12And of thy mercy cut off mine enemies, and destroy all them that afflict my soul: for I am thy servant.
Psalms 143:12

Biblical Context

The verse asks for mercy to cut off enemies that trouble the soul and destroy what afflicts the inner life. The speaker affirms loyalty as God's servant.

Neville's Inner Vision

Psalm 143:12 invites you to treat mercy as the ruling state of consciousness. The enemies you plead to cut off are not external powers but your own restless states—fear, guilt, the sense of separation from the I AM. When you declare, 'for I am thy servant,' you are choosing to sit as a servant of the one infinite awareness rather than as a slave to the thoughts that torment you. Mercy becomes your inner governance; it dries up the roots of perturbation by affirming that you are held within the I AM, not at the mercy of disturbance. In this light, deliverance is a shift of state, not a plea for rescue. You imagine the I AM actively cancelling the troubles that afflict the soul and then you dwell in the feeling of that mercy as your present reality. The moment you assume, you begin to feel the vibration of peace, confidence, and quiet power washing through the mind. Imagination creates the reconciliation; you simply adjust your assumption until the inner climate matches the mercy you seek.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes, revise your state to 'mercy governs me now'; feel the relief as if it were already true, and dwell there until it stabilizes. Make it your living I AM in that moment.

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