Inner Memory of Creation
Psalms 143:5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 143 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The psalmist recalls the days of old, meditates on God's works, and muses on the craft of His hands. It presents a practice of inner reflection on creation as evidence of divine order.
Neville's Inner Vision
Remembering, in the sense of this verse, is not memory of a bygone hour but a deliberate shift of consciousness. When I say I remember the days of old, I am affirming that the past exists now in the I AM, as a vibrant pattern within my mind. The works of God are not distant miracles but the ongoing activities of my imagination expressed as form and order. To meditate on thy works is to fix attention on the living structures of experience—the laws, patterns, and harmonies by which events arrange themselves. The hands of God symbolize the powers of awareness that fashion my world; when I muse on the work of thy hands, I internalize the truth that I am the creator who imagines and thereby births what I behold. This practice cultivates discernment, because the thoughts I dwell upon grow into habits and circumstances. Neville’s counsel is simple: perceive the visible as a sign of inner activity, and align my inner talk with the end I desire. In this light, the Psalmist's memory becomes a tool for realigning consciousness with divine order.
Practice This Now
Assume you are already the one who remembers and governs your world. For five minutes, dwell on a single desired state as if it has already materialized, and feel it real.
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