Inner Praise: The Soul's Song
Psalms 146:1-2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 146 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse invites a constant posture of praise, commanding the soul to lift up God with every living moment. It presents praise as a vow spoken from the deepest self, not a passing ritual.
Neville's Inner Vision
Psalm 146:1-2 invites us to see praise not as an external act toward a distant God, but as a first-person alignment of consciousness. When the soul declares, 'Praise the LORD,' it is the I AM affirming presence; the act of praise is the inner choosing of reality itself. To live is to persist in that assumption: I am always praising, I am always with God, I am the living song of gratitude. If you awaken to lack, don’t beg for change; revise your sense of self to the observer who already sings. The 'LORD' is the inner ruler—the divine I AM within—whose authority governs every perception. Your singing unto God becomes the living condition that conditions your world, because feeling and belief precede form. The more you cultivate that cadence of praise, the more the outer life aligns with it, reflecting a steady inner sun. Make praise your habitual state and watch how your inner reality blooms into outward experience.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit quietly, repeat 'I am praising the LORD with all my being' in the present tense, and feel that gratitude as real right now. Let that feeling color the next moment of awareness.
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