Inner Reign Of Divine Justice
Psalms 146:7-10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 146 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 146:7-10 proclaims that God acts to judge the oppressed, feed the hungry, free prisoners, open blind eyes, lift up the bowed, and protect the vulnerable; it ends with the Lord's eternal reign. The passage contrasts the care of the righteous with the upheaval of the wicked.
Neville's Inner Vision
Psalm 146:7-10 is not a distant chronicle of events; it is a doorway into the living intelligence within you. The 'oppressed' and the 'hungry' and the 'prisoners' are inner states of consciousness—habits of lack, fear, and limitation—that you must redeem by turning your awareness to the I AM, the Lord who reigns in you. When you imagine God’s judgment in favor of the oppressed, you are rehearsing the correction of your own mind: you replace limitation with sufficiency, you feed absence with perception of fullness, you release thoughts that bind you and awaken the eyes of your awareness to possibility. The line, 'the Lord shall reign forever,' is your inner reassurance that the sovereign I AM is not temporary but perpetual within you. To practice is to revise your sense of circumstance by inviting that reign now; feel the righteous, the stranger, the widow, and the child of your soul being cared for by the same I AM. In this internal kingship, the way of the wicked is overturned not by external change, but by your consciousness changed from lack to abundance, from fear to love, from separation to unity with God.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Close your eyes and declare, 'The Lord reigns in me now.' Hold the feeling of abundance and protection for five minutes, revising every thought of lack until your inner perception aligns with the I AM’s eternal government.
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