Inner Praise Power of I Am
Psalms 150:1-3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 150 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalms 150 invites wholehearted praise to God—within the sanctuary and in the firmament of his power—and using musical imagery to honor His mighty acts and greatness. It frames praise as a comprehensive response to divine acts, expressed through inner faculties of attention, feeling, and speech.
Neville's Inner Vision
Consider that the 'Lord' in this psalm is not a distant deity but the I AM you awaken to as consciousness. When you read, 'Praise ye the LORD in his sanctuary; praise him in the firmament of his power,' you are being invited to shift your inner weather into a state of praise—where the mind holds steady in awareness of God as your own being. The sanctuary is the quiet center of you; the firmament of power is the expansive imagination you wield at every moment. To praise 'for his mighty acts' and 'according to his excellent greatness' is to acknowledge that every inner movement—each victory, each clarity, each felt release—exists because you are aware of it. The trumpet, psaltery, and harp are symbols of inner faculties—breath, attention, emotion—attuned to the same deliberate pitch: the awareness that you already possess the very reality you seek. Keep this praise as a continuous atmosphere of consciousness, and you will find that what you celebrated inwardly begins to manifest outwardly by the law of assumption. In short, praise is the practice of living as the I AM already knowing itself.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit quietly, assume the feeling of continuous praise—'I am the I AM praising itself'—and visualize a bright sanctuary within you surrounded by a vast firmament. Let that feeling linger, then move through your day dwelling in that state.
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