Inner Cleanse Through Alignment
Psalms 19:13-14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 19 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
It warns to guard against presumptuous sins that would dominate you and to pursue uprightness. It also calls for the words of your mouth and the meditation of your heart to be acceptable to the I AM.
Neville's Inner Vision
To the imagination-stirred reader, these lines reveal a discipline of consciousness. The presumptuous sins are not external trespasses but states of mind that presume control—self-will, pride, habit, the thought that 'I must' apart from the I AM. When you refuse to yield to that state, you withdraw the dominion such thoughts would claim, and you awaken to a state of uprightness where your actions reflect the alignment of inner and outer. The great transgression can be seen as the belief that you are separate from your divine Source. By choosing, in imagination, to relegate those lower thoughts to the background, you rediscover the innocence that comes when you live from one I AM, not from divided voices. Then the words your mouth speak and the meditations of your heart become not a battlefield with moral law, but a single expression of truth—the same creative power that imagines the world. As you practice, you will notice that attention shifts from fight to alignment, and conduct follows.
Practice This Now
Imaginative_act: In quiet, assume the state of upright consciousness now; revise any thought of self-will as 'Not I but the I AM acting.' Then say, 'The words of my mouth and the meditations of my heart are acceptable to the I AM' and feel the alignment as if it were already true.
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