Inner Feast of Worship
Psalms 22:29 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 22 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse presents two sides of humanity— the wealthy who eat and worship, and the downcast who bow— and hints that true life cannot be sustained by ego alone.
Neville's Inner Vision
Viewed through the Neville lens, wealth and dust are inner states, not external facts. 'Fat upon earth' signals a mind fed by appearances, confident in its own separate existence. 'Eat and worship' invites you to feed on reverent awareness—imagining you are the I AM, and that the Presence sustains you moment by moment. The line about those who go down to the dust bowing before him is the inner surrender of the ego to the divine Presence within, a voluntary alignment rather than a defeat. 'None can keep alive his own soul' is a reminder that ego-identity cannot sustain true life; real vitality comes from God’s life within you. So the verse invites you to practice: assume you are the living I AM. In every moment, revise any sense of lack by imagining you are nourished by the divine, and feel the bow as steadiness of consciousness before the Presence.
Practice This Now
Assume you are the I AM now and imagine a radiant inner banquet. Feel the life of God nourishing you and revise lack into confident gratitude.
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