Inner Pardon for Great Iniquity

Psalms 25:11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Psalms 25 in context

Scripture Focus

11For thy name's sake, O LORD, pardon mine iniquity; for it is great.
Psalms 25:11

Biblical Context

Psalms 25:11 requests pardon for great iniquity, invoked for the sake of God's name. It frames forgiveness as arising from God's nature, not earned by the sinner.

Neville's Inner Vision

To the I AM within, the 'name' spoken in this psalm is your living consciousness. When you ask pardon 'for thy name's sake,' you are not petitioning a distant judge but aligning your inner state with the holiness of the one I AM that you truly are. The great iniquity you feel is not a fixed fact about you; it is a belief your mind has rehearsed until it seems solid. Neville would say the forgiveness you seek already exists as your natural condition the moment you stop identifying with the old story and assume the new one. Pardon arises when the I AM, the unwounded self, asserts its unity with God and refuses to separate guilt from your divine essence. So, instead of begging, revise: 'I am forgiven now, for I and God are one.' As you dwell in that consciousness, the emotional atmosphere shifts—mercy, compassion, and grace become your inner weather and your external experience alike. The psalm's phrase becomes a device to awaken the awareness that you are already free.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Sit quietly, repeat 'I am forgiven now' as a fact of your I AM, and feel a sense of lightness spreading through chest and mind.

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