Inner Mercy Remembered
Psalms 25:6-7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 25 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 25:6–7 pleads for God to remember His mercies and not count past sins, asking to be remembered for goodness. It centers on divine forgiveness and the enduring mercy that sustains the seeker.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within my I AM, the calling to Remember thy tender mercies is not a memory of yesterday but a conscious alignment with my true nature. When I say Remember, O LORD, thy tender mercies, I am naming the atmosphere I dwell in—the warm, unceasing mercy that recognizes my being as inseparable from God. To Remember not the sins of my youth is to refuse to treat the old self as present; it is a deliberate revision of identity, a decision that the past no longer governs the now. Remember thou me for thy goodness' sake becomes a pledge to align my present state with the I AM’s immutable goodness—an effortless favor that flows from being, not from merit. This is the realization that salvation, pardon, and reconciliation are states I can assume, not plead for. When I assume this truth, my outer world increasingly reflects inner certainty: I am cherished, mercifully regarded, and forever held in the light of my own true worth.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and affirm, 'I am remembered by tender mercy now,' then revise any old sins as not present in my life and feel the goodness that is my present state.
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