Cry To Your Inner Rock
Psalms 28:1 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 28 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse shows the speaker crying to the Lord, seen as a rock; he fears silence that might plunge him into despair, turning prayer into a petition for unshakable presence. He seeks reassurance from God as his refuge.
Neville's Inner Vision
To Neville, the cry of Psalms 28:1 is not a petition to a distant sky, but a turning of attention to the I AM who dwells as your rock within. When you cry, you are not pleading with God so much as shifting your sense of self from fear to unshakeable awareness. The rock stands in the midst of your storm, an inner reference point that remains unmoved while every thought of lack or silence passes by. If you fear that God is silent and you will descend into a pit, revise the scene: realize that silence is simply the condition of your old story; awaken the conviction that you are heard because you are, the I AM itself, listening in your own consciousness. As you persist in this assumption, the inner atmosphere changes; trust is restored, and what seemed external delay resolves into a fresh sense of salvation already present in you. The external world then reflects your inner state, not by force but by your consciousness aligning with the rock of awareness.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit quietly, declare the I AM as your rock now, and feel its steady presence. Repeat 'I am; I am here' until you sense unshakable assurance.
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