Inner Thunder of Psalm 29
Psalms 29:3-7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 29 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 29:3-7 presents the voice of God as a mighty, ordering force upon the waters, breaking old obstacles and establishing divine order within creation.
Neville's Inner Vision
Consider that the Psalm is not about distant thunder but about your own inner weather. The voice of the LORD upon the waters is the I AM speaking through your depths, the God of glory echoing in consciousness. When you assume the reality of that voice, it becomes powerful and majestic within; it moves the waters of belief, causing the surface to look different. The phrase that it breaks the cedars of Lebanon refers to the breaking of stubborn habits and fixed ideas that have seemed immovable. They bow, leap, and collapse as your attention is seized by the authoritative sound of your I AM. Lebanon and Sirion, the great mountains of memory, recede as your sense of self forms around this inner speech. The voice divides the flames of fire, pointing to the discernment of energy: not all energy is to be feared—some are fiery thoughts you can direct. In practical terms, this is a call to listen inwardly and feel the truth of your own divine nature, and to let that inward thunder reorder your life.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit quietly, listen for the inner thunder of your I AM speaking over the inner waters, and revise one limiting belief by declaring that you are already free and in rightful order.
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