Morning Joy Psalms 30:5
Psalms 30:5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 30 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 30:5 contrasts a brief divine anger with enduring favor. It says weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning.
Neville's Inner Vision
Your true God is your I AM, the waking awareness that never leaves you. The verse teaches that anger endures only as a state you permit; favor is the quality of consciousness in which you live, and life is the expression of that state. Weeping belongs to the night of forgetting who you are, while morning joy is the natural dawn when you remember that you are the one who imagines. This is not a call to deny reality but to revise it from within: dwell in the feeling that your wish is already true, and let the inner light shift your weather. The I AM is timeless, and time moves as you shift states. By practicing the assumption of joy as your present state, you align with the morning and see the outer world reflect the dawn you have embraced. When you persist, you realize that joy is your birthright, and the night yields to day as your consciousness awakens to itself.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Sit quietly, repeat 'I am joy now' while picturing dawn breaking over your inner landscape; sustain the feeling for a minute and rest in the assumption until it feels normal.
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