Trusting the Inner LORD
Psalms 31:6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 31 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse rejects worship of false vanities and affirms trust in the LORD. It invites turning from empty appearances to inner reliance.
Neville's Inner Vision
To Neville, the verse speaks to a state of consciousness. Lying vanities are not external idols but the shifting beliefs that pretend to define you—fear, lack, need, the ego's vanity. To hate them is to refuse identification with them, to choose a deeper allegiance: trust in the LORD, the I AM within. When you shift your attention from outward signs to the steady inner awareness, your life rearranges itself to match that conviction. Reality, in this view, is a projection of consciousness; the more you acknowledge the LORD as your inseparable awareness, the more your surroundings reflect steadiness, clarity, and surety. The act of hating vanities becomes a practice of revision—refusing to invest in illusions and renewing belief in the inner ruler who never deceives. So stand firm in the sense I am not the vanities of opinion; I am the I AM who trusts. The internal shift is sufficient to transform external conditions.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and revise: I am the I AM; the LORD within is my trust. Feel that truth as already done, and let it displace vanity images.
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