Silence, Sin, and the Inner Return

Psalms 32:3-4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Psalms 32 in context

Scripture Focus

3When I kept silence, my bones waxed old through my roaring all the day long.
4For day and night thy hand was heavy upon me: my moisture is turned into the drought of summer. Selah.
Psalms 32:3-4

Biblical Context

The psalm speaks of the turmoil that comes when one keeps quiet about wrongdoing; unconfessed guilt unsettles body and spirit, until confession and turning bring relief.

Neville's Inner Vision

Here the inner man cries, not for judgment, but for the return of correspondence between God and you—the awareness you call I AM. When you pretend there is no separation, you keep the silence; the body speaks in roars and drought. But the moment you reverse the state, you confess the truth inwardly: you are already forgiven, you are reconciled, you are seen and held by the self that loves you. The 'hand' that weighed on you is but the pressure of awareness that your state must align with truth. In that moment, the dry moisture of the spirit gives way to living water as you feel the release of guilt, and your bones soften to ease instead of weariness. The verse invites you to evaluate the state you are choosing to inhabit: guilt or grace, bondage or freedom. Choose grace now by assuming the end; dwell in the feeling of reconciliation, and the external experience follows as the inner state harmonizes with the truth of I AM.

Practice This Now

Assume the state: I am forgiven now. Close your eyes, feel the release, imagine the inner light flowing through every bone, and say 'I AM reconciled' until it feels true.

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