Mercy Responds to Hope

Psalms 33:22 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Psalms 33 in context

Scripture Focus

22Let thy mercy, O LORD, be upon us, according as we hope in thee.
Psalms 33:22

Biblical Context

The verse asks for God's mercy to be with us in proportion to our hope in Him. It links mercy with trust and expectation.

Neville's Inner Vision

Psalm 33:22 invites you to dwell as if mercy is the air you breathe, because mercy is the natural state of your true I AM. In this Neville reading, God is not an external overseer but the awareness you awaken to in the present moment. Your 'hope in thee' is a precise assumption: you trust that the divine nature is already kindness, guidance, and relief. Hence mercy does not arrive as a distant favor; it is made real as your inner atmosphere. When you maintain the feeling that mercy is upon you now, the outer circumstances adjust to that inner reality. The world mirrors your inner state, and a persistent hopeful consciousness dissolves lack by revealing the abundance that was always there. The discipline is simple: assume the mercy is already upon you, revise any sense of separation, and feel it real in your chest, here and now. With that conviction, you align yourself with the I AM, and the Psalm's promise becomes your lived experience.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and in your imagination, affirm to the I AM within you: 'Mercy is upon me now because I hope in Thee.' Hold that feeling as real for a minute.

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