Reversing Betrayal by Imagination
Psalms 35:12 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 35 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The psalmist did good to others and was repaid with evil, which wounded his inner peace. He describes how the inner hurt arises from the mismatch between outward deeds and others' responses.
Neville's Inner Vision
Viewed through the Neville lens, Psalm 35:12 is not a grievance about external enemies but a revelation of inner states. When you take the scene literally as 'they harmed me for good,' you endure two harms: the memory of the act and the belief that your good can be spoiled. The truth here is that sorrow arises when your consciousness identifies with the appearance of evil rather than with your I AM presence, the unalterable life within. If you insist you have been damaged by another's retaliation, you empower the scene and feed the spoiling of your soul. The remedy is to revise your inner assumption: affirm that you acted from love and that goodness is your real, uninterrupted state. See others as reflections of your own condition, not judges of your worth. The law of imagination moves when you hold the feeling of unassailable peace; the outer world will rearrange to mirror the renewed inner pattern. You are the I AM behind all events; your creative self governs the stage of life.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, recall the moment of harm, and revise the scene by assuming you acted from love and your soul remains untouched. Feel the certainty of that revised state as if it already is your daily experience.
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