Teeth at the Inner Feast
Psalms 35:16 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 35 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The psalm speaks of hypocritical mockers at a feast who gnash their teeth at the speaker. It hints that outer scorn reflects inner disturbance that can be transformed by inner work.
Neville's Inner Vision
In Neville's map, the mockers are not distant foes but inner states of consciousness—fear, insecurity, judgment, and the craving for approval. The feast is your self-image theater, the stage where you seek belonging, and the gnashing teeth symbolize the relentless inner voices that bite at peace. The I AM—your true awareness—remains untouched by any scene. When you interpret the scene as inner, you can change it by assumption, revision, and feeling-it-real: adopt the state you desire as already real, and let the body feel the truth, not the threat. See the mockery dissolve as you rest in the certainty that you imagine this world into being. Do not argue with outer actors; instead, align with the inner state and claim sovereignty over the narrative. The feast becomes a festival of wholeness, and the future hope arises from present consciousness.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Close your eyes and imagine an inner feast where you are welcomed as you are; say I AM and feel a steady calm. Then revise the mockery into encouragement until the scene rings true.
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