The Inner End of the Wicked
Psalms 37:38 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 37 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Plainly, the verse declares that the wicked meet a final end. It frames a cosmic accounting where wrongdoing is separated from righteousness, pointing to an intrinsic order within consciousness.
Neville's Inner Vision
Look at these words as a mirror for your inner life. The 'transgressors' are not distant enemies but thoughts and habits that distance you from your I AM. The claim that they shall be 'destroyed' is the inner natural consequence of withdrawing belief from them. When you stop feeding fear, resentment, or lack with attention, that image loses its hold and collapses. The 'end of the wicked' is the end of a story you have believed about yourself as separated from the divine order. In the moment you align with the awareness 'I AM'—the living presence that knows justice, mercy, and return—you dissolve the old image and reveal a new arrangement of your experience. The Psalm's law of judgment is really the law of consciousness: what you imagine as real persists, what you discontinue imagining returns to its source. Therefore, there is no external punishment; there is inward alignment. Your task is to practice being the one who sees through the old picture into the quiet, merciful order of your own being.
Practice This Now
Imaginative_act: Close your eyes and assume the I AM as your present reality. Revise any fear or resentment by picturing it dissolving and being replaced with scenes of justice, mercy, and harmony, and feel it real.
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