Inner Mercy Healing Psalm 41
Psalms 41:4-6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 41 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The speaker asks God for mercy to heal the soul, acknowledging sin. The verses reveal inner conflict with thoughts and rumors as reflections of the ego, inviting mercy, forgiveness, and restoration.
Neville's Inner Vision
Think of the Lord not as a distant judge but as the I AM within you, the awareness that never leaves its own image. When the psalmist asks for mercy and healing of the soul, he is voicing a universal demand: shift your state of consciousness. Mercy is not mercy from outside; it is the rearrangement of your inner conditions so that you and God are one expression. The 'sins' are simply thoughts of separation that you have allowed to cling to you; the 'enemies' are those counterclaims that declare your identity is flawed. The line 'when shall he die, and his name perish?' is the ego’s death wish on a former self-image—an invitation to let a die-away of the old you occur by your present I AM awareness. When the old self appears and speaks vanity, recognize it as mere noise in the mind; when it goes abroad and tells it, you do not entertain it. Healing and reconciliation come by affirming your oneness with God, by feeling the truth that you are already forgiven and restored. Make the assumption: I am healed now; I am one with the I AM.
Practice This Now
Sit quietly, breathe, and declare, 'I am healed now; I am one with the I AM.' Visualize the voices fading as a bright mercy flows through the soul, and revise any inner story of sin with the new testimony of wholeness.
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