Sing Praises to the Inner King
Psalms 47:6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 47 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 47:6 calls us to sing praises to God and to our King, a rhythm of worship that honors divine sovereignty. It suggests worship as an outer expression that reveals an inner allegiance.
Neville's Inner Vision
Think of the psalmist’s command as a guide to the state you are to entertain in consciousness. God is not a distant deity but the I AM that fills your being, and the King is the sovereign order of your inner life. When you say, 'Sing praises to God, sing praises unto our King,' you are not asking for favor; you are recognizing and confirming the already-present power and harmony within. Praise becomes a deliberate alignment of attention, a turning of your inner ear toward the throne of your own awareness. As you repeat the titles—God, King—you awaken the sense that you reign by virtue of consciousness itself, and the world rearranges to reflect that inward royal posture. Imagination is the instrument; you imagine yourself living in a realm governed by timeless order, where every circumstance mirrors your inner decree. The more you dwell in that state, the more your outer life reconfigures to match it, and praise ceases to be ritual and becomes living truth—the I AM’s royal expression in form.
Practice This Now
Imaginative_act: Sit quietly, place a hand on your chest, and repeat 'I AM the King of this inner kingdom' until you feel the sovereign presence. If a doubt arises, revise it to 'I AM and I reign here now.'
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