Inner Wealth That Transcends Time
Psalms 49:10-12 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 49 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Mortals die and wealth is left to others. People imagine their houses and lands enduring forever, but true honor does not persist.
Neville's Inner Vision
Think of the scene as an inner script. The verse observes that wise men and fools alike die and leave their wealth behind; in Neville’s psychology, this is the notice that outer things cannot define a life. The one who fixes identity on houses or lands is playing in the outer dream, believing continuity is found in property. But consciousness is the real stage, and the only permanence. When you accept that you are the I AM—awareness itself—you will see that wealth is not a stash in a bank, but the feeling of sufficiency that arises when you are aligned with inner truth. If you revise your sense of self from 'I am a person who owns' to 'I AM is the owner of all states,' then the death of form becomes a gentle reminder, not a catastrophe. Your true stock is the creative act of imagining; you are the imagineer, not the image. As you dwell in that state, judgment softens, accountability becomes welcome feedback, and provision flows as a natural expression of your inner reality, not as a contest with time or mortality.
Practice This Now
Act: Sit in quiet stillness and declare, 'I AM the I AM; I am wealth that never dies.' Then revise any claim that possessions define me and feel the abundance as an inner reality, letting it shift outer circumstances.
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