Dawn Prayer Within: Morning I Am

Psalms 5:1-3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Psalms 5 in context

Scripture Focus

1Give ear to my words, O LORD, consider my meditation.
2Hearken unto the voice of my cry, my King, and my God: for unto thee will I pray.
3My voice shalt thou hear in the morning, O LORD; in the morning will I direct my prayer unto thee, and will look up.
Psalms 5:1-3

Biblical Context

Psalm 5:1-3 asks God to hear the speaker's words and meditation, and to listen to his cry. He vows to pray to God each morning, directing his heart upward.

Neville's Inner Vision

Within Neville's frame, the 'LORD' is the I AM that you ARE. 'Give ear to my words' becomes your decision to attend to the inner soundtrack of your consciousness; 'consider my meditation' invites you to scrutinize the quality of your thoughts as the living voice of your state. When you call God 'my King, my God,' you name the inner ruler who presides over your being, and the cry you hear is the ardent desire of that awakened self. To 'pray unto thee' is to turn all inner speech toward the I AM, trusting that your petition is already heard as you hold the assumption. 'My voice shalt thou hear in the morning' signals the moment you awaken to a listening Presence within; 'in the morning will I direct my prayer unto thee, and will look up' proclaims the rise of an upward-directed state. The practical truth remains: you become what you consistently assume, revise, and feel as real. Treat the morning as a fresh call to act from the inner king and God, and your outer world will follow the shift in consciousness.

Practice This Now

Imaginative Act: In the morning, revise the verse into present-tense first-person address and feel the I AM hearing you. Sit in stillness and imagine the inner king directly approving your petition, then carry that state into your day.

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