Morning Prayer for Inner Presence
Psalms 5:3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 5 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse presents a morning habit: hear the Lord, direct your prayer to Him, and look up. It frames prayer as a deliberate alignment with Presence at the start of the day.
Neville's Inner Vision
Morning is not a clock but a state of consciousness. When I say, 'My voice shalt thou hear in the morning,' I am declaring that the divine listening begins the moment my attention rests in I AM. 'In the morning will I direct my prayer unto thee' becomes a deliberate act of spiritual imagination: I direct my desire by assuming the end—the feeling that what I seek is already mine, that the Presence I call upon is fully awake to my needs. 'And will look up' is the gentlest posture of the soul, turning from limitation to the Source, and beholding the Reality within. The inner scene is the sole stage; the outer world mirrors my inner state. If I begin the day with this recognition, I am rehearsing a law: my awakening to the I AM summons the events and people I need as evidence of the Presence. Thus the Psalm teaches true worship as conscious alignment, trust in the inner hearing, and faith that I am heard.
Practice This Now
This morning, close your eyes, breathe, and declare 'I am the Presence listening now.' Then imagine a scene where your need is already fulfilled and feel the joy of that realization.
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