The Fool and the I Am

Psalms 53:1 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Psalms 53 in context

Scripture Focus

1The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God. Corrupt are they, and have done abominable iniquity: there is none that doeth good.
Psalms 53:1

Biblical Context

Psalm 53:1 declares that the fool says there is no God; Neville would read this as a state of consciousness that denies the I AM, not a fact about others.

Neville's Inner Vision

Within the verse, the fool is not outside; he is a condition of consciousness saying there is no God—a stubborn conviction of lack. God is the I AM that fears or forgets itself as fullness. When you hear that voice, you are being invited to awaken the inner witness, to revise the assumption that there is absence. This Psalm shows two realms: the inner core that already holds God and the outer show of distraction when we forget; yet it is all the same mind. By refusing the hunger for proof outside, you align with the conviction that God is here as your own awareness. This faithfulness is not dogma but alignment: you imagine and feel the truth until it becomes your lived reality. The act of saying there is God within me shifts the entire field, turning the fool's claim into a stepping stone toward trust and wholeness.

Practice This Now

Imaginative_act: Assume the I AM now within you. Revise the inner speech to there is God within me and dwell in the felt sense until it becomes your living reality.

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