Deliverance Into Living Light
Psalms 56:13 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 56 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 56:13 declares deliverance of the soul from death and asks for protection so one may walk before God in the light of the living.
Neville's Inner Vision
Where you read death, I hear the moment your attention ceases to identify with fear, and where you read deliverance, you interpret a shift in your inner state. The psalmist says 'thou hast delivered my soul from death' as a statement of consciousness: your I AM is intact, unaffected by appearances. 'Wilt not thou deliver my feet from falling' speaks of the steadiness of your going when you know yourself as the living awareness that never collapses into doubt. To walk 'before God in the light of the living' is to walk in the day of your own inner recognition— to align with the consciousness that is ever-presence, the God within, the I AM that I am. In Neville's terms, the events of your life are pictures in the cinema of your mind, and you as the viewer have the power to revise them. Deliverance is not a rescue from without; it is a return to the recognized truth that you are always in the light, and your feet rise to that light when you feel it real.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Sit comfortably, close your eyes, and revise the verse into your own mind: 'I have been delivered from death; my feet are kept from falling; I walk now and forever in the light of the living.' Feel the truth as present, embodying it now.
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