Awakening Inner Justice
Psalms 59:5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 59 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The psalm asks God, the God of Israel, to awaken and visit the nations, judging the wicked. It frames divine justice as the antidote to transgression.
Neville's Inner Vision
In Neville's lens, the cry is not for a distant sovereign to punish others, but for your own consciousness to awaken to truth. 'Thou therefore, O LORD God of hosts' becomes the acknowledgment that the I AM—the hidden host within you—awakens to visit every inner state that has been unaddressed. The 'heathen' are your unobserved thoughts, habits, or feelings that have misaligned with the divine order. When you ask, 'be not merciful to any wicked transgressors,' you are declaring that you will not excise or ignore misalignment any longer; you will see, confront, and revise it with the firmness of inner justice. 'Selah' invites a pause for contemplation, a moment to allow the I AM to inspect the landscape of your inner city. Justice here is not vengeance but clarity—the return of your awareness to rightful, unclouded perception, freeing you from errant judgments you have entertained about yourself and others. As you align with this inner visitation, you become both the judge and the witness to your own transformation, turning every misstep into an opportunity for realignment with your true state.
Practice This Now
Assume the I AM is awake within you now. Notice any unexamined thoughts as 'wicked transgressors' and revise them with a firm, loving decree: 'You are seen; you are corrected; I accept only truth.'
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