Deliverance Through Inner Remembrance

Psalms 6:4-5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Psalms 6 in context

Scripture Focus

4Return, O LORD, deliver my soul: oh save me for thy mercies' sake.
5For in death there is no remembrance of thee: in the grave who shall give thee thanks?
Psalms 6:4-5

Biblical Context

Psalm 6:4–5 asks God to deliver the soul for mercy, noting that in death there is no remembrance or thanks.

Neville's Inner Vision

The psalm is not a plea to a distant deity, but a map of your consciousness. To 'deliver my soul' is to awaken to the fact that you are the I AM, the living awareness that can revise any sense of self. The confession that there is no remembrance in the grave exposes the old lie that life and gratitude end with death. Your remembrance of God is a function of the living state you entertain now. By clinging to mercies as your own inner supply—unconditional awareness, creative imagination, and thankfulness—you do not wait for salvation; you become it. When you imagine from the end that you are saved by the mercies of your own consciousness, you rewrite the memory that you are separate from God. The 'death' dissolves as the old state yields to the new conviction: I am the I AM, here and now, insofar as I maintain a living thanksgiving and a felt-sense of protection, abundance, and grace. This is deliverance, not from an external event, but from an inner fear that pretends to be real.

Practice This Now

Assume I AM as your only reality now and feel the relief of being saved; then persist in a 60-second feeling of gratitude as if the prayer is already answered.

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