Remembrance Beyond the Grave

Psalms 6:5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Psalms 6 in context

Scripture Focus

5For in death there is no remembrance of thee: in the grave who shall give thee thanks?
Psalms 6:5

Biblical Context

The verse suggests that remembrance and gratitude toward God cease in death; therefore true worship must be established while we are living, not anticipated after death. It highlights the living state as the place where God is remembered and thanked.

Neville's Inner Vision

Death is not an outer fact to fear, but a belief that consciousness can end. The only reality is the I AM, the awareness that never dies. When you understand that remembrance of God is an inner disposition, you do not wait for the grave to remember. If you persist in the sense that life ends, you reinforce the separation between you and God; if you choose to remember now, you refuse the 'grave' as the last word. The psalm invites you to live as the living remembrance of Thee. As you imagine and feel the presence of God within, you are actively proving that remembrance is your inner state, not an external event. In practice, treat 'thanks' as a current sensation, a gratitude that fills your chest and radiates outward. The dead are not far; they are a belief in a moment you once did not exist in the I AM. Wake up to the truth that God is always within, and your remembrance of Him becomes your life, your worship, your being.

Practice This Now

Assume the feeling that you are always in the presence of God. Revise the verse into present tense: 'In me there is remembrance of Thee now; death cannot erase the living memory of God within me.'

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