Inner Turn Toward God
Psalms 60:1 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 60 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 60:1 speaks of God having cast us off and scattered us, with a plea for God to turn back and restore. It frames exile and longing as the cry for divine presence.
Neville's Inner Vision
Psalm 60:1 speaks not of a distant God but of your inner state—the I AM—momentarily turned away from your gates of consciousness. The cast-off and scattered are the motions of a mind convinced of separation from the I AM. Yet the line 'O turn thyself to us again' is an invitation from consciousness to revise the scene. In Neville’s method, you do not plead with an external deity; you assume the feeling of being already turned toward, already restored. Close your eyes and feel your awareness facing you, as if God were the I AM granting you immediate attention. See the exiles and dispersions dissolving into a single, centered presence. When you accept that you are the one who turns God toward you, the sense of abandonment fades and a new arrangement of reality appears—restoration occurs not by begging, but by a deliberate, felt revision in imagination. The world around you follows the new inner posture, and you move from exile into the fullness of return.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and imagine the I AM turning toward you with open arms; silently affirm, 'I am turned toward me now' and rest in the feeling of restored unity.
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