The Inner Wait for Salvation
Psalms 62:1 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 62 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The soul waits on God for safety and relief. True salvation comes from God alone.
Neville's Inner Vision
To the one who reads, this psalm is a map of consciousness. When it says 'Truly my soul waiteth upon God,' it invites you to rest your attention in the I AM rather than in the fluctuating appearances of the world. Salvation, in Neville's sense, arises not as a future rescue but as a present recognition that God is the I AM within you, the constant awareness by which you are alive. Waiting becomes active inner ownership: you do not beg for deliverance; you assume you already stand within the divine order and observe the world as rearranged to fit that truth. As you hold to that inner posture, fear dissolves into faith, want into sufficiency, and time into the present moment of realization. The source of your salvation then moves from a distant deity to your own consciousness; you are saved as you awaken to what you already are. Practice is to dwell in the I AM, to revise any sense of separation, and to feel the state of salvation here and now.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Close your eyes, breathe, and assume the state of salvation by declaring 'I AM salvation' until it feels real. Let that sense of being saved saturate your body and world as present, not future.
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