Inner Arrow of Self-Justice
Psalms 64:7-8 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 64 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The psalm says God shoots at the wicked with an arrow, wounding them suddenly. It also says their own tongue will trip them up, causing all who see them to flee.
Neville's Inner Vision
Notice that this Psalm is not about distant foes; it is about the inner dynamics of your own consciousness. When God is spoken as I AM, the arrows are not weapons aimed at others but beliefs and judgments you project into your world. The line that they will be wounded suddenly is the moment a refusal to hold a troubling thought collapses, a shock of realization that the attack you perceived was simply a vibration you sent forth and then believed. The tongue that trips them up represents the self-creating power of your words—once you see them as reflective of your inner state, you stop interrupting your own peace. Observe how 'all that see them flee' describes the withdrawal of appearances when the inner atmosphere shifts. Your responsibility is not to fight but to revise, to assume a new state of awareness in which the imagined attacker is dissolved by the I AM presence within you. As you hold this assumption, the external scene adjusts to match your inner light, and judgment loses its grip.
Practice This Now
Assume the state: God is the I AM within you, shooting away every judgment. Revise the scene and feel the relief as the arrows turn back on the belief you released.
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