Crowned Year of Goodness
Psalms 65:11-13 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 65 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 65:11-13 pictures the year crowned with goodness. Abundance flows over the land and all creation rejoices.
Neville's Inner Vision
Take the verse as a declaration about your inner state, not a calendar prophecy. Thou crownest the year with thy goodness is the I AM speaking through your imagination: the moment you anchor consciousness in that truth, goodness becomes your felt reality. When you dwell there, thy paths drop fatness—your choices, images, and habits reveal effortless abundance as if fat and sweetness drip from every step. The wilderness and hills in the text are inner landscapes: you as the observer witness a thriving pasture of your thoughts, a valley rich with corn, flocks at hand. The joy and singing are your inner praise arising when you accept grace and favor as your natural condition, not a gift you must earn. This is true worship: an unwavering assumption that God—your I AM—has crowned the year with good; the outer world simply mirrors that inner crown. Neatly, the verse invites you to revise your sense of time and place: wherever you are, imagine the season already blessed, then carry that image into every moment. Your reality follows your inner inspired state.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and repeat: I am crowned with goodness this year. Visualize fatness dropping on your paths and the land lush with corn; feel gratitude as if it is your present experience, then proceed with your day.
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