Desolate Tents, Redeemed Mind
Psalms 69:24-25 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 69 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The psalmist calls for divine indignation to fall on enemies and for their dwelling to become desolate.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the Neville mode, this passage is not about punishing others but about the inner states of consciousness. 'Pour out thine indignation' becomes the fierce energy that dislodges the old, fear-based beliefs within your mind. 'Let their habitation be desolate' translates to the destruction of the habitual houses of thought—victimhood, lack, and separation—that you have unknowingly occupied with attention. 'Let none dwell in their tents' is the clearing of space, so that no old fear-narrative can reside in your awareness. The enemies are the stubborn memories and identifications that pretend to govern your life. By abiding as the I AM—the single, unchanging awareness—you do not attack but dissolve. The desolation is inner renewal: the house of belief is emptied so new conditions can be imagined into being. See this not as punishment but as the natural thinning of what has hidden your true abundance. The renewed life arises when imagination is allowed to reign in place of fear and judgment.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes and declare, 'I am the I AM.' Then imagine the old tents dissolving and a bright, new habitation rising within your mind.
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