The Inner Judge of Life

Psalms 7:11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Psalms 7 in context

Scripture Focus

11God judgeth the righteous, and God is angry with the wicked every day.
Psalms 7:11

Biblical Context

Plain sense: there is an ongoing inner discernment where states of righteousness are supported and states of wickedness are addressed.

Neville's Inner Vision

Your God is the I AM that is awake in you now. The 'righteous' are the states of consciousness that align with truth—calm, love, integrity—while the 'wicked' are thoughts of fear, separation, and judgment that seem to rule your mind. 'Every day' simply means the continuous activity of awareness, the constant examination of what you believe and imagine. The Psalm is not describing a distant deity meting out punishment, but inviting you to notice how you judge your own inner scenes. When anger arises at the wicked, recognize it as a signal that you are still believing in a split between yourself and life; you can revise by affirming that the I AM governs every image and feeling. By assuming that the righteous state is already present and letting the wickedness dissolve through inner correction, you harmonize your consciousness. In that immediacy, you discover that the judge and the judged are one: your awareness discerning its own content, and bringing it into alignment with its true nature. Thus, the kingdom of peace begins as your awareness rules itself.

Practice This Now

Imaginative Act: Close your eyes and affirm, I AM the judge and governor of my life. Revise any inner scene of wickedness by assuming it is already transformed into harmony, and feel the I AM sustaining this wholeness in you now.

The Bible Through Neville

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