Haste of Help: Inner Deliverance
Psalms 70:5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 70 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The speaker declares poverty and need, and asks God to hurry. He frames God as help and deliverer.
Neville's Inner Vision
Observe that the words poverty and need reflect a state of consciousness, not a fixed condition. When the psalmist says I am poor and needy, he announces a mindset that demands transformation. The I AM within is the true God, the only power present; the outer world merely reflects the inner belief. To make haste unto me is to declare a firm decision that the inner source responds without delay. O God, thou art my help and deliverer, points to the inner helper who is always present as the self you identify with. The cry O LORD, make no tarrying becomes a vow to align thoughts and feeling with the reality you intend to experience. In this light, prayer is not bargaining with a distant deity but turning attention inward to the living I AM, in whom all danger and lack vanish. When you hold this conviction, the sense of poverty dissolves and you perceive deliverance already here, not as a future event but as a present fact realized by your imagination.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Close your eyes, revise the line I am poor and needy to I am the I AM, perfectly supplied now, and dwell in the felt sense of that truth for a minute. Let the sense of immediate help and deliverance fill your chest until it seems real.
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