Inner Wealth vs Outer Wealth
Psalms 73:12 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 73 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 73:12 observes that the ungodly seem to prosper and amass riches in the world. It contrasts outward display with inner life, inviting a shift in perception about true wealth.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the Neville fashion, we read the line not as an external judgment but as a mirror of your inward states. The word ungodly reveals a mind separated from the I AM—one who believes prosperity comes from the world and not from the kingdom of your own consciousness. When you dwell in that belief, you will witness prosperity in form, riches increasing in the outer scene, precisely because your attention is fixed on possessions as power. Yet the psalmist invites you to see beyond it: the outer show is but a reflection of your inner alignment. When you claim, in present tense, 'I AM that I AM,' wealth becomes your natural condition and the world follows that determination. The 'prospering' of the ungodly is not a condemnation but a clue to the power of assumption: you must assume the feeling of already having all you desire, in harmony with your true self. As you revise the memory of lack and feel the reality of abundance, you will notice a change in the inner weather, and the outer numbers will adjust to fit your new inner kingdom.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Sit quietly, close your eyes, and declare in the present tense that you are already wealth and abundance; revise any memory of lack, and feel the fullness as your natural state.
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