Inner Psalm Of Abandonment
Psalms 74:1 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 74 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 74:1 voices a cry to God in a moment of felt abandonment and divine anger directed at the people.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the Neville mood, the cry is not about a distant deity but about a state of consciousness. 'O God, why hast thou cast us off' becomes the inner question: 'Why have I forgotten my own I AM?' The 'anger' that smokes against the 'sheep of thy pasture' is the inner friction born of believing you are separated from your divine wholeness. The exile described is the felt distance between awareness and its content, the sense that the pasture—your life field—belongs to a power outside you. Yet the I AM is never absent; it is the very consciousness through which you imagine separation. By acknowledging that all events are inner movements, you can revise the impression of abandonment by returning to the unwavering conviction that God is the ever-present I AM within you. Rest emerges as you align with that inner guiding presence, allowing every part of your being to graze in the pasture of infinite awareness.
Practice This Now
Assume the state: 'I am in God’s constant presence.' Feel this as a real living memory; breathe, and visualize the inner anger dissolving into calm as you dwell in the pasture of awareness.
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