Covenant Mind Awakening
Psalms 74:20-21 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 74 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 74:20-21 pleads for God to honor the covenant, recognizing a world filled with cruelty. It asks that the oppressed not be shamed and that the poor and needy praise thy name.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within your consciousness, the covenant is not a distant contract but a living, immediate I AM—awareness as action. The phrase 'dark places of the earth' translates to the stubborn corners of your own mind where cruelty can seem to lodge. When you treat the covenant as your current condition, you starve cruelty of its ground and you breathe a new reality into existence through assumption. The clause 'let not the oppressed return ashamed' invites you to release the old feeling of diminishment; revise that image by feeling, right now, that you are seen, justified, and intact by the I AM. The 'poor and needy' are those lackful, tender parts of you awakening to praise the Name—the inner intelligence that governs all. As you persist in this feeling of already-being, the inner dispositions begin to realign, and the outer world rises to reflect your inward covenant. The Psalm is not asking a future rescue but inviting you to live as the covenant person, where mercy and justice flow from the I AM through imagination into your seen world.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume the state: 'I AM the covenant now.' Repeat, 'I AM deliverance and praise' while feeling the weight of that truth as real, here and now.
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