Inner Awakening Through Psalm 77:3-4
Psalms 77:3-4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 77 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 77:3-4 portrays a moment of recalling God that triggers distress and a spirit overwhelmed, even to the point of silence. It reveals how inner states shape what we perceive, showing the I AM either as presence or as disturbance.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within Neville's framework, the recall of God is not a mere thought but the turning of the entire state of consciousness. When I remember God, the mind may tremble, the spirit may feel overwhelmed, even to the point of speechlessness; yet this disturbance is the raw material I use to reframe reality. The 'Selah' is not a retreat from truth but a pause in identification, a gateway to the I AM. 'Thou holdest mine eyes waking' can be read as the inner assurance that consciousness itself is kept alert by the divine within, not by external conditions. The cure is not to argue with the storm but to revise the sense of 'I' from troubled self to the awareness that witnesses all images. If I inhabit the I AM as my permanent state, the memory of God becomes the anchor that dissolves fear and breathes life into calm imagination. Because imagination creates reality, I practice feeling it-real now: I am the I AM, awake, at peace, and the outer scene follows that inner light.
Practice This Now
Assume the I AM as your unshakable reality; feel the peace as if it is happening now. Then breathe and rest in the conviction that your inner seeing shapes the waking world.
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