Inner Justice Psalm 82:2

Psalms 82:2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Psalms 82 in context

Scripture Focus

2How long will ye judge unjustly, and accept the persons of the wicked? Selah.
Psalms 82:2

Biblical Context

Psalm 82:2 challenges biased judging and favoritism, inviting a fairer discernment that sees beyond personal prejudice.

Neville's Inner Vision

Psalm 82:2 speaks to the inner court of your own consciousness. The question 'How long will ye judge unjustly, and accept the persons of the wicked?' is not a verdict about people outside you; it is a mirror of the judgments you hold inside regarding your circumstances. In Neville's terms, God is the I AM, the awareness that creates. To judge unjustly is to project your own fear, lack, or insufficiency onto others and then treat those projected motives as real. But you can reverse the movement by refusing to accept the identification of anyone as 'wicked' in your mind. When you stop selecting 'worthy' and 'unworthy' images, you begin to see that each situation is but a sign from your own inner state. Selah—pause—before you pass sentence. In this pause you revise your state: declare that you are the I AM, that justice flows through your awareness, and that events reflect your ruling assumption rather than outer conditions. As you dwell in that truth, the outer world rearranges to match the inner measure.

Practice This Now

Assume the state of I AM now; declare, 'I am the I AM, through whom justice flows without bias.' Then spend five minutes feeling it real by imagining yourself listening to others with complete impartiality, and observe how circumstances align with that inner justice.

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