The I Am Reveals All

Psalms 83:16-18 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Psalms 83 in context

Scripture Focus

16Fill their faces with shame; that they may seek thy name, O LORD.
17Let them be confounded and troubled for ever; yea, let them be put to shame, and perish:
18That men may know that thou, whose name alone is JEHOVAH, art the most high over all the earth.
Psalms 83:16-18

Biblical Context

The psalm frames adversaries as catalysts to seek God. It ends with the claim that Jehovah is the Most High over all the earth.

Neville's Inner Vision

Observe how the text does not command God to move in space, but to awaken within you. The 'enemies' are images of fear, pride, and limitation—inner conditions that, when named and faced, are exposed to the light of I AM. Fill their faces with shame becomes a metaphor for correcting perception: as you insist on the truth of Jehovah—the I AM that you are—these old pictures shrink, confess wrongdoing, and vanish. Let them be confounded and troubled is the internal shaking of the old self that clings to separation. Perish translates not physical death but the death of the belief in separation from God. The final clause declares: that men may know that thou, whose name alone is Jehovah, art the Most High over all the earth. In Neville's practice, you don't demand change from without; you realize you are the consciousness that commands all appearances. When you dwell in I AM, the entire world rearranges to honor that sovereignty.

Practice This Now

Practice: close your eyes, assume 'I AM' as the sovereign observer, and revise any external threat as a feature of your inner state dissolving into light. Feel the shift; let the image of the 'enemy' vanish as you affirm 'Jehovah is the Most High' within.

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