Inner Vindication in Psalms 83:9-10
Psalms 83:9-10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 83 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verses recount a call for judgment on the foes of the people, describing their downfall and removal from the land.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the inner economy of Neville's teaching, Psalm 83:9-10 becomes a parable of your mind, where what you call enemies are beliefs, habits, and identities you have outgrown. The line Do unto them is not wrath but the I AM applying a decisive revision to stale mental patterns at the brook of Kison, the moment you choose to stand in awareness and let old stories pass. When it says which perished at Endor, they became as dung for the earth, that vision shows the old thought forms dissolving, turning into fertile soil for new growth. What falls away is not punishment but the removal of misperception, so that justice arises as harmony in consciousness. Providence appears as inner guidance—as you assume the truth of your unconditioned being, you witness outcomes that mirror your newly defined state. The verse invites you to stop identifying with the problem and to identify with the I AM, the observer who rewrites mental content rather than attacking it. In this light, righteousness is the steady alignment of your inner life with the truth you declare.
Practice This Now
Sit in quiet and assume the I AM. Revise one persistent belief until it dissolves, and feel the new spacious certainty expanding within you.
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