Inner Winds of Psalms 83
Psalms 83:9-15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 83 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage invokes God to defeat Israel's enemies and scatter them. It frames these foes as tests of righteousness and divine justice.
Neville's Inner Vision
Who are the enemies in your Psalm? They are not distant foes but stubborn states of mind—doubt you lack, fear of failure, pride clinging to the old self. The 'houses of God' are the inner temple where you awaken to the I AM. When the text says make them like a wheel, or the stubble before the wind, it is describing the natural dissolution of worn-out ideas by the wind of awareness. Endor becoming dung signals that these beliefs cannot stand in the light of a revised state. The tempest and the storm are the inner pressure that accompanies a decisive shift in consciousness. By aligning with the I AM, you are not appealing to punishment but claiming a new ruling idea. Imagine the old thoughts spinning away, swept aside by a wind you have generated with your conviction. Your certainty acts as the wind; your imaginative act as the flame that purifies; your awareness as the mountains dissolving into light. You become the ruler of an inner kingdom, and as you assume that state, the world you experience follows suit.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, and assume the I AM presence; declare, 'I now possess the inner house of God.' Visualize the wind of awareness sweeping away old beliefs until the space is clear.
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