Inner Renewal Psalm 85
Psalms 85:4-7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 85 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The psalm pleads for God to turn His anger away and revive His people so they may rejoice in Him; it asks for mercy and for the realization of salvation within.
Neville's Inner Vision
Imagine these lines as an invitation to your inner God-state. 'Turn us, O God of our salvation' is not asking a distant deity to move, but instructing your own awareness to pivot away from doubt and fear toward the reality you are within. The 'anger' spoken of is the auto-judgment and guilt that keeps you from joy; identify it as a mental posture, a state of consciousness that has held you captive generation after generation of moments. When you ask, 'Wilt thou be angry with us for ever?', you are testing your own constancy: is your inner state permanent, or can you switch to the divine view that never abandons you? 'Wilt thou not revive us again' becomes a practical declaration: I am revived by the very presence I am aware of. Rejoicing in thee means your awareness rejoices in its unity with the I AM, not in external circumstances. 'Shew us thy mercy' is the feeling of grace in your own heart, and 'grant us thy salvation' is the realization that salvation is an inner state of alignment with truth.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume the state: 'I am that I am,' the God of my salvation here and now. Feel anger dissolve as you revise your inner climate and let revival and mercy be your experiential reality.
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