Morning Prayer Preempts The Day

Psalms 88:13 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Psalms 88 in context

Scripture Focus

13But unto thee have I cried, O LORD; and in the morning shall my prayer prevent thee.
Psalms 88:13

Biblical Context

It states crying to the LORD and, in the morning, the prayer goes before the day, shaping what follows.

Neville's Inner Vision

Consider the verse as your inner morning practice. The cry to the LORD is not to beg from without, but the waking I AM within you—awareness that stands at the center of every moment. When you rise, your prayer does not chase life; it precedes life, setting the tone and calling forth the state that creates experience. In Neville's sense, you are not petitioning an external deity; you are assuming you already are the fulfilled state. The morning action is the act of consenting to the truth: I am that I AM; I am present, I am whole, I am the reality that unfolds. The prayer’s preemption is a psychological move: you refuse to start the day in lack or doubt, you crown your consciousness with the feeling of already having what you seek. As you dwell in this assumption, the day aligns with that inner position, and circumstances respond as if recognizing your interior state.

Practice This Now

In the morning, sit quietly and declare, 'I am the I AM; my prayer preempts this day.' Then visualize the day unfolding from that state, feeling it as already true.

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