Awakening the Immortal I Am Within
Psalms 89:48 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 89 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse asks which mortal can avoid death and whether the soul can be delivered from the grave. It invites inner reflection on whether life is confined to the body or can arise in consciousness.
Neville's Inner Vision
All scripture, in Neville’s method, reveals the states of consciousness that you assume. When the psalm questions what man lives and will not see death, it is pointing to the state you inhabit—the I AM—who cannot die because awareness cannot die. The grave represents your habit of fear, time-bound thinking, and identification with the body as the self. The deliverance of the soul is not an external rescue but a shift in identification: you deliver your essential self from the hand of the grave by declaring, 'I am the I AM,' and living from that fact now, not eventually. The question is a call to refuse the reality of death as ultimate; instead, you imagine and feel as if your life is intact, continuous, and eternal. Selah, the pause, is the moment you switch from gossip of the senses to the consciousness that never fades. Thus the verse becomes a practical program: assume the state of immortality; imagine yourself already alive; let your feeling-sense confirm it, and the world will reflect your inner deliverance.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Assume you are the I AM now, not the body; revise mortality with the feeling that you are eternally alive, and carry that sensation through the next breath.
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