Inner Anger, I Am Calm
Psalms 90:7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Psalms 90 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Psalm 90:7 speaks of humanity being consumed by God's anger; in Neville's terms, this is an inner state we inhabit rather than a distant judgment.
Neville's Inner Vision
To say we are consumed by thine anger is to acknowledge that the climactic force of wrath is not out there but within the vantage point we inhabit. In Neville’s psychology, 'God' is the I AM—the awake awareness that gives form to every feeling. When you feel consumed by anger, you are not being oppressed by a harsh deity so much as identifying with a state of consciousness that thinks it is under judgment. The verse invites you to notice the inner weather: the sense of trouble, the belief that you are defined by a condemning voice. Yet your imagination is the creative power that shapes experience. By refusing to identify with the wrath as an actual fact and by assuming a different occupant of consciousness, you shift the cause of the storm. The moment you revise your assumption—and feel-it-real that you are the I AM who is unshaken, uncondemned—you dissolve the sense of being troubled. Your inner world becomes a sanctuary where anger passes like weather, not a permanent jail. Faith is not belief in punishment; it is the steady recognition that you are the perceiving I AM, and thus you re-script the scene.
Practice This Now
Sit quietly, assume you are the I AM behind every thought; say softly, 'I AM calm,' and feel the anger draining as you hold this new assumption.
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