Inner Law and True Justice

Psalms 94:20-21 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Psalms 94 in context

Scripture Focus

20Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee, which frameth mischief by a law?
21They gather themselves together against the soul of the righteous, and condemn the innocent blood.
Psalms 94:20-21

Biblical Context

The psalm asks whether the throne of iniquity can share in God's presence, because it frames mischief by a law. It then speaks of the wicked gathering against the righteous and condemning the innocent.

Neville's Inner Vision

Consider that the throne described is not a stone seat but a state of consciousness that misuses law to justify fear. The line 'frameth mischief by a law' reveals how thought fashions a rule to support its own perception, and thus locks you into a drama of judgment. The 'they' who gather against the soul of the righteous are only recurring patterns of thinking—gossip, guilt, and the urge to condemn—projected onto an image of someone outside. In Neville's sense, the 'soul of the righteous' is your own inner center, the I AM that never waivers in truth. When you imagine the world as governed by a just, divine inner law, you will see that no external decree can wound your sense of selfhood. The fallacy of 'perverse law' dissolves as you hold the I AM-aware mind steady; you stop identifying with hostile verdicts, and the justice you seek becomes your native experience, not an external conquest. The moment you revise the decree—'I am the law; I govern my inner kingdom'—the imagined fellowship with mischief dissolves and innocence rises as the reality.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Sit quietly, declare 'I AM the law in my inner world; no misused decree can condemn my innocence,' and feel that truth as a living I AM within you.

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