The Sun's Vanity Transfigured
Ecclesiastes 1:14-15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ecclesiastes 1 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The speaker says that all earthly toil under the sun appears vain and vexing. He adds that some things cannot be fixed or fully counted.
Neville's Inner Vision
Ecclesiastes speaks through the eye of perception, not as fact but as the stage on which your inner drama plays. When you hear 'vanity of vanities' and 'crooked cannot be made straight,' remember you are not reading about the world’s permanent faults, but about the mind's habit of judging appearances. The energy you call 'life under the sun' is the continuous movement of your own beliefs about lack, time, and effort. If you insist that outcomes must bend to outward schedules, you will always meet resistance—the mind resists what it does not own. By turning inward, you can revise from within: assume that the end is already in place, that the crookedness you fear is only a misalignment of your inner vision, and that the missing is a concept you drop from your dictionary. Your awareness, the I AM, need not chase facts but banners of truth you decide to stand under. When you dwell in a defined, fulfilled state, the world follows by reflection; every attempt to straighten becomes unnecessary because you have already accepted the straight line in consciousness.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, assume the end: 'I am complete, and all is in divine order.' Feel the truth of that completion for a minute, allowing any impulse to lack to dissolve.
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