Inner Perfection Beyond Ecclesiastes 7:20
Ecclesiastes 7:20 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ecclesiastes 7 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
There is no man on earth who is always just or free from fault. The verse acknowledges universal imperfection and invites us to turn inward for true righteousness.
Neville's Inner Vision
To the Neville ear, Ecclesiastes’ line is not a verdict against you but a clue to the inner theatre. The 'just man' and the act of constant goodness are not external records but inner states you entertain. There is no fixed man outside, only a consciousness that can revise itself. When you hear that no man does good and never sins, do not argue with it; use it as a map to revision. Assume the I AM as your unwavering present reality, and dwell in the sense that you are the one who does good and sins not, and feel it real. As you persist in that assumption, the inner movements shift: resentment softens, impulses align, and what you call moral fault becomes an old image being replaced by new seeing. Imagination is the creative force; by choosing a state of righteousness now, you invite the outer world to reflect it. The verse becomes a door to present creation—your inner state making your outer life appear as if you are already perfectly just.
Practice This Now
In a quiet moment, assume the feeling that you are the I AM, the one who does good and sins not, and feel it real; then test the revision by acting from that inner state in the next ordinary choice.
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