The Inner Mark of Sin

Job 10:14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Job 10 in context

Scripture Focus

14If I sin, then thou markest me, and thou wilt not acquit me from mine iniquity.
Job 10:14

Biblical Context

Job 10:14 states that if I sin, God marks me, and I will not be acquitted from my iniquity. It conveys the weight of guilt and accountability.

Neville's Inner Vision

In Neville’s sense, this is not a punitive ledger outside you but a revelation of your inner state. God is the I AM that you ARE, and every act of judgment you experience is an inner habit of consciousness marking itself. The law of consciousness says you live in the state you conceive, and the 'mark' is simply the feeling that your present self is separate, guilty, and unpardoned. To change the effect, do not plead for external mercy but revise your inner state. Assume the state you desire: that you are whole, forgiven, and already acquitted by the very nature of your I AM. When you dwell in that assumption, the mental 'mark' loses its grip, and the sense of iniquity dissolves as you realize you are the one who calls the verdict upon yourself. Your feelings become the law of your life; claim the forgiveness by feeling it in advance, and the outer appearance shifts to match.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Sit quietly, rest in the I AM, and declare, 'I am the state of innocence now; I revise my past as if sin never defined me,' then feel the shift as relief sweeps through.

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