Job 10:15 Inner Lift

Job 10:15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Job 10 in context

Scripture Focus

15If I be wicked, woe unto me; and if I be righteous, yet will I not lift up my head. I am full of confusion; therefore see thou mine affliction;
Job 10:15

Biblical Context

Job expresses a double judgment about himself—if wicked, woe; if righteous, he still cannot lift his head—and he is overwhelmed by confusion and affliction.

Neville's Inner Vision

Job 10:15 presents you at the moment when you judge yourself by moral terms and find yourself bowed down by confusion. In Neville's psychology, the outer tale is the inner state: condemnation and doubt are nothing more than the mind's resistance to its own I AM presence. When you insist, 'If I am wicked...', or 'If I am righteous...', you tether your awareness to a shifting treadmill of judgment, and your head stays lowered because you have not allowed the self that is always awake to assume its rightful rulership. The true self is not defined by the verdict of a changing perception but by the I AM that remains untouched by opinions. The affliction Job describes is simply the current inner weather—beliefs that you are separated from your own wholeness. To reinterpret, you must disregard the self-accusations and rest in the awareness that you are the I AM, here and now. In that quiet identification, the condition of 'confusion' dissolves, and what once felt like punishment becomes a signpost guiding you back to inner authority. Lift your head by choosing the state of I AM consciousness, and the outer world follows the inward ascent.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Assume the I AM as your immediate state and revise every doubt to that truth. Feel the lift of your head as already real in this moment.

The Bible Through Neville

Neville Bible Sparks

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