Inner Eyes of Justice

Job 11:20 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Job 11 in context

Scripture Focus

20But the eyes of the wicked shall fail, and they shall not escape, and their hope shall be as the giving up of the ghost.
Job 11:20

Biblical Context

Job 11:20 foretells that the wicked lose their sight, cannot escape their fate, and their hope fades away, signaling the consequences of a closed, fearful state.

Neville's Inner Vision

Viewed through the I AM, Job’s line is not a verdict on others but a reflection of your current state of consciousness. \"Eyes of the wicked\" denotes the inner gaze tinted by fear, separation, and habitual doom-mentality. When you inhabit that state, you project limitation and a sense of inevitability; escape appears impossible and hope dies into the so-called ghost of the past. Yet the universe answers to your inner truth. If you assume the vantage of the I AM—persistently seeing with awareness and feeling the reality of your desired state—then you reverse the verse. The inner eyes become clear; the future becomes a space of possibility; what once looked inescapable loosens as you hold to a higher self. Every thought creates a world; by choosing a state aligned with your true nature—breathing in the light of awareness, recognizing your desire as already present—you resist the doom of the outer scene. The verse then serves as a gentle call to maintain a consciousness that refuses fear and asserts the power of imagination.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Sit quietly, breathe, and repeat 'I am the I AM, the perceiver.' Then revise your scene so you view life with the eyes of wisdom and feel the new state as real.

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