Inner Eyes of Justice
Job 11:20 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Job 11 in context
Scripture Focus
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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