Inner Knowledge of Sin Unveiled
Job 13:23 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Job 13 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Job asks to know his sins. This is a pull toward inner self-knowledge and accountability.
Neville's Inner Vision
Here, the cry 'How many are mine iniquities and sins? make me to know my transgression and my sin' is not a plea for guilt but a declaration of the I AM awakening. In the quiet inner space of the scripture, Job stands as a state of consciousness seeking to illuminate what thoughts and beliefs have colored his experience. Neville's law says your outer world mirrors the inner picture you hold of yourself; the 'transgression' you seek to know is the texture of your current self-definition. When you desire to know it, you are already in possession of its power to dissolve—for the moment you truly see it, you can revise it. The act of naming your sin collapses its charge, because the I AM watches without judgment and, by attention, neutralizes the charge. The task becomes not to punish but to transmute by awareness: you discover what you are holding as real, then let imagination rewrite it as harmless, and thus you awaken to a larger mercy.
Practice This Now
Identify a specific fault and, in a quiet moment, assume the state of the aware I AM. Feel-it-real: I now know my sin and dissolve it in light; imagine a forgiving, merciful atmosphere surrounding me.
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