Job 14 Inner Resurrection Practice
Job 14:1-22 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Job 14 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Job 14 portrays human fragility and the inevitability of death, yet it speaks of possible renewal like a tree that sprouts again. It points to an inner, not external, ground of hope.
Neville's Inner Vision
In this passage, the line about a life cut down resembles the habitual beliefs you hold about life: the body’s days seem short and trouble appears to define you. Yet the 'tree' image is a trigger for imagination: with the scent of water—your inner nourishment—you can awaken a renewal already present in consciousness. View 'born of a woman' as a state you occupy, not a fixed fate of matter. When you affirm the I AM within, you shift from a fear of decay to an assured expectancy of change; death becomes a transition of form, not a termination of life. The moment you call to the inner you, you will be answered; the work of God becomes the work of your own hands. Your countenance changes as you dwell in the awareness of eternal renewal, and apparent loss gives way to a living transformation in your consciousness.
Practice This Now
Assume you are the tree that can sprout again. Picture your roots drinking water from within and feel the immediate renewal in your awareness; then rest in the conviction that you are awakened to new life now.
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