Inner Tree Of Hope Restored

Job 19:10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Job 19 in context

Scripture Focus

10He hath destroyed me on every side, and I am gone: and mine hope hath he removed like a tree.
Job 19:10

Biblical Context

The verse expresses being crushed on every side, and the speaker's hope appears uprooted like a fallen tree.

Neville's Inner Vision

Here the lines are not about a man's external calamities alone, but about your inner weather. 'Destroyed on every side' reveals a state of consciousness that has identified with limitation and time-bound trouble; 'I am gone' is the moment you forget the I AM within and mistake circumstance for reality. 'Mine hope hath he removed' signals you believe the sustaining presence of life has fled, leaving you with a withered sense of possibility. Yet the scripture does not condemn; it invites you to observe your own assumptions. In Neville's method, the outer world is the echo of your inner state, and you may revise by assuming the opposite state of being—that you are still intact, that consciousness is ever-present, and that hope is simply a belief in a temporary scene. By feeling as if the wish fulfilled, by living in the awareness that the I AM is the source and sustainer, you redraw the scene. The moment you dare to dwell in that lasting center, the perceived destruction loosens its grip, and a fresh sense of rooted hope begins to sprout, as if a hidden tree were suddenly nourished by inner light.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and revise by assuming the truth: I am the I AM, rooted and unshaken. Imagine a sturdy tree of hope springing from your inner awareness, growing stronger as the storm passes.

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