Seeing God in Flesh

Job 19:26 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Job 19 in context

Scripture Focus

26And though after my skin worms destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall I see God:
Job 19:26

Biblical Context

Job 19:26 declares that even if his body decays, he will see God in his own flesh. It points to an inner truth about seeing the divine within the self, not merely a future bodily resurrection.

Neville's Inner Vision

Viewed through the Neville lens, Job’s cry is a statement of the inner man awakening. The “skin worms” are the worn-out beliefs of decay and limitation; they are only the surface phenomena that the senses mistake for reality. The clause “in my flesh shall I see God” does not promise a future physiological miracle; it declares that the I AM, the inner awareness, will behold the divine while clothed in the body. Your true sight is not with ordinary eyes but with the realization that God is your own consciousness, the perceiver and the thing perceived. As you cease identifying with the body’s decline and align with the assumption that God now fills your entire being, you begin to experience resurrection as a present shift in feeling and conviction. This is the practical gospel: you revise the sense of self by assuming, here and now, that you are in the presence of God, and you feel it as real in your chest, your breath, your heartbeat, until the world of form reflects that inner kingdom.

Practice This Now

Sit quietly, place a hand on your chest, and feel the I AM as your own presence. Then revise the sense of self by imagining you are already in God’s presence and see Him within your flesh.

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