Inner Justice in Job
Job 21:29-33 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Job 21 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Job notes that the wicked are reserved for the day of destruction and will be brought to the grave; the passage also speaks of a public knowledge of their path and of many following them into the tomb.
Neville's Inner Vision
Beloved, Job does not threaten an angry God but reveals your own law of consciousness. The wicked man you notice in the world is but a state of mind you have allowed to persist; the 'day of destruction' is the moment you withdraw energy from that belief and let it be dissolved. There is no external judge to declare your way to your face; the truth you seek is already within, as your I AM awareness. To 'bring him to the grave' is to release the old self, the worn-out image, and to let the tomb remind you that nothing eternal belongs to that pattern. The clods of the valley, sweet unto him, symbolize the softening of resistant feelings as you walk in alignment with your inner I AM, such that others follow your lead into a new way of being. The verse points to the universal law: every manner of life you witness outside mirrors your own inner states. Practice recognizing your current inner state, then revise it by assuming you have already stepped into the change you seek, feeling it as real now.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit quietly and assume, I am the awareness that judges thoughts and brings harmony to my life. Then revise a stubborn belief by declaring, This state has dissolved; I now walk in the path my I AM reveals, and feel it as real.
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