Inner Court of Fearless I Am

Job 22:4-5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Job 22 in context

Scripture Focus

4Will he reprove thee for fear of thee? will he enter with thee into judgment?
5Is not thy wickedness great? and thine iniquities infinite?
Job 22:4-5

Biblical Context

The verses question whether God would rebuke you for fear and judge you, while declaring your wickedness and iniquities to be great.

Neville's Inner Vision

Your 'God' is not an external judge but the I AM, the constant awareness through which you feel and think. In this scene from Job, fear of punishment and the sense of being weighed in an eternal court arise from a mistaken identity—seeing yourself as apart from the life that sustains you. The line about great wickedness is not a verdict on your being but a symbol of thoughts that have crowded your consciousness, convincing you that you are ruled by guilt. When you adopt Neville’s practice, you reverse the perspective: you are not trying to appease an outside deity, you are returning to the only authority that matters—the I AM within, which never condemns but always loves. Imagine stepping into an inner chamber where you are unconditionally accepted, where judgments dissolve into a simple truth: you are the expression of divine life here and now. Persist in that awareness, and the sense of separation vanishes, leaving you free to act from righteousness, not fear.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Sit quietly, place a hand on your chest, and assume the state 'I AM' now—declaring, 'I am not condemned; I am righteousness itself.' Then revise your inner court by affirming, 'From this moment, fear dissolves into love, and I stand in the presence of the I AM as beloved, whole, and free.'

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