Inner Complaint, I Am Within
Job 23:2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Job 23 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Job declares his complaint is bitter today. His suffering weighs heavier than his groaning.
Neville's Inner Vision
Notice the language as a map of inner weather. Job’s bitter complaint is not a fact external to you; it is a state of consciousness you have rehearsed until it feels like reality. The stroke that he feels is the overlay of resistance, a mental pressure you place upon life when you forget that you are the I Am, the living awareness that alone creates. In Neville’s reading, God is not out there chastising you but within, as the I Am, the constant background in which every sensation arises. The moment you dwell in that awareness, the sharpness of the 'stroke' relaxes, for you begin to revise the story from limitation to wholeness. The groaning is the old vibration of lack—an echo of a belief that you are apart from the source of your life. Remember: imagination does not follow reality; it precedes it. When you assume the state you desire—as if you are already the harmonious, complete person—you disclose the power that turns bitterness into faith, anxiety into trust, pain into destinies you choose. The present bitterness becomes the signal to re-enter the I Am and allow your inner light to rewrite your days.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and, in the quiet, repeat 'I Am' as a present-tense fact; revise the bitter complaint into gratitude and a sense of wholeness.
The Bible Through Neville










Neville Bible Sparks









