Job's Inner Courtroom: I Am
Job 23:2-7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Job 23 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Job laments a bitter complaint and longs to find God. He wishes to present his case at the divine seat and hear an answer that would vindicate him.
Neville's Inner Vision
Where Job says 'my complaint is bitter' and 'I would order my cause before him,' Neville would read this as a map of the psyche in momentary rebellion against your own I AM. The 'seat' he seeks is the inner throne of awareness—the place where you imagine, decide, and feel the verdict of life. When he wonders whether God would plead with power, he discovers that the true ruling comes not from a distant judge but from the strength awakened within. The scene is not about changing a historical event but about waking to a new state of consciousness: you become the one who can 'put strength in me' by aligning with the inner authority that already judges rightly. So the 'delivered for ever from my judge' is your return to the certainty that the self that rules within is just and righteous. Your beliefs, feelings, and assumptions are the arguments you lay before the inner courtroom; the verdict you imagine becomes your lived reality, here and now.
Practice This Now
Imaginative_act: Sit quietly, close your eyes, and assume the I AM is seated in your inner courtroom. Imagine laying your case before that presence and hear a verdict of strength and deliverance arising within you.
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