Inner Courtroom of Awareness
Job 23:3-5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Job 23 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Job longs to know where God is and to come before Him to argue his case and hear what He would say. The text expresses the raw desire for a direct encounter with divine truth.
Neville's Inner Vision
Job's cry, 'Oh that I knew where I might find Him,' is the call of a consciousness seeking alignment with its own source. The seat he longs for is not in a distant throne-room but in the stillness of your awareness—the I AM. To 'order my cause before Him' is a practical stance: assume the state of already knowing the answer, feel the position of the observer who is never in doubt, and let the mind revise any sense of lack. The 'words which He would answer me' are the inner responses that arise when you dwell in presence rather than in problem. As you feel, you hear, and you respond from the center of your being, you discover that God’s verdict is your own inner recognition of truth. The trial dissolves when you stop chasing evidence and begin to embody the truth that you are always heard by the living I AM. So the imagined courtroom becomes a studio for the creative act of self-creation, where the dialogue is ultimately with your own divine nature.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, breathe into the I AM presence, and declare: I am already in the seat of God within; revise any lack as no fact of mine; feel the inner 'verdict' as calm certainty.
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